Katherine Young | |
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![]() Young in 2014 | |
Alma mater | |
Occupations |
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Employer | Emory University |
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship (2021) |
Musical career | |
Genres | Electro-acoustic music [1] |
Instrument | Bassoon |
Katherine Young is an American bassoonist and composer. She released her solo album Further Secret Origins in 2009 and is a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow. She is also a professor at Emory University.
Katherine Young studied classical music with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's Carl Nitchie, [2] and she studied comparative literature and bassoon at Oberlin College and the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, [3] graduating in 2003. [4] She later obtained her MA in Composition from Wesleyan University, where she studied under Anthony Braxton, [3] [2] and her DMA in Composition from the Bienen School of Music; [5] her doctoral dissertation is Nothing Is as It Appears: Anthony Braxton’s Trillium J. [6]
Young's music involves electroacoustic music and sonic art, and she also plays as a bassoonist in her work. [3] She recorded with Braxton in an album released in 2008. [4] In 2019, she was the featured composer for the sixth season of Basscon's Wasteland festival, with one of her pieces being Arthur Russell's Hiding Your Present From You (1986). [7] Aaron Cohen of the Chicago Tribune noted that she "thrives in unexpected terrain" and that "her basic impulse remains straight-forward". [2] Tamzin Elliott of San Francisco Classical Voice said of Young: "Her vocabulary of string techniques — bowing on the body of the instrument, grinding the bow into the string, playing behind the bridge, etc. — was markedly uniform between the pieces, to the point where I wondered about the intentionality of this similarity." [7]
In 2009, her solo album Further Secret Origins was released. [8] [9] She later did another album in 2012, Pretty Monsters, for her quartet of the same name. [10] Young said that solo recordings are "brutal", noting they leave her with only a sound engineer to record with. [4] She performed as bassoonist in Jessica Pavone's 2024 album Clamor . [11]
Originally teaching at Berklee College of Music and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, she later became Assistant Professor of Composition at Emory University. [3] In 2021, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. [12]
Young has been based in Chicago. [7]