Canary Burton
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (September 2021) |
Canary Burton | |
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Born | Canary Sandra Lee Adele Burton September 16, 1942 Richmond, California, U.S. |
Other names | Canary Driller |
Education | University of Idaho |
Canary Lee Burton, also known as Canary Sandra Lee Adele Burton, and Canary Driller[1] (born September 16, 1942) is an American keyboardist, composer and writer.
Biography[]
Burton was born on September 16, 1942 in Richmond, California. She studied music at the University of Idaho at Moscow, Idaho, from 1972–1979,[2] and relocated to Washington D.C. and then to Cape Cod. Burton continued her studies with Kevin Toney in jazz in 1980, with David Sussman in 1988, with John Zielinski in composition from 1990 to 1992, and briefly with Rodney Lister at the New England Conservatory in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1995.[3] She worked as a music teacher from 1996–2000.
Burton founded and played in various rock and jazz ensembles while completing her education and worked at WPFW Pacifica radio in Washington D.C. for three years. After moving to Cape Cod, she established her own contemporary music radio show The Latest Score, on WOMR in Provincetown, Massachusetts.[4] Selected pieces of her work were included in the published collection Music of Living Composers, compiled by the Campbell University piano professor and composer Betty Wishart in 1997. In 2013, Southern River was among the winners of the annual Search for New Music competition of the International Alliance for Women in Music.
Burton's works have been performed internationally.[5] Her music, with information about her work, is archived in the Wellfleet Public Library in Massachusetts and in Italy in the library of the Fondazione Adkins Chiti: Donne in Musica.[6] She is the recipient of an ASCAP Plus award, which recognizes composers whose works have a unique prestige value. The 2012 article "Canary Burton: Kaleidoscopic Connections," by Elizabeth Raum, is an extensive profile of the artist.[7]
Her married name was Driller, but she abandoned that name in the 1970s.[1]
Selected works[]
- Sometime After One (1982), for piano
- Gaia Morning, Gaia Noon, Gaia Night (1987), for piano
- Costa Brava (1989), for piano
- Atlantic Sonata (1992), for piano
- The Promise (1993), for voice and piano
- Archeological Record (2008), for piano[8]
- Daniella’s Hope (2008), for piano four-hands[9]
- Whispers (2011), for guitar[10]
- String Theory (2011), for string orchestra[9]
- Chopin Slept (2011), for piano trio[11]
- In the Beginning, for organ
- A Green and Yellow Basket, for organ
- Solo Viola, for solo viola
- Clara Young, for voice and piano
- American Lullaby, for voice and piano
- Early in the Morning, for voice and piano
- The Tea Party: The Tea Party; Dancing with my Teddy; Playing Dress Up; Ad Hoc
- Folksong for My Mother piano
- Victoria's Harp, for piano
- Southern River, for cello and viola
- We Want to Pond Naked, for voice, flute, oboe, piano
- No More Violins, for violin and piano
- The Twelfth of Cold, for piano, viola, violin, clarinet, bass, cello, in three movements: Fairy Boat; Snow Imp; Frost Heaves
- Viola Thinks 2, viola solo
- Sparcity, for viola, bass, flute, tuba
- Sri Rama, for piano
- Nightfall in the City, for piano and voice
- Refugee, for.guitar and voice
- Indian Voices, electroacoustic
One-minute pieces
- La Compara, for piano, trumpet and clarinet
- Cuban Love, for piano
- Dust Bunnies, for piano
- Minute Meld, electroacoustic
- Viola Thinks 1, for viola solo
Jazz
- Familiarity (1977), lead sheet, jazz, one instrument[12]
- Meteor Shower (1977), jazz/instrumental
- Companion (2006), for jazz piano[13]
- Companion, extended for bass, piano and flute
- Lulu's Rag, for jazz band
- Sinuosity, for flute, oboe, piano
- Solar Reflection, for jazz band
- Ya Gotta Be Kiddin, for piano
- Sigred's Lullaby, for piano
- Raggity Three Step, for piano[14]
- Turkey Too
- Tritone Subrosa
- Monkish
Burton's music has been recorded and issued on CD, including:
- Piano Music from Cape Cod (Seabird Studio, 2003) Canary Burton, piano[15]
- Women in Harmony (Tempus Floridum, 2010)
- Classical Bird: The Music of Canary Burton (2014)
- Jazz Bird (2014) Canary Burton, piano; Jarvis Trio[16]
- Bird Notes (2014).
- Bird Song: Canary Burton and Friends
- Live at the Center (Roxana Bajdechi, pianist)
- Lou Lou and Bird: Soundpaintings 2012 (Canary Burton and Marylou Blakeslee)
- Lou Lou and Bird: Soundpaintings 2014 (Canary Burton and Marylou Blakeslee)
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Canary Burton, At the piano (CNN Report, July 24, 2008).
- ^ Anne Gray, The World of Women in Classical Music (La Jolla CA: WordWorld, 2007).
- ^ "Resume". Retrieved November 24, 2015.
- ^ http://womr.org.
- ^ "Pan pipes: Sigma Alpha Iota quarterly". 99. 2006. Cite journal requires
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(help) - ^ See http://www.donneinmusica.org Archived February 28, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ In IAWM Journal 18, no. 2 (2012): 22–23.
- ^ Premiered by Max Lifchitz, October 2008; see http://newswire.scena.org/2008/10/composers-young-and-younger.html.
- ^ Jump up to: a b See http://www.sai-national.org/home/ComposersBureau/BurtonCanaryL/tabid/280/Default.aspx Archived January 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Concert poster is at http://www.seabirdstudio.com/guitar Archived December 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Information is on Aaron Larget-Caplan webpage http://www.aaronlc.com/newlullaby/ .
- ^ Commissioned by Daniella Baas. Premiered by Elisabeth Deletaille, violin, Bruno Ispiola, cello, and André Grignard, piano. See http://www.sai-national.org/home/ComposersBureau/BurtonCanaryL/tabid/280/Default.aspx Archived January 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Burton's works from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s are listed at http://www.musicaneo.com/sheetmusic/43856_canary_burton/.
- ^ Listed in Pan Pipes: Sigma Alpha Iota Quarterly, 99 (2006). Premiered by Daniella Baas, November 2007; see http://www.sai-national.org/home/ComposersBureau/BurtonCanaryL/tabid/280/Default.aspx Archived January 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Reviewed January 2016 at http://skopemag.com/2016/01/25/canary-burton-raggity-three-step
- ^ Reviewed May 2013 at http://skopemag.com/2013/05/15/canary-burton-piano-music-from-cape-cod
- ^ Reviewed July 2014 at http://skopemag.com/2014/07/01/canary-burton-jazz-bird and by Rick Jamm at http://jamsphere.com/reviews/canary-burton-jazz-bird-is-the-kind-of-music-that-triggers-nostalgia.
Further reading[]
- Burns, Kristine Helen. Women and Music in America Since 1900: An Encyclopedia. Westport CT: Greenwood Press, 2002, I: 312.
- "Canary Burton." Interview in Music Notez, http://www.muzicnotez.com/magazine/interviews/artist-interviews/canary-burton/.
- Fanfare Magazine, March/April 2012: 272.
- Pan Pipes: Sigma Alpha Iota Quarterly, 94–95 (2002): 24-25.
External links[]
- 1942 births
- 20th-century classical composers
- 21st-century American composers
- 21st-century classical composers
- American women classical composers
- American classical composers
- American music educators
- Living people
- University of Idaho alumni
- 20th-century American women musicians
- 20th-century American composers
- 21st-century American women musicians
- Women music educators
- 20th-century women composers
- 21st-century women composers