Matthijs Vermeulen Award
Matthijs Vermeulen Award | |
---|---|
Awarded for | "Dutch composer who has composed an important piece in the field of contemporary music." |
Sponsored by |
|
Country | Netherlands |
Presented by | Performing Arts Fund |
Reward(s) | €20,000 |
First awarded | 1972 |
Website | www |
The Matthijs Vermeulen Award is the most important Dutch composition prize. It was named after the Dutch composer Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967).[1]
During the years 1972 through 2004, the prize was awarded annually by the Amsterdam Foundation for the Arts. The award was discontinued from 2005, when the Amsterdam Foundation merged it with the Amsterdam Award for the Arts (Amsterdamprijs voor de Kunst).
In March 2009, the Nederlands Foundation for Stage Arts announced it will renew the prize. The prize money is €20,000.
List of award winners[]
- 1972: (Omaggio a Gesualdo)
- 1973: Peter Schat (To You)
- 1974: Willem Breuker (Het paard van Troje)
- 1975: Tristan Keuris (Sinfonia)
- 1976: not awarded
- 1977: Louis Andriessen (De Staat)
- 1978: Jeugd en Muziek (Zeeland) / (Zeelandsuite)
- 1979: (Symphony for saxophones and orchestra)
- 1980: (Quatemi)
- 1981: Jan Boerman (whole oeuvre)
- 1982: Ton de Leeuw (Car mes vignes sont en fleur)
- 1983: Klaas de Vries (Discantus)
- 1984: Guus Janssen (Ternet)
- 1985: Dick Raaymakers (Extase)
- 1986: Theo Loevendie (Naima)
- 1987: Gottfried Michael Koenig
- 1988: (Über Erich M.)
- 1989: (Requiem voor een levende)
- 1990: Peter-Jan Wagemans (Rosebud)
- 1991: Klas Torstensson (Stick on Stick)
- 1992: Louis Andriessen (M. is for Man, Music and Mozart; Facing Death, Dances, Hout en Lacrimosa)
- 1993: Robert Heppener (Im Gestein)
- 1994: Dick Raaymakers (Der Fall/Dépons; Die glückliche Hand — Geöffnet)
- 1995: not awarded
- 1996: Diderik Wagenaar (Trois Poèmes; Prose)
- 1997: Ton de Leeuw (Three Shakespeare Songs)
- 1998: Klaas de Vries (A king, riding en Interludium for string orchestra)
- 1999: (Salome Fast)
- 2000: Richard Rijnvos (Times Square Dance)
- 2001: Misha Mengelberg (Opera 2000)
- 2002: Peter-Jan Wagemans (Moloch)
- 2003: Richard Ayres (No. 36 NONcerto)
- 2004: Michel van der Aa (One)
- 2005–2008: not awarded
- 2009: (Mattheus Passie)
- 2011: Richard Rijnvos (Die Kammersängerin)
- 2013: (Kagami-Jishi for piano solo and orchestra)
- 2015: (Scala II)
- 2017: Kate Moore (The Dam)[2]
- 2019: (Shambling Emerge – after party)
References[]
- ^ "The Matthijs Vermeulen Award". Performing Arts Fund. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
- ^ Musa, Helen (30 June 2017). "Dutch music prize goes to the first woman ever". Canberra CityNews. Canberra. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
Categories:
- Dutch music awards
- Classical music awards