Valerie Coleman

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Valerie Coleman
OriginLouisville, Kentucky,
GenresClassical, Jazz, Soul
Occupation(s)Composer, Flutist, Educator
InstrumentsFlute
Years active1997-present
LabelsNaxos Records
Blue Note Records
E1 Music
Associated actsImani Winds
WebsiteVColemanMusic.com

Valerie Coleman is an American composer and flutist as well as the creator of the wind quintet, Imani Winds. Coleman is a distinguished artist of the century who was named Performance Today's 2020 Classical Woman of the year and was listed as “one of the Top 35 Women Composers” in the Washington Post. In the year 2019, Valerie Coleman composed a piece titled Umoja, Anthem for Unity which was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra. This achievement was a very special one because it was the first time that a living African-American woman composer was commissioned by the Philadelphia Orchestra.

Coleman is known for her many contributions to wind chamber music and with Imani Winds, she released a number of studio albums with the group, one of which was nominated for Grammy Award for Best Classical Crossover Album in 2005.[1]

A graduate of Mannes College of Music and taught by musicians such as Julius Baker, her compositions frequently incorporate diverse styles such as jazz with classical music and many times incorporate political or social themes. Her piece Umoja in 2002 was listed as one of the "Top 101 Great American Works" by Chamber Music America.[2] She is an alumna of Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center CMS Two Fellowship program, laureate of Concert Artists Guild competition.

Valerie is a highly sought-after recitalist and clinician with a reputation of transformative skill and has conducted masterclasses and performances at top institutions. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor at the Frost School of Music at the University of Miami.

Early life and education[]

Valerie Coleman was born and raised in Louisville, Kentucky, in the same West End inner city neighborhood that Muhammad Ali grew up in.[3] Her father died when she was nine, and her mother raised Coleman and her sisters as a single working mother.[4]

Even as a toddler, it was clear that Valerie Coleman had a love for music and a great interest in playing the flute. Coleman even recollects picking up sticks in the backyard and pretending they were flutes. She started her formal music education in fourth grade,[4] at age eleven.[3] During her early years as a young musician, Coleman was interested in composing music. This love for composing grew and she started writing symphonies as a hobby,[4] using a portable organ that she had at her home.[5] By age fourteen she had written three full-length symphonies and won several local and state competitions,[2] as well as participating as a flutist in youth orchestra.[4] She is a graduate of Louisville Male High School.

Coleman and all her sisters attended college, and she earned[6] a double B.A. in theory/composition and flute performance from Boston University. She then graduated with a Masters Degree in flute performance from Mannes College of Music. Coleman studied flute with Julius Baker, Alan Weiss, Judith Mendenhall, Doriot Dwyer, and Mark Sparks, and composition with Martin Amlin and Randall Woolf.[2]

Imani Winds[]

In 1996, while still a student, Coleman began planning a chamber music ensemble.[7] She chose the name Imani Winds, Imani being the Swahili word for faith,[6] and sought African American woodwind players who might approach classical music from a similar cultural background.[7] About her reasons for starting the ensemble:

I used to be in the youth orchestra [as a child], and there were so many African Americans. But somewhere along the line, when I got to college, I was the only one in the orchestra. So I wondered what in the world happened here? It came to my mind that role models are needed.

— Valerie Coleman, NPR[4]

The group grew to five people, with Coleman on flute, Torin Spellman-Diaz on oboe, Monica Ellis on bassoon, Mariam Adam on clarinet, and Jeff Scott on french horn.[4] From the beginning the ensemble focused on "championing composers that were underrepresented from the non-European side of contemporary music."[7] The repertoire frequently involves music that is inspired by many different cultures including influences from the music of Africa, Latin America and North America.[6]

Accolades

By 2001 the group had won the Concert Artists Guild competition,[6] and over the following years released five albums internationally on the E1 Music label (formerly known as Koch International Classics), with many of those tracks composed by Coleman herself.[3] About their musicianship, the New Orleans Times Picayune stated, "As an ensemble, the Imani Winds cultivate the big, rich sound one associates with classical players -- and they also display the daring, respond in-the moment qualities one associates with a swinging jazz combo."[1]

The ensemble was named resident-artists of Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and has appeared in major concert halls throughout the United States.[6] The ensemble has won awards from Artists International and the 2005 ASCAP/WQXR-FM Award for Adventurous Programming, and were honored at the 2007 ASCAP Concert Music Awards.[3]

NPR Music named their album Terra Incognita one of the "5 Best American Contemporary Classical Albums Of 2010," saying "Imani Winds' members have earned a reputation for expanding the recorded wind-quintet repertoire, but in a way that's culturally significant."[1] According to the Cleveland Classical, "Imani Winds have carved a unique path into the world of classical chamber music for themselves through inventive programs, commissioning projects, and educational activities, and above all superb musicianship."[1]

Imani Winds Chamber Music Festival (IWCMF)[]

In 2009 Coleman conceived and created the Imani Winds Chamber Music Festival, which is both an institute and chamber music series on the Lincoln Center Campus in New York City.[8] The festival attracts artists from all around the world, who come to be mentored by Imani Winds and explore different paths of chamber music performance and repertoire.

The third annual festival was opened with Coleman's composition "Tzigane," which according to Lucid Culture, "made a deliciously high-octane opening number: an imaginative blend of gypsy jazz and indie classical with intricately shifting voices, it was a showcase for the entirety of the ensemble."[1]

In 2012 composers were added to the roster through the Emerging Composers Program. It involved master classes with composers such as Mohammed Fairouz and Daniel Bernard Roumain,[8] and the panel of guest artists included Stefon Harris, Paula Robison, Carol Wincenc, and Stanley Drucker.[8]

Solo career[]

Coleman made her debut as a flutist/composer at Carnegie Hall in 2004,[5] and prior to that was the understudy for flutist Eugenia Zukerman at Lincoln Center. Coleman was also a featured soloist in the Mannes 2000 Bach Festival.[2] Throughout Coleman's career, she has had performances and premieres that have taken place in major music halls across the country such as Alice Tully Hall, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, The Kennedy Center, Chamber Music Northwest, and Philadelphia Chamber Music Society.[3]

Her compositions and performances receive regular play on classical radio stations in the United States,[3] and she has been showcased on the New York classical radio station WQXR.[2] She also appeared on NPR's Performance Today, All Things Considered, and The Ed Gordon Show; WNYC's Soundcheck, and MPR's Saint Paul Sunday.[3] In April 2008 she was featured in Flutist Quarterly.[5]

She has received commissions from orchestras and ensembles as diverse as San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, Brooklyn Philharmonic, The National Flute Association, Hartford Symphony Orchestra, College Band Director's National Association, West Michigan Flute Association, and The Flute and Clarinet Duos Consortium.[3]

She has been a teacher for the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, has served on the faculty of The Juilliard School's Music Advancement Program and Interschool Orchestras of New York.[2] She's given flute masterclasses at colleges such as SUNY Purchase, Columbus State, UMass Amherst, Ohio State, Ithaca College, Utah State, Norfolk State, and Hampton University,[3] She has also been a composer/flutist in residence with Young Audiences NYC, and completed a mentorship with the Brooklyn Philharmonic.[3] Coleman is on the advisory panel of the National Flute Association.[2]

Compositions[]

Coleman is the resident composer of Imani Winds, though the ensemble also incorporates the work of other members and composers. Coleman's style mixes modern orchestration with genres as diverse as jazz and Afro-Cuban.[3] She has added a number of works to the flute repertory, also contributing to the literature for wind quintet, full orchestra, woodwinds, brass, and strings, many of which have been published by International Opus.

She often interposes music with the words of historical figures and poets, in some cases using manipulated speeches of people of diverse as Robert F. Kennedy, A. Philip Randolph and Cesar Chavez.[9]

About her world premiere of Painted Lady, a set of two songs for orchestra and soprano and her first commission, The Hartford Courant said "The songs are luminous works, with a tangy but accessible harmonic language, graced with a humanizing sense of melodic line and a mildly exotic rhythmic lilt. They are the work of a major talent, and they should be recorded immediately."[9] The songs used words by African American poet Margaret Danner.[9]

Her signature wind quintet piece Umoja (named for the Swahili word for "unity") in 2002 was listed as one of the "Top 101 Great American Works" by Chamber Music America.[2] Josephine Baker: A Life of le Jazz Hot in 2007 traced the life Josephine Baker,[4] receiving a glowing response in publications such as the Philadelphia Inquirer.[9]

Awards[]

  • Aspen Music Festival Wombwell Kentucky Award[2]
  • Michelle E. Sahm Memorial Award at the Tanglewood Music Festival[2]
  • Meet The Composer's Edward and Sally Van Lier Memorial Fund Award, 2003[3]
  • the Wombwell Kentucky Award for study at the Aspen Music Festival, 2003[3]
  • Michelle E. Sahm Award for flutists, 2003[3]
  • Received the Multi-Arts Production Fund - a grant given to "support innovative new works in all disciplines and traditions of performing arts."[2]

Grammys[]

Year Category Song/album Label Result
2005 Best Classical Crossover Album The Classical Underground Koch Int'l Classics Nominated

List of compositions[10][]

Wind quintet[]

  • 2001: UMOJA
  • 2002: speech. and canzone
  • 2005: Afro-Cuban Concerto
  • 2006: Suite: Portraits of Josephine - 4 Movements
  • 2009: Red Clay and Mississippi Delta - Scherzo
  • 2011: Tzigane
Arrangements
  • "Afro Blue - Mongo Santamaria"
  • "NKOSI SI KE LEL 'I AFRIKA - Enoch Sontaga" (South African national anthem)
  • Spirituals, Vol.1 ("Every Time I Feel the Spirit", "Steal Away", "Little David Play on Your Harp")
  • "Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing"
  • Various holiday songs

Chamber music[]

  • 2003: UMOJA for wind sextet
  • 2005: Sonatine for Clarinet and Piano
  • 2006: Maombi Asante - A Prayer of Thanksgiving for flute, violin, and cello
  • 2006: Suite: Portraits of Josephine - A Ballet in 8 Movements for chamber ensemble
  • 2007: Suite: Portraits of Langston for flute, clarinet & piano
  • 2007: LENOX AVENUE for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
  • 2008: Des Filmes Epiques for wind and string quartet
  • 2009: Our God of Voiceless Things for choir, wind quintet, and jazz ensemble
  • 2011: Four Winds of Ol' Forester for flute, violin, cello and mp3
  • 2012: Rubispheres for flute, clarinet and bassoon
  • 2012: Ruby St. Nola for three C flutes
  • Pontchartrain for flute choir

Orchestral[]

  • 2005: The Painted Lady
  • 2018: Phenomenal Women
  • 2019: UMOJA
  • 2020: Seven O'Clock Shout

Concert band[]

  • 2008: UMOJA
  • 2009: ROMA
  • 2013: Arabia for intermediate concert band

Solo flute[]

  • 2011: Danza de la Mariposa (Theodore Presser)

Discography[]

Imani Winds[]

Studio albums
  • 2002: Umoja
  • 2005: The Classical Underground (E1 Music)
  • 2006: Imani Winds (E1)
  • 2007: Josephine Baker: A Life of le Jazz Hot (E1)
  • 2008: This Christmas with Imani Winds (E1)
  • 2010: Terra Incognita (E1)
  • 2013: Mohammed Fairouz: Native Informant (Naxos Records)
  • 2013: Without a Net (Blue Note Records)

Personal life[]

Coleman lives with her husband, Jonathan Page, and daughter, Lisa.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Press". ImaniWinds.com. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k "Valerie Coleman, flute/composer". Imani Winds. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Bio". ValerieColeman.com. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Gordon, Ed (May 23, 2006). "Classical Chamber Music Ensemble Imani Winds". NPR. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c Westbrook, Peter (April 2008). "Valerie Coleman: Revitalizing the Woodwind Quintet". Flutist Quarterly. EBSCO Host, Vol. 33 Issue 3, page 36. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Hoover, Sarah (February 16, 2007). "Imani Winds is an ensemble on a mission". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c Stockinger, Jacob (September 25, 2012). "Classical Music Q&A: Here is what's happening with the Grammy-nominated Imani Winds ensemble, which opens the new Wisconsin Union Theater series in Mills Hall this Friday night". The Well-Tempered Ear. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c "About the Festival". Imani Winds Chamber Music Festival. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Reviews". ValerieColeman.com. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  10. ^ "Valerie Coleman Works". ValerieColeman.com. Retrieved 2013-05-29.

External links[]

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