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About Michael Kowalski

Composer and pianist Michael Kowalski was a pioneer in the field of computer music in the 1970s. He wrote extensively for percussion and mixed chamber ensembles before turning fulltime to operatic composition in 1995, when he founded his ensemble, The Postindustrial Players.

Kowalski studied piano and music history at the Oberlin Conservatory. His "Program Etude" (1971), synthesized by a program of his own design, was the first totally digital electronic work produced and performed at Oberlin's pioneering computer music lab. He began his formal composition studies with Richard Hervig at the University of Iowa, where he also continued independent work in the field of computer-aided composition. In 1975 he was a University Fellow at the University of Illinois, where he studied in the music, computer science, and linguistics departments and worked with composers Herbert Brün, Ben Johnston, and Salvatore Martirano. In 1976 Kowalski was a Margaret Lee Crofts Fellow in Composition at the Berkshire Music Center (Tanglewood), where he studied with the French composer Betsy Jolas.

Kowalski's chamber music and electronic works have been performed throughout Europe and Japan, at dozens of university venues in the USA and Canada, at the 1975 and 1978 International Computer Music Conferences, Percussive Arts Society National Conferences, American Society of University Composers Conferences, and the 1982 and 1983 SIGGRAPH (international computer graphics) Conferences. Since moving to New York in 1980, he has appeared as a composer, pianist, and actor at numerous uptown and downtown spaces, including Roulette, Symphony Space, P.S. One, Emanu-El Midtown Y, and Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors. He has produced work for Radiotelevisione Italiana (RAI), Home Box Office, percussionist Steve Schick and pianist James Avery (Freiburg), soprano Candace Natvig and trombonist Jon English (Amsterdam), The United Mime Workers (Urbana, Ill.), tap dance choreographer Anita Feldman (NYC), Equilibrium Dance (Ann Arbor), and sculptor Sonja Visser (Rotterdam). He has been guest composer and lecturer at colleges and universities across the US and has held residencies at Yaddo, the Millay Colony for the Arts, and Art Awareness.

Since 1978 Kowalski has pursued a parallel career in the computer and finance industries. In the late 1970s he worked in the fledgling computer graphics industry at the Computervision Corporation in Boston. Between 1984 and 1995 he worked as a software consultant in the retail banking and brokerage industries. Since 1995 he has worked in the field of financial risk management. He is currently Vice-President of Almex, Inc., a risk management software design and consulting firm.

 

Selected works

A Ascenção e a Queda do Primeiro Mundo (The Rise and Fall of the First World) (2008) - chamber opera: soprano, mezzo, tenor, bass; chamber orchestra (12 players)

Fraternity of Deceit (1998) - chamber opera: soprano, baritone, bass; cello and multi-keyboards

Still in Love (1995) - chamber opera: soprano, bass; cello and multi-keyboards

Piano Bar #1: How to Compose Yourself (1995) - monologue for lounge organist

Lekcja gry na fortepianie, akord Chopin (Piano Lesson, after Chopin) (1992) - piano

City/Riffle (1985/1987/1992) - text and two-channel tape for tap dancer

Gringo Blaster (1989) - percussion trio, synthesizer, rapper

Silhouettes (1977/1986) - marimba

Salad Bar Blues (1983) - monologue with hip-hop and blues synthesizer tracks

Blue Period (1983) - one-act play

Point of Departure (1982) - dramatic quartet

Hot Air (1980) - monologue with two-channel tape

Vapor Trails (1975/1981) - four saxophones, four drumsets, congas

Double-Time (1980) - piano and percussion

Rebus (1980) - choreographed percussion trio

The Moral of the Story (1977) - two-channel tape and text for dancer

Tempting Fate (1977) - monologue

Daydreams (1978) - violin and percussion

Hotsy-totsy (1977) - two-channel tape

Traveling Music (1976) - dancer and percussion; choreography notated in score

Fakebook (1976) - piano

Jeu de Gestes (1975) - mime quartet; movement notated in score

No More Modesty (1975) - monologue

Bringing in the Sheaves (1975) - flute

hors d'oeuvres (1975) - soprano and trombone

Tracks (1974) - xylophone, vibraphone, marimba, piano, and percussion

Small Talk (1974) - four-channel tape

The Entrance of the Queen of Sheba (1973) - chamber orchestra

Balonie (1973) - four-channel tape

in memoriam Sydney Toler (1973) - two-channel tape

Program Etude (1971) - two-channel digitally-synthesized tape


Recordings

Gringo Blaster — selected instrumental work, 1974-92 Einstein Records (Einstein 008)

Still in Love a chamber music drama - Equilibrium (EQ6)
Music by Michael Kowalski. Text by Kier Peters. Directed by Constance McCord
Gregory Purnhagen, baritone
Karen Grahn, soprano
Yari Bond, cello
Michael Kowalski, synthesizer

Fraternity of Deceit a chamber music drama - Equilibrium (EQ36)
Music and text by Michael Kowalski. Directed by Jeffrey Johnson.
Peter Stewart, baritone
Gregory Purnhagen, baritone
Karen Grahn, soprano
Francesca Vanasco, cello
Michael Kowalski, synthesizer

Border Crossings: Percussion Music (includes Kowalski's "Vapor Trails") - Equilibrium (EQ2)

City/Riffle, synthesizer with tap dancer Anita Feldman - Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine, #12
(out of print)


Publications

"The Exhaustion of Western Art Music"
Perspectives of New Music Vol. 21, Nos. 1-2 (Fall-Winter, 1982, Spring-Summer, 1983)

"Why We Refuse to Listen"
Perspectives of New Music Vol. 44, No. 2 (Summer, 2006)

"Sancho Panza's Politics of Self-Deception"
Critical Review Vol. 19, No. 4 (2007)