Lisa Bielawa, composer & vocalist

Photo by Desmond White

one of the most brilliant and unforgettable new scores I’ve heard in years
— San Francisco Chronicle
a dynamic and innovative composer
— The Boston Globe

Composer, producer, and vocalist Lisa Bielawa (b. 1968) is a 2023 Guggenheim Fellow and a Rome Prize winner in Musical Composition. She takes inspiration for her work from literary sources and close artistic collaborations. Gramophone reports, “Bielawa is gaining gale force as a composer, churning out impeccably groomed works that at once evoke the layered precision of Vermeer and the conscious recklessness of Jackson Pollock.” Her music has been described as “ruminative, pointillistic and harmonically slightly tart,” by The New York Times, and “fluid and arresting ... at once dramatic and probing,” by the San Francisco Chronicle. She is the recipient of the Music Award from the American Academy of Arts & Letters and an OPERA America Grant for Female Composers. She was named a William Randolph Hearst Visiting Artist Fellow at the American Antiquarian Society for 2018 and was Artist-in-Residence at Kaufman Music Center in New York for the 2020-2021 season. For her Guggenheim Fellowship period, Bielawa is writing a new opera, La Ballonniste, and a book of prose vignettes from her experiences and encounters with music in a variety of international settings.

Lisa Bielawa has established herself as one of today’s leading composers and performers, consistently incorporating community-making as part of her artistic vision. In an article which branded Bielawa a “fire starter,” New Music Box reported, “It’s difficult to stand anywhere near composer and vocalist Lisa Bielawa and not feel energized by proximity. . . An extrovert to the core, Bielawa acknowledges that her highly social nature has taken her in some specific directions both as a composer and as a musical citizen. Community building and close collaboration with performing artists is often central to her compositional process.” 

Bielawa has created music for public spaces in Lower Manhattan, a bridge over the Ohio River in Louisville, KY, the banks of the Tiber River in Rome, on the sites of former airfields in Berlin and San Francisco, and to mark the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall; she has composed and produced a twelve-episode, made-for-TV opera that features over 350 musicians and was filmed in locations across the country; she was a co-founder in 1997 of the MATA Festival which continues to support young composers; and for five years she was the artistic director of the San Francisco Girls Chorus, bringing the chorus to the NY PHIL BIENNIAL and introducing the young performers to the music of today through numerous premieres and commissions of leading composers. From 2019-2022, Bielawa was the founding Composer-in-Residence and Chief Curator of the Philip Glass Institute (PGI) at The New School’s College of the Performing Arts. 

In 2022, Lisa Bielawa was selected for the inaugural Louisville Orchestra’s Creators Corps. She temporarily relocated to Louisville for the 2022-23 season to make new orchestral and community-based work as an active, engaged member of the community. Her residency included the world premiere of Louisville Broadcast, the latest iteration of her Broadcast series of spatialized symphonies. The 45-minute musical piece for an unlimited number of participants celebrated two historic sites and the vitality of Louisville’s many musical communities. Her time with the Louisville Orchestra also included the world premiere of Send the Carriage Through, composed as an ode to Louisville Orchestra Music Director Teddy Abrams’ “open-hearted vision of leadership as connection and invitation,” the world premiere of Spacelord and Queen for narrator and orchestra, a climate-focused story by librettist Claire Solomon, performed for thousands of public school students, and the world premiere of Home, co-composed with singer/songwriter Lindsey Branson and developed in collaboration with traditional musicians from the Appalachian mountain region of Kentucky.

the formal sophistication and lyrical richness of Bielawa’s music go deep
— The New Yorker

NEWS

 

PHOTOS

prodigious gift for mingling persuasive melodicism with organic experimentation
— Time Out New York

VIDEOS

 

AUDIO

Vireo: The Spiritual Biography Of A Witch's Accuser
Lisa Bielawa
Aimlessness Song
Lisa Bielawa
Father Death Blues
Philip Glass (arr. Lisa Bielawa)
Trojan Women
Lisa Bielawa
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James Blachly, conductor