born in Plainfield, New Jersey, May 16, 1931, he began music
lessons at nine--learning to play the clarinet, saxophone, and oboe--and started composing
at 15. He holds degrees from Syracuse and Princeton Universities. A member of the American
Academy of Arts and Letters and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, his many awards include two Fulbright scholarships; three Guggenheim awards;
grants from the Massachusetts Arts Council, the National Institute of Arts and Letters,
and the National Endowment for the Arts; the Brandeis Creative Arts Citation in Music; the
1974 Pulitzer Prize in music for his chamber work Notturno, First Prize in the 1985
Kennedy Center Friedheim Competition for his String Quartet (1983), and most recently, the
Boston Symphony's Mark M. Horblit Award. Mr. Martino has taught at The Third Street Music
School Settlement in New York, Princeton, Yale, The New England Conservatory of Music,
where he was chairman of the composition department from 1969-1979, Brandeis, where he was
Irving Fine Professor of Music, and Harvard, where he is the Walter Bigelow Rosen
Professor of Music, Emeritus. He has been active as guest lecturer and has been
Composer-in-Residence at Tanglewood, The Composer's Conference, The Yale Summer School of
Music and Art, The Pontino Festival (It.), May in Miami, The Atlantic Center for the Arts,
The Warebrook Festival, The Ernest Bloch Festival, The Festival Internacional de Musica de
Morelia (Mex.), and has been Distinguished Visiting Professor at many institutions
of higher learning. Commisions for new works have come from, among others, the
Paderewski Fund; the Fromm, Naumburg, Koussevitzky, and Coolidge Foundations; the Chicago,
Boston, and San Francisco Symphonies; and a number of musical societies and organizations.
According to the New Grove, "Martino's music has been characterized as expansive,
dense, lucid, dramatic, romantic, all of which are applicable. But it is his ability...to
conjure up for the listener a world of palpable presences and conceptions...that seems
most remarkable." |