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DONAL FOX is internationally acclaimed as composer,
pianist, and improviser in both the jazz and classical
fields.
His numerous awards include a 1997 Guggenheim Fellowship in
music composition, a 1998 Fellowship from the Bogliasco Foundation
(Italy), and 1999, 2001, and 2003 nominations for a CalArts/Alpert
Award in the Arts.
Mr. Fox's exciting and innovative "Jazz Duet Series" has included
concerts, recordings, and collaborations with Oliver Lake, John
Stubblefield, Billy Pierce, David Murray, Elliott Sharp, Regina
Carter, Andrew Cyrille, Stefon Harris, Al Foster, Gary Burton, John
Patitucci, and poet Quincy Troupe to name a few. He has recorded as
composer and pianist for New World Records, Evidence Records, Music &
Arts, Passin' Thru Records, Yamaha's Original Artist Series, and Wergo
Records.
Mr. Fox served as the first African American composer-in-residence
with the St. Louis Symphony from 1991 to 1992. In the l993-94 season,
Mr. Fox was a special guest artist at the Library of Congress in a
program that was recorded by National Public Radio, and was a visiting
artist at Harvard University where he received a Certificate of
Recognition from the President of Harvard College for his contribution
to the arts.
In the 1998-1999 season, he was a featured concert artist with the
Richmond Symphony (VA) where he gave the world premiere performance of
Anthony Kelley's piano concerto Africamerica. The concerto asks for
Mr. Fox to compose and improvise four cadenzas and many solo passages,
bridging both jazz and classical styles inherent in the concerto. In
the 2003-2004 season, he was a featured concert artist with the
American Composer Orchestra Improvise Festival! where he gave the New
York premiere performance of T.J. Anderson's piano concerto Boogie
Woogie Concertante with the MSM Jazz Philharmonic at LaGuardia Concert
Hall. The concerto was written especially for Mr. Fox and asks for
him to improvise all the solo passages and cadenzas in the eight
movement work with spontaneous interactive dialogue with the
orchestra.
In 2003 and 2004, Mr. Fox held artist-in-residence posts at the Tyrone
Guthrie Center in Northern Ireland and the Oberfäzer
Künstlerhaus in Schwandorf, Germany.
Mr. Fox was named Top Ten Jazz Act in 2004 in the company of Herbie
Hancock, Sonny Rollins, and Ron Carter by jazz journalist Bill
Beuttler of The Boston Globe.
In the 2005-2006 season, Mr. Fox will premiere his Monk and Bach
Project at Jazz at Lincoln Center and a new work composed in memory of
concert tenor William A. Brown at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall.
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