John Howell Morrison (b. 1956) is a native of North
Carolina. He began his study of music with piano at age 9,
but gained his most influential experiences playing the
trumpet. As a high school student attending the Governor's
School of North Carolina in instrumental music, John played
entirely music of the twentieth century, laying the
foundation for a life as a composer.
Undergraduate musical studies were at Davidson College. It
was only after college that John began to study
composition, and he eventually completed a master of music
in composition at the University of Tennessee. His
principle teachers there were John Anthony Lennon, Kenneth
Jacobs and Allen Johnson. Doctoral studies at the
University of Michigan were funded by the university's most
prestigious award, the Regents Fellowship. Teachers at
Michigan included William Bolcom, William Albright,
Nicholas Thorne, George Wilson, and Leslie Bassett. John
served as a teaching fellow during that time, and his
degree was completed with the aid of a Predoctoral
Fellowship. Teaching posts have followed, at Tennessee
State University, Luther College, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland State University, the Cleveland
Institute of Music, and Oberlin College. John has served on
the board of directors of the Iowa Composers Forum, and was
elected president of the Cleveland Composers Guild. Now
residing in Newton, Massachusetts, John is chair of
composition and theory at the Longy School of Music.
Morrison has composed for a wide range of ensembles, solo
instruments and chorus. He has been commissioned by the
Fromm Foundation, the Intergalactic Contemporary Ensemble
(ICE), the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, the Nashville
Chamber Orchestra, the Detroit Chamber Winds, Antiqua Nova,
the Galhano/Montgomery Duo, Davidson College, the Cleveland
Composers Guild and several individual performers. Grants
from the Ohio Arts Council (2002 Individual Artist
Fellowship), American Composers Forum (Composers
Commissioning Project and Performance Incentive Fund), Meet
the Composer, Iowa Arts Council, Luther College, and the
American Music Center (Margaret Fairbank-Jory Copying
Assistance) have supported his work. John has been awarded
residencies at the MacDowell Colony, the Schweitzer
Institute (Festival at Sandpoint), June in Buffalo and the
Charles Ives Center for American Music.
John's music has been performed throughout the U.S.,
including significant exposure on the 1999 U.S. tour by
ICE, which featured stops in New York and Los Angeles,
among others. Other highlights include performances by the
San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, at two annual
conferences of the North American Saxophone Alliance,
national conferences of the Society for Electro-Acoustic
Music in the U.S. and the Society of Composers, Inc., and
of course by all the commissioning ensembles already
mentioned.
In addition to the recently released Innova Recording #584,
John's music appears on compact disc on Arizona University
Recordings #3098 and Ten Thousand Lakes SC 114. His music
is available from Arizona University Publications and M.
Baker Publications.