Recipient, 2007 National Medal of Arts
The music of Morten Johannes Lauridsen, composer-in-residence of the Los Angeles
Master Chorale from 1994-2001 and professor of composition at the University of
Southern California Thornton School of Music for more than thirty years,
occupies a permanent place in the standard vocal repertoire of the Twentieth
Century. His seven vocal cycles -- Les Chansons des Roses (Rilke),
Mid-Winter Songs (Graves), Cuatro Canciones (Lorca), A
Winter Come (Moss), Madrigali: Six "FireSongs" on Renaissance Italian
Poems, Nocturnes, and Lux Aeterna -- and his series of
sacred a cappella motets (O Magnum Mysterium, Ave Maria, O Nata Lux, Ubi
Caritas et Amor and Ave Dulcissima Maria) are featured regularly
in concert by distinguished ensembles throughout the world. O Magnum
Mysterium, Dirait-on (from Les Chansons des Roses) and O Nata
Lux (from Lux Aeterna) have become the all-time best-selling
choral octavos distributed by Theodore Presser, in business since 1783.
In speaking of Lauridsen's sacred works in his book, Choral Music in the
Twentieth Century, musicologist and conductor Nick Strimple describes
Lauridsen as "the only American composer in history who can be called a mystic,
(whose) probing, serene work contains an elusive and indefinable ingredient
which leaves the impression that all the questions have been answered... From
1993 Lauridsen's music rapidly increased in international popularity, and by
century's end he had eclipsed Randall Thompson as the most frequently performed
American choral composer."
His works have been recorded on over a hundred CDs, three of which have received
Grammy nominations, including O Magnum Mysterium by the New York-based
ensemble, Tiffany Consort, led by Nicholas White, and two all-Lauridsen discs
entitled Lux Aeterna by the Los Angeles Master Chorale conducted by
Paul Salamunovich (RCM) and Polyphony with the Britten Sinfonia
conducted by Stephen Layton (Hyperion). His principal publishers are Peermusic
(New York/Hamburg) and Peer's affiliate, Faber Music (London).
A recipient of numerous grants, prizes and commissions, Dr. Lauridsen chaired
the Composition department at the USC Thornton School of Music from 1990-2002,
founded the School’s Advanced Studies Program in Film Scoring, and is currently
Distinguished Professor of Composition. In 2006, Morten Lauridsen was named an
"American Choral Master" by the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2007, he was
the recipient of the National Medal of Arts from the President in a White House
ceremony, "for his composition of radiant choral works combining musical beauty,
power and spiritual depth that have thrilled audiences worldwide." The National
Medal of Arts is the highest award given to artists and arts patrons by the United
States government.
For more information on Mr. Lauridsen, you can visit other Lauridsen pages
and the articles section.