David Vayo,
A.Mus.D.
Professor of Composition and Theory Head of Composition Department; Coordinator of New Music Activities B.M., M.M., Indiana University; A.Mus.D., University of Michigan Professor Vayo (b.1957) is Professor and Composition Department head at Illinois Wesleyan University, where he teaches composition, improvisation, and contemporary music. As Coordinator of New Music Activities, he directs the annual Symposium of Contemporary Music, the New Music Cafe concert series, and other events in the School of Music's New Music Series. Vayo has also taught at Connecticut College and the National University of Costa Rica. He holds an A.Mus.D. in Composition from The University of Michigan, where his principal teachers were Leslie Bassett and William Bolcom; his M. Mus. and B. Mus. degrees are from Indiana University, where he studied with Frederick Fox and Juan Orrego-Salas. Vayo has received awards and commissions from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, ASCAP, the Koussevitzky Music Foundations, the Barlow Endowment for Music Composition, the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, the American Music Center, the National Association of College Wind and Percussion Instructors, and the Illinois Council for the Arts, and has been granted numerous artists' colony residencies.Over three hundred performances and broadcasts of his compositions have taken place, including recent performances in Mexico, Hong Kong, the Netherlands, Germany, and France and at the University of Wisconsin, Ohio State University, and the California Institute of the Arts. Festivals which have programmed his work include the International Trombone Festival, the International Double Reed Festival, the Grand Teton Music Festival, the Thailand Composition Festival, and three World Music Days of the International Society for Contemporary Music. His compositions are published by A. M. Percussion Publications, Bèrben/Italia Guitar Society Series, and the International Trombone Association Press. Vayo is also active as a pianist performing contemporary music, free improvisations, and jazz. Recent projects include Enlightenment for Mexico City's ONIX ensemble, Weave for the Wuji Ensemble, a Chinese plucked-string group based in Hong Kong and Fertile Ground, a musical for Prairie Fire Theatre with script and lyrics by Nancy Steele Brokaw. Prof. Vayo writes: "As a composition teacher I am primarily concerned with helping young composers discover and refine their personal artistic voices. My teaching is aimed at developing each student's aesthetic sensitivity, practical skills, and inner ear in ways that will make it possible for him or her to create music of significance and meaning. "Traditional and contemporary concert music, jazz, popular, and folk music have been equally potent influences on my own artistic development. I welcome students whose backgrounds and interests include any combination of these areas." Current Project: A composition for brass, strings, piano and percussion, to be performed with projected images by photographer Ken Kashian. Upcoming: The duo of percussionist Thierry Miroglio and pianist Ancuza Aprodu, based in France will perform Vayo's Orion at IWU on March 25. Vayo's Seis Cosechas (Six Harvests) for clarinet, bassoon and piano is on the program of the 2010 Belvedere Chamber Music Fertival, to be held in Memphis, TN in June. Vayo has been informed that he is the winner of the eighth Andrés Gaos Competition for Musical Composition, held by the provincial government of A Coruña in Galicia, Spain. The prize consists of 6500 Euros and the world premiere of Vayo's composition Wellspring by the Symphony Orchestra of A Coruña, during the 2009-2010 or 2010-2011 season. Recent News: Trombonist Samantha Keehne performed Vayo's Eight Poems of William Carlos Williams at the University of Colorado, Boulder on October 29 and 30. Keehne is writing her doctoral dissertation on Vayo's composition. Vayo was awarded an artist residency at The Lillian E. Smith Center for the Arts in Georgia for two weeks last June. Climb was be performed at the University of Wisconsin, Madison on September 17 by trombonist Mark Hetzler and percussionist Anthony Di Sanza. The duo repeated the performance at IWU on Sept. 20. The world premiere of Enlightenment by Mexico City's ONIX Ensemble took place at the University of Iowa on Oct. 1. ONIX traveled to Illinois Wesleyan to perform the work again on Oct. 3. Guitarist Zane Merritt performed Berceuse during the Region V Conference of the Society of Composers, Inc. at Clark College in Dubuque, Iowa. The conference took place from October 8 through 10. Vayo was a guest composer at the Utah Arts Festival in Salt Lake City, where Awakening of the Heart, was performed on June 27, 2009. Violinist Kia-Hui Tan of Ohio State University performed Vayo's Music for Violin on April 4 at the National Conference of the Society of Composers, Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The France-based duo of Thierry Miroglio (percussion) and Ancuza Aprodu (piano) premiered Vayo's Orion at Williams College (MA) on March 17. The Third Millennium Ensemble included Vayo's Poem in its March 1 concert in Bethesda, MD. Vayo performed original jazz and free improvisations with the Sonic Exploration Society in their February 28 concert at IWU. Audio Files of Music by David Vayo - Quiet Poem, from Sandpails, performed by Prof. Robert Mangialardi, baritone, with chamber ensemble of IWU students and faculty. Text by James McGowan, Emeritus Professor of English. - Play of Hands, performed by David Vayo, amplified harpsichord - First movement from Music for Wind Ensemble, performed by the IWU Wind Ensemble, Steven W. Eggleston, conductor - Second movement from Music for Wind Ensemble, performed by the IWU Wind Ensemble, Steven W. Eggleston, conductor - Arms Length for upright piano with paper-covered strings; written for a collaboration with IWU faculty choreographer Jean MacFarland Kerr Go here for Real Player
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| dvayo@iwu.edu | 556-3068 | Presser 251 Illinois Wesleyan University Bloomington, IL 61701 |
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| Office Hours |
Fall 2009 |
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| Monday | 3:00-4:00 | |
| Tuesday | 1:45-2:15, 3:15-4:00 | |
| Wednesday | - | |
| Thursday | 2:00-2:30, 3:15-4:00 | |
| Friday | 12:30 - 2:30* (by appt. only) | |