About

Editorial Statement


NewMusicBox is a Web-based advocacy magazine and portal dedicated to the music of American composers and improvisers and their champions. A multimedia publication from the American Music Center, NewMusicBox offers: in-depth profiles, articles, and discussions; up-to-the-minute industry news and commentary; coverage of upcoming performances and new books; plus a direct portal to our internet radio station, Counterstream, where visitors can hear recordings of American music as well as special programs.

Embracing the broadest possible range of viewpoints, NewMusicBox invigorates and gives voice to a global online community dedicated to this ever-evolving music while bringing it to the attention of the world at large. Building on the energy derived from the music itself, NewMusicBox is a vital hub for information that cannot be found elsewhere.


Donors

Major support for NewMusicBox is provided by The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the New York State Music Fund, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. For a full list of AMC funders and supporters, click here.

Who's Who

Frank J. Oteri, Composer Advocate & Founding Editor
Frank J. Oteri
Photo © 2005 by Jeffrey Herman

Frank J. Oteri is the Composer Advocate at the American Music Center and the founding editor of its web magazine NewMusicBox, which has been online since May of 1999. An outspoken crusader for new music and the breaking down of barriers between genres, Frank has written for publications including BBC Music, Chamber Music, Ear Magazine, Stagebill/Playbill, Symphony, Time Out New York and the Revised New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, has been a frequent radio and pre-concert speaker, and has served as the host for ASCAP's Thru The Walls showcase, Meet The Composer's The Works in Minneapolis, and the 21st Century Schizoid Music series at the Cornelia Street Café. Frank holds a B.A. and a M.A. (in Ethnomusicology) from Columbia University where he served as Classical Music Director and World Music Director for WKCR-FM.

Frank's own musical compositions, which reconcile structural concepts from minimalism and serialism and frequently explore microtonality, span operas and chamber music, solo keyboard works and original bluegrass/old-timey songs for his band The String Messengers. His music has been programmed in venues ranging from Carnegie's Weill Recital Hall, the Los Angeles Contemporary Museum of Art and the Theatre Royal in Bath, England to Galapagos, the Knitting Factory, the Sidewalk Café and the Bethlehem Musikfest (PA), and has been performed by sopranos Gilda Lyons and Cybele Paschke, tenors Rob Frankenberry and Harlan DeBell, keyboardists Sarah Cahill, Trudy Chan, Jenny Lin, Guy Livingston, Rebecca Pechefsky, guitarists Dominic Frasca and David Starobin, the Magellan String Quartet, Sylvan Winds, Pentasonic Winds, the PRISM Saxophone Quartet, and the rock band Capital M, among others. MACHUNAS, Oteri's "performance oratorio in four colors" based on the life of Fluxus-founder George Maciunas created in collaboration with painter/performance artist Lucio Pozzi, was staged at the Contemporary Arts Centre in Vilnius, Lithuania as part of the International Christopher Summer Festival in a production conducted by Donatas Katkus (August 20-21, 2005).

Molly Sheridan, Managing Editor, NewMusicBox

Molly Sheridan
Photo by Dayna Regalado

Molly Sheridan is the managing editor of NewMusicBox.org and the director of CounterstreamRadio.org. She is also the host of Carnegie Hall's Sound Insights podcasts. Her writing appears in publications such as TimeOut, The Washington Post, and the occasional concert program.

Prior to joining the AMC staff, Sheridan worked for the American Symphony Orchestra League, where she was associate editor of Symphony magazine and the League's webmaster. She attended the Honors Tutorial College at Ohio University, earning a bachelor's in journalism with a specialization in violin performance and French in 1999. During her college years, she managed marketing and development for the university's performing arts series, edited Southeast Ohio magazine, and played professionally with a number of orchestras in the region.


Randy Nordschow, Associate Editor, NewMusicBox

Randy Nordschow
Photo by Colin Conroy

Renowned musicians, from Fred Frith to the Janáček Philharmonic, have performed Nordschow's music throughout North America and Europe at venues like Symphony Space, IJsbreker, and the Italian Academy, and at festivals such as the Spoleto Festival USA, Global Ear (Germany), International Gaudeamus Music Week (Netherlands), Voix Nouvelles (France), Ostrava Days (Czech Republic), June in Buffalo, the Santa Fe International Festival of New Music, and the New Music Miami ISCM Festival. Exhibitions of his sound and visual work have been featured at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, New Langton Arts, Southern Exposure, and the Exploratorium, including a solo exhibition titled Heard It All Before presented by a.o.v. Gallery.

Nordschow has lectured on music at the Julliard School and his writing has appeared in Interrobang?!, Chamber Music magazine, and Playbill. As a performer he has collaborated, improvised, and performed with artists ranging from Christian Wolff to Deerhoof. He appears on recordings and videos released by Kill Rock Stars, Decomposition, and Bananafish. His composition Detail of Beethoven's Hair is featured on Jenny Lin's album, The Eleventh Finger, released by Koch International Classics.


About the American Music Center
American Music Center

The American Music Center (AMC) was founded in 1939 by composers Marion Bauer, Aaron Copland, Howard Hanson, Harrison Kerr, Otto Luening, and Quincy Porter to support the creation and presentation of new American music. Since then, the Center has been a leader in providing field-wide advocacy, support, and connection for the field of new American music. Its programs include NewMusicBox, the award-winning web magazine; Counterstream Radio, a 24/7 online radio station programming American music; grantmaking initiatives Live Music For Dance and the Composer Assistance Program; Tuning Up Your Career and Nuts & Bolts, professional development workshops for composers and others working in new music; and Explore American Music, a web portal to new American music, composers, repertory and ensembles (including the AMC Online Library, a searchable database of some 43,000 works by American composers). Membership is open to composers, performers, ensembles, and institutions. Membership benefits include monthly listings of opportunities in the field, ability to upload biographical information and works to the Online Library, and eligibility to apply for grants. Visit www.amc.net.

Copyright Notice

The material in this web site is copyright © 1998-2008 by the American Music Center, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.

Disclaimers

Articles and commentary posted on NewMusicBox reflect the viewpoint of their individual authors; their appearance on NewMusicBox does not imply official endorsement by the American Music Center.



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