Beth
Wiemann was
raised in Burlington, VT, studied composition and clarinet at Oberlin
College and received her PhD in
theory and composition from
Princeton University. Her works have been performed in New York, Boston,
Houston, San Francisco, Washington DC, the Dartington Festival (UK),
the "Spring in Havana 2000 Festival (Cuba), and elsewhere by the
ensembles Continuum, Parnassus, Earplay, ALEA III, singers Paul Hillier,
Susan Narucki, D’Anna Fortunato and others. Her compositions have
won awards from the Opera Vista Chamber Opera Competition, the Orvis
Foundation, Copland House, the Colorado New Music Festival, American
Women Composers, and Marimolin as well as various arts councils. A founding
member of Griffin Music Ensemble, a contemporary music group in Boston,
she premiered many clarinet works and conducted composer-in-the-schools
workshops in the Boston and Worcester public schools. After teaching
at the College of the Holy Cross and Salisbury State University, she
now teaches at the University of
Maine. In addition to clarinet instruction, her work at UMaine includes
teaching Orchestration, Tonal Counterpoint, Twentieth Century Musical
Techniques, Composition, and Graduate -level theory seminars. A CD of
Wiemann's music, Why Performers Wear Black, was released on Albany Records
in 2004. Songs of hers appear currently on the Capstone, innova and Americus
record labels. Wiemann's personal website can be found at http://home.earthlink.net/~bwiemann/beffpage_001.htm
beth.wiemann@umit.maine.edu
|