Hearing The Pulitzers – Details, episodes & analysis

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Hearing The Pulitzers

Hearing The Pulitzers

hearingthepulitzers

Music

Frequency: 1 episode/31d. Total Eps: 69

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Hearing the Pulitzers: A piece-by-piece, episode-by-episode exploration of the winners of the Pulitzer Prize in Music with hosts Andrew Granade and David Thurmaier.
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Apple Podcasts

  • 🇺🇸 USA - musicHistory

    06/12/2025
    #70
  • 🇺🇸 USA - musicHistory

    11/09/2025
    #89
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    02/08/2025
    #92
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    01/08/2025
    #75
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    31/07/2025
    #59
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    30/07/2025
    #45
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    29/07/2025
    #30
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    28/07/2025
    #24
  • 🇺🇸 USA - musicHistory

    27/07/2025
    #93
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - musicHistory

    21/07/2025
    #98

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Episode 52 - 1994: Gunther Schuller, Of Reminiscences and Reflections

Episode 66

mercredi 11 septembre 2024Duration 28:33

In this episode, Dave and Andrew discuss one of the composers Dave wishes he had met, Gunther Schuller. But does Schuller's winning work Of Reminiscences and Reflections live up to his high expectations?

If you'd like more information about Gunther Schuller, we recommend:

  1. Schuller's autobiography, A Life in Pursuit of Music and Beauty
  2. The Gunther Schuller Society
  3. Read "The Compleat Musician in the Complete Conservatory" in Schuller's collection of essays, Musings

Episode 51 - 1993: Christopher Rouse, Trombone Concerto

Episode 65

lundi 10 juin 2024Duration 29:49

In this episode, Dave and Andrew consider one of the few concertos to win the Pulitzer Prize, this time for an instrument whose sound some critics claimed grew "tiresome." Will they agree? And what famous composer's music is quoted in the piece?

If you'd like more information about Christopher Rouse, we recommend:

  1. This interview with Joe Alessi mentioned in the episode.
  2. R. Burkhardt Reiter's 2005 dissertation, Symmetry and Narrative in Christopher Rouse's Trombone Concerto with white space waiting (an original composition for chamber orchestra)
  3. Laurie Shulman's article, "Christopher Rouse: An Overview" in Tempo, no. 199 (1997): 2-8.

Episode 45 - 1987: John Harbison, The Flight Into Egypt

Episode 56

mercredi 30 août 2023Duration 29:14

In this episode Dave and Andrew discuss a composer known for his eclecticism, who writes music that features the influence of jazz, Stravinskian neoclassicism, Schoenbergian serialism, and a variety of popular idioms. But will that mixture of styles win them over when applied to a Biblical text about the "dark side" of Christmas?

If you'd like more information about Harbison, we recommend:

  1. Brian Galante's dissertation "John Harbison's The Flight into Egypt: An Analysis for Performance," University of North Texas, 2008.
  2. Mike Seabrook's "John Harbison and His Music," Tempo 197 (July 1996): 7–11.
  3. Tom Jacob's profile in the San Francisco Classical Voice.

Episode 44 - 1986: George Perle, Wind Quintet IV

Episode 55

mardi 27 juin 2023Duration 22:46

In this episode, Dave and Andrew discuss someone they know primarily as a music theorist. George Perle is celebrated for his theoretical work on twelve-tone theory and Alban Berg's music, but how does he stack up as a composer? And what do they think of the first woodwind quintet to win a Pulitzer?

 

For more information about George Perle, we recommend:

  1. George Perle, Twelve-Tone Tonality, 2nd edition (University of California Press, 1996).
  2. George Perle, The Operas of Alban Berg, Vol I and Vol II (University of California Press, 1989).
  3. Elliott Antokoletz, "George Perle: Man, Composer, and Theorist," Theory and Practice 33 (2008): 55-63.
  4. Steven Rosenhaus, "Harmonic Motion in George Perle's Wind Quintet No. 4" Ph.D. dissertation, New York University, 1995.

Episode 43 -1985: Stephen Albert, Symphony RiverRun

Episode 54

mercredi 7 juin 2023Duration 27:44

In this episode, Dave and Andrew continue discussing the streak of Neo-Romantic winners of the Pulitzer Prize in music with Stephen Albert's Symphony RiverRun. But will this symphony win them over?

 

For more information about Stephen Albert, we recommend:

  1. Ron Petrides's dissertation "Pitch Organization in Stephen Albert's Symphony RiverRun: A Study in Modal Combinations and Tonal Centricity" PhD Diss, NYU, 2008.
  2. Holly Watkins's article "The Pastoral After Environmentalism: Nature and Culture in Stephen Albert's Symphony: RiverRun" Current Musicology, no. 84 (2007): 7-24.
  3. Stephen Albert's Website (maintained by Alissa Grimaldi)

Episode 42 - 1984: Bernard Rands, Canti del Sole

Episode 53

vendredi 12 mai 2023Duration 28:08

In this episode, Dave and Andrew discuss a composer associated with New Romanticism. But is that label reductive or does it accurately describe Bernard Rands's music? How about this song cycle based on poems about the sun?

If you'd like more information about Rands, we recommend:

  1. Will Robin's article "Horizons ’83, Meet the Composer, and New Romanticism’s New Marketplace" in Musical Quarterly, Vol. 102, nos. 2-3 (2019): 158–99.
  2. Benjamin Rivera's thesis "An Introduction to the Musical Language of Bernard Rands, as Demonstrated in Canti d'Amor" from Roosevelt University in 2005.
  3. Bruce Duffie's interview with Bernard Rands.

Bonus: An Interview with Ellen Taaffe Zwilich

Episode 52

samedi 25 février 2023Duration 31:28

In this special bonus episode, Dave and Andrew talk with Pulitzer Winner Ellen Taaffe Zwilich. What did she learn studying at Florida State University and with former Pulitzer winners Roger Sessions and Elliott Carter? And why does she have a framed "Peanuts" cartoon in her studio? We hope you enjoy hearing from her about these insights and more!

 

Episode 41 - 1983: Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Symphony No.1 (Three Movements for Orchestra)

Episode 51

vendredi 10 février 2023Duration 24:56

In this episode, Dave and Andrew discuss the first female Pulitzer Prize winner, Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, who wrote a symphony of all things. What will they think about the first symphony to win the prize since Walter Piston's Symphony No. 7 back in 1961?

 

As promised in the episode, here's Ellen Taaffe Zwilich's appearance in Peanuts.

If you'd like more information about Zwilich, we recommend:

  1. Julie Schnepel's article "Ellen Taaffe Zwilich's Symphony No. 1: Developing Variation in the 1980s" in Indiana Theory Review Vol. 10 (Spring and Fall 1989): 1-19
  2. Anthony J. Palmer's "Interview with Ellen Taaffe Zwilich" in Philosophy of Music Education Review Vol. 19, No. 1 (Spring 2011): 80-99.
  3. Ellen Taaffe Zwilich's website.

Episode 40 - 1982: Roger Sessions, Concerto for Orchestra

Episode 50

lundi 16 janvier 2023Duration 27:37

In this episode, Dave and Andrew discuss the third winner of the Pulitzer Prize to study with Horatio Parker at Yale, Roger Sessions, for his Concerto for Orchestra. Since the other two winners were Charles Ives and Quincy Porter, it isn't a shock that Sessions was 85 years old when he won. What will they think about this blast from the past?

 

If you'd like to learn more about Roger Sessions, we recommend:

  1. Roger Sessions on Music: Collected Essays, edited by Edward T. Cone (Princeton University Press, 1979).
  2. Andrea Olmstead's book Roger Sessions: A Biography (Routledge, 2008).
  3. The Correspondence of Roger Sessions by Andrea Olmstead and Roger Sessions (Northeastern University Press, 1992)
  4. The Roger Sessions Society

Episode 39 - 1981: No Winner

Episode 49

jeudi 22 décembre 2022Duration 24:13

In this episode, Dave and Andrew cover the fourth and final time (so far) that the Pulitzer Board decided not to award a music prize. Unlike 1965, which was the last year they didn't award the prize, 1981 wasn't mired in controversy. So why did the Pulitzer Board not award a prize and what should have won? As a bonus, Dave and Andrew also discuss lessons learned after covering 40 years of the Pulitzer Prize and make predictions for what's to come!

 


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