Jason Eckardt


Jason Eckardt is an American composer. He began his musical life playing guitar in heavy metal and jazz bands and abruptly moved to composing after discovering the music of Anton Webern.

Compositions

and microtonal harmony, intricate rhythms, highly polyphonic textures and large-scale transformational processes are prevalent in Eckardt’s compositions. Allan Kozinn of The New York Times wrote, " music celebrates harmonic prickliness, rhythmic complexity and a density of ideas". Though Eckardt has been associated with the New Complexity movement, he is also influenced by American composers Milton Babbitt and Elliott Carter.
Major works include After Serra for chamber ensemble, Tongues for soprano and chamber ensemble, Reul na Coille for percussion and orchestra, Trespass for piano and chamber orchestra and the Undersong cycle, a series of four chamber works that, when played together without pause, form a concert-length supercomposition.
Some of Eckardt's compositions are inspired by extramusical subjects, such as extraordinary rendition, the sculptures of Richard Serra, W.S. Merwin's poem "Echoes" and George W. Bush's 2003 State of the Union Address. Subject, a work for string quartet, uses special concert lighting to recreate the conditions used to interrogate military detainees. Eckardt has also written about the influence of research in cognitive psychology on his compositional techniques.
Eckardt has received commissions for his work from several major institutions and performers including Carnegie Hall, Tanglewood, the Koussevitzky Foundation, the Guggenheim Museum, the Fromm Foundation at Harvard University, Chamber Music America, the New York State Music Fund, Meet the Composer, the Oberlin Conservatory and percussionist Evelyn Glennie. His works have been programmed internationally by festivals including the Festival d'Automne a Paris, IRCAM-Resonances, ISCM World Music Days, Darmstädter Ferienkurse, Musica Strasbourg, Voix Nouvelles, Musik im 20. Jahrhundert, Musikhost, Currents in Musical Thought-Seoul, New Consortium, International Review of Contemporary Music, Festival of New American Music and the International Bartok Festival. Eckardt’s catalog is published by Carl Fischer Music.

Career

Eckardt has taught composition, theory and musicology at Columbia University, the Peabody Conservatory, the Oberlin Conservatory, New York University, the University of Illinois, Rutgers University and Northwestern University. He is also the co-founder of Ensemble 21, the contemporary music chamber ensemble based in New York City. He is currently Professor of composition at City University of New York's Conservatory of Music at Brooklyn College and Graduate Center.

Awards

In 2004, Eckardt was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. Eckardt has also earned fellowships from the Rockefeller Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Fondation Royaumont, the MacDowell and Millay Colonies, the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts, the Fritz Reiner Center for Contemporary Music, the Composers Conference at Wellesley, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the Yvar Mikhashoff Trust for New Music. Eckardt’s compositions have received awards from the League of Composers/ISCM, Deutschen Musikrat-Stadt Wesel, ASCAP, the University of Illinois and Columbia University.

Education

Eckardt attended Berklee College of Music, first as a guitar performance major before switching to composition, eventually earning a BA. He continued his studies at Columbia University, principally with Jonathan Kramer, and earned MA and DMA degrees. He attended masterclasses with Milton Babbitt, James Dillon, Brian Ferneyhough, Jonathan Harvey, and Karlheinz Stockhausen.

List of compositions