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1 minute read
Yale well-represented at Pulitzers
Anthony Davis Michael Torke Alex Weiser
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Composer and Yale alumnus Anthony Davis ’75BA won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in music, and two other Yalies, composers Michael Torke ’86 and Alex Weiser ’11BA, were finalists for the prestigious award.
Davis won the Pulitzer for The Central Park Five, which the jury described as “a courageous operatic work, marked by powerful vocal writing and sensitive orchestration, that skillfully transforms a notorious example of contemporary injustice into something empathetic and hopeful.” The piece, whose libretto was written by Richard Wesley, was premiered in 2019 by the Long Beach Opera.
Torke’s Sky: Concerto for Violin was described by the jury as “a composition that merges traditions of bluegrass and classical music through the musical instrument common to both forms, a virtuosic work of astonishing beauty, expert pacing and generous optimism.” Weiser’s and all the days were purple, for singer, piano, percussion, and string trio, was described as “a meditative and deeply spiritual work whose unexpected musical language is arresting and directly emotional.” Torke studied for a year with Jacob Druckman and Martin Bresnick at the Yale School of Music. Davis taught composition and African American studies at Yale as a Lustman Fellow in 1981 and has served as a visiting professor at the School of Music on four occasions, all in the 1990s.
Davis’ father, Charles Davis, who died in 1981, chaired Yale’s Department of African-American Studies and served as head of what is now the university’s Grace Hopper College.
Among the jurors for this year’s Pulitzer Prize in music was composer and Yale School of Music alumnus Kevin Puts ’96MM, who won the award in 2012 for his Silent Night: Opera in Two Acts. q