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Recognized internationally as an
outstanding performing and recording artist, a charismatic educator, and a
transcriber and editor of both taste and intelligence, David Tanenbaum is
one of the most admired classical guitarists of his generation. He has
performed throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, Europe, Australia,
the former Soviet Union and Asia, and in 1988 he became the first American
guitarist to be invited to perform in China by the Chinese government. He
has been soloist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony,
Minnesota Orchestra, London Sinfonietta, the Oakland Symphony, Vienna's ORF
orchestra, with such eminent conductors as Esa-Pekka Salonen, Kent Nagano
and John Adams.
David Tanenbaum has been a featured soloist at many international festivals,
including those of Bath, Luzern, Frankfurt, Barcelona and Vienna as well as
numerous guitar festivals. In 1989, as President of the Second American
Classical Guitar Congress, he commissioned five new works, including
Rosewood by Henry Brant for a large guitar orchestra. He has subsequently
conducted Rosewood more than a dozen times on four continents.
While his repertoire encompasses diverse styles, David Tanenbaum is
recognized as one of today's most eloquent proponents of new guitar
repertoire. Among the many works written for him is Hans Werner Henze's
guitar concerto An Eine Äolsharfe, which he premiered throughout Europe and
recorded with the composer conducting, Terry Riley's first guitar piece,
Ascención, four works by 1998 Pulitzer Prize winner Aaron Jay Kernis, two
pieces by Roberto Sierra, and a suite by Lou Harrison. He is currently
working with Terry Riley on a series of 24 guitar pieces. He has toured
extensively with Steve Reich and Musicians, was invited to Japan in 1991 by
Toru Takemitsu, and has had a long association with the Ensemble Modern. As
a chamber musician he has collaborated with, among others, the Kronos,
Shanghai, Alexander and Chester String Quartets, dancer Tandy Beal and
guitarist Manuel Barrueco. He is currently a member of the World Guitar
Ensemble, which regularly tours Europe.
David Tanenbaum's three dozen recordings, which reflect his broad repertoire
interests, can be found on New Albion, EMI, Nonesuch, Ars Musici, Rhino, GSP,
Albany, Audiofon, Bayer, Acoustic Music Records, Bridge, Stradivarius and
others. His 2002 recording as soloist with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los
Angeles Philharmonic in John Adam's Naive and Sentimental Music was
nominated for a Grammy as the Best New Composition. He has produced many
editions of guitar music, including the David Tanenbaum Concert Series for
Guitar Solo Publications. He has also written a series of three books, The
Essential Studies, which analyze the etudes of Sor, Carcassi and Brouwer and
compliment his recordings of those works on GSP, and his chapter on the
Revival of the Classical Guitar in the 20th Century appears in the Cambridge
Companion to the Guitar.
David Tanenbaum is currently Chair of the Guitar Department at the San
Francisco Conservatory of Music, where he received the 1995 Oustanding
Professor Award, and he has been Artist-In-Residence at the Manhattan School
of Music. He is in demand for master classes worldwide. Mr. Tanenbaum's
students have won many international competitions, and his former students
hold teaching positions internationally.
David Tanenbaum studied guitar with Rolando Valdez-Blain, Aaron Shearer and
Michael Lorimer, attending the San Francisco Conservatory and Peabody
Conservatory. Further studies included work with pianist Jeanne Stark-Iochmans
and harpsichordist Laurette Goldberg. He participated in the 1981 New York
master class with Andres Segovia. |