Mason Bates, the Richmond-bred composer whose works have been performed by many of this country’s leading orchestras and ensembles, has
been named composer-in-residence of the Kennedy Center in Washington for a three-year period beginning in the 2015-16 season.Bates, now in his sixth year as a composer-in-residence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, will compose works for various groups that perform at the Kennedy Center. Performing groups and series affiliated with the center include the National Symphony Orchestra, Washington National Opera, Kennedy Center Chamber Players and Fortas Chamber Music Series.
No specific commissions have been announced yet.
The 38-year-old composer, who doubles as a DJ in dance clubs and other spaces (in that guise, he’s known as DJ Masonic), also will curate a contemporary music series and work on various projects intended to enhance the Kennedy Center’s presence in the surrounding community.
An alumnus of Richmond’s St. Christopher’s School, Bates went on to study at New York’s Juilliard School and Columbia University, and subsequently earned his doctorate in composition at the University of California at Berkeley. John Corigliano and David Del Tredici were Bates’ principal composition teachers.
Now living near San Francisco, Bates is perhaps best known for works, such as “Rusty Air in Carolina” and “Liquid Interface,” that incorporate electronica (computer-generated electronic sounds) in symphonic orchestrations.
He also has written many chamber and orchestral works with standard instrumentation, including the Violin Concerto that Anne Akiko Meyers has performed with several orchestras, including the Richmond Symphony, since its premiere in 2012, and a Cello Concerto, recently introduced by Joshua Roman with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra.
In recent years, Bates’ music has been among the most frequently programmed of any living American composer’s.
The Washington Post’s Anne Midgette reports on Bates’ Kennedy Center appointment:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/style/wp/2015/01/28/kennedy-center-names-first-composer-in-residence/
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be meatier, both in content and execution, than most of the programs that the ensemble has presented here in recent years.
not many old friends come calling with a 1742 Guarneri in hand.)

listening vantage – front row center, first dress circle, which ought to be a prime location acoustically.
Chesterfield County.
variety of memorable and influential compositions – none more so than Richard Wagner’s 
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“Brandenburg” Concerto No. 3 added for concerts on Jan. 10 at Southside Church of the Nazrene in Chesterfield County and Jan. 11 at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland. . . . French flutist Nicholas Duchamp joins the Eckhardt Ensemble in a program of Bach and Italian Renaissance dances, Jan. 10 at St. Luke Lutheran Church. . . . The Chamber Music Society of Central Virginia presents three programs of baroque music, a free lecture-recital on the trio sonata, Jan. 10 in the Richmond Public Library’s Gellman Room, and ticketed concerts on Jan. 10 (featuring soprano Jessica Petrus) and Jan. 12 at First Unitarian Universalist Church. . . . Steven Smith
News, Norfolk and Virginia Beach. . . . Marin Alsop conducts the Baltimore Symphony in Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring” and Osvaldo Golijov’s “Rose of the Wind,” featuring a multi-ethnic, multi-genre quartet of instruments, Jan. 11 at Strathmore.
Wolfgang Rihm’s Piano Concerto No. 2, Jan. 17 and 19 at the Kennedy Center in Washington. . . . The St. Lawrence String Quartet plays Haydn, Dvořák and John Adams, Jan. 23 at the Library of Congress in Washington. . . . Virginia Opera opens its new production of Richard Strauss’ “Salome” with performances on Jan. 30 and Feb. 1 and 3 at the Harrison Opera House in Norfolk (February dates follow in Richmond and Fairfax). . . . The State Symphony of Mexico performs on Jan. 30 at the Virginia Tech Arts Center in Blacksburg and Jan. 31 at George Mason University’s Center for the Arts in Fairfax. . . . Marin Alsop conducts the Baltimore Symphony in Mahler’s epic Third Symphony, Jan. 31 at Strathmore.