- Jean Eichelberger Ivey
Jean Eichelberger Ivey ("July 3, 1923 - ? ?, 2001?") was an American
composer who produced an extensive and diverse catalog of works in virtually every medium, including solo, chamber, vocal, orchestral, and she is a, "respected electronic composer." ["America's Women Composers: Up from the Footnotes". Author(s): Jeannie G. Pool. Source: "Music Educators Journal", Vol. 65, No. 5, (Jan., 1979), pp. 28-41. Published by: MENC: The National Association for Music Education. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3395571. Accessed: 27/06/2008 16:44.] Her music has been frequently represented on the programs of majororchestras and ensembles.She founded the Peabody Electronic Music Studio in 1967, and taught composition and
computer music at thePeabody Conservatory of Music until her retirement. Most of her works which include electronics do so in combination with live musicians. TheBaltimore Symphony premiered two of her works which combine tape with orchestra, and her music has been recorded on the CRI, Folkways and Grenadilla labels. Her publishers includeBoosey and Hawkes , Carl Fischer, Inc. and E.C. Schirmer.Ivey is listed in such reference works as the New Grove Dictionary of Music and
Who's Who in America . She is also the subject of a half-hourdocumentary film prepared in Washington: "A Woman Is... a Composer". Her awards include aGuggenheim fellowship , two fellowships from theNational Endowment for the Arts , annualASCAP awards since 1972, the Peabody Director's Recognition Award, and the Peabody Distinguished Alumni Award.She has expressed her compositional ideals as follows: "I consider all the musical resources of the past and present as being at the composer's disposal, but always in the service of the effective communication of humanistic ideas and intuitive emotion."
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