Rhian Samuel
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Professor Rhian Samuel (born in Aberdare, in 1944) is a Welsh composer. She was educated in Britain and the United States, and joined the teaching staff of City University, London in 1995 becoming Professor of Music there in 1999. Prior to that, she taught at the University of Reading (Head of Department, 1993–1995) and the St Louis Conservatory, St Louis, USA.
She has composed over 80 published works and her music has been performed in many countries. She has written chamber, vocal, choral, and orchestral music spanning from Elegy-Symphony (St Louis Symphony Orchestra (1981) to TIrluniau/Landscapes (BBC commission, BBCNOW, Proms 2000); in 1983 she won the ASCAP/Rudolph Nissim Prize for La Belle Dame sans Merci. She has also written about music; as co-editor of the New Grove (Norton) Dictionary of Women Composers, she has been at the forefront of issues concerning gender and music. She also writes on the operas of Harrison Birtwistle, having been commissioned by the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, to write programme essays on both Gawain and The Minotaur. Her most recent CD, Light and Water, is issued on the Deux-Elles label.
She is married to Professor Sir Curtis Price, Principal of the Royal Academy of Music, London.