Maria Newman
Maria Newman | |
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Maria Newman at Pepperdine University in February, 2013. | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Maria Louise Newman |
Born |
Los Angeles, California, U.S. | January 18, 1962
Genres | |
Occupation(s) | Composer, conductor, arranger, musician |
Instruments |
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Years active | 1980-present |
Labels |
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Website |
www |
Maria Newman (born Maria Louise Newman on January 18, 1962, in Los Angeles, California) is an award-winning American composer of classical music, and a critically acclaimed violinist, violist and pianist.[1] She is the youngest child of Alfred Newman, a major Hollywood film composer. Maria holds the Louis and Annette Kaufman Composition Chair; and the Joachim Chassman Violin Chair at the Montgomery Arts House for Music and Architecture in Malibu, California, and is a founder of the Malibu Friends of Music,.[2] Her library of original works represents a range of genres, from large-scale orchestral works, works for the ballet,[3] chamber works, choral and vocal works, to new collaborative scores for vintage silent film.[4] She has been presented with many awards and commissions, including musical commendations from the United States Congress (2009), the California State Senate (2009), the California State Assembly (2009), the City of Malibu (2010), and the Annenberg Foundation (2011).[5]
Life and career
The youngest of the children of nine-time Academy Award winning composer/conductor Alfred Newman and former Goldwyn Girl and businesswoman, Martha Louis Montgomery, Maria Newman is part of the musical Hollywood Newman family dynasty.[6] Her father, Alfred Newman, (1900-1970), was the conductor of the original Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.
Newman grew up in Pacific Palisades, California and began studying piano at age six. At age eight, she started a lifelong tie to the violin and was composing by age nine. As a teenager, Newman studied with violinist, Joachim Chassman,[7] who was a founding member of the Hollywood String Quartet,[8] and played in the 20th Century Fox Studio Orchestra under Alfred Newman (composer).[9]
After high school, Newman entered the University of Rochester's Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY, where she studied violin with Peter Salaff [10] of the Cleveland Quartet, and piano with Blair Cosman,[11] graduating in 1984, and earning a Bachelor of Music (BM ’84) with high honors (Magna cum Laude). Also in 1984, Newman was inducted into the American Academic Honor Society, Pi Kappa Lambda.[12] Newman attended Yale University from 1984-1986, completing graduate work there, studying violin with Syoko Aki,[13] and composition with Martin Bresnick. She earned a Master of Music Degree (MM ’86), and received Yale School of Music's George Wellington Miles Award.[14] In addition to her active career as a composer, and performing her own works in concert, Maria Newman has collaborated as a soloist with celebrities Pierce Brosnan,[15] Billy Crystal, Paul Reiser, Randy Newman, and Daniel Stern. Her works have been performed in such novel locations as the U. S, Capitol Building, Hearst Castle Private Theatre,[16] Washington State Capitol Building Rotunda, The National Archives, the Kennedy Center, and the U.S. Marine Barracks, among others.
Newman and her husband, Scott Hosfeld, who is the Founding Conductor/Music Director of the Malibu Coast Chamber Orchestra, currently live in Malibu, California. They are raising five children: Martha Jeannette Thatcher (b. 1996), lsabella Montgomery Thatcher (b. 1998), Samuel (Sonny) James Thatcher (b. 2000), Noah Louis Hosfeld (b. 2005), and Joaquin Syrus Hosfeld (b. 2008).[9]
Family and renowned siblings
Maria is the youngest child of Martha Louis Montgomery (born December 5, 1920, Clarksdale, Mississippi - died May 9, 2005, Pacific Palisades, California), a former John Robert Powers model, actress, benefactor and Goldwyn Girl, and 9-time Academy Award-winning film composer, Alfred Newman (composer). Maria Newman has four older siblings: Thomas Newman, David Newman, Fred Newman, Lucy Newman Whiffen. She has one half brother, Tim Newman.
Maria is from a large family of major Hollywood film composers:
- Her older brother David Newman has scored nearly 100 films, including Hoffa, Galaxy Quest, The Nutty Professor, The War of the Roses, and Ice Age.
- Her older brother Thomas Newman has scored over 75 films, including Finding Nemo, The Green Mile, The Shawshank Redemption, Fried Green Tomatoes, Road to Perdition, American Beauty, and WALL-E, and has received twelve Academy Award nominations.
- Her first cousin, Randy Newman is a two-time Academy Award-winner noted not only for his film work, but also for a series of popular albums as a singer/songwriter, including: "Toy Story", "Toy Story 2," "Toy Story 3."
- Her cousin Joey Newman has scored many TV series, films, and video games.
- Her niece Jaclyn Newman Dorn is a music editor, and won a Golden Reel Award for 30 Days of Night: Dark Days, and received another nomination for Burlesque.
- Her uncle Lionel Newman scored three dozen films and several TV series, adapting and conducting scores for hundreds of other films.
- Her uncle Emil Newman scored over 80 films.
Composition career
Maria Newman is an Annenberg Foundation Composition Fellow, and received a grant from the foundation in 2012.
As a violinist who performs and records around the world, Maria Newman began her professional composition career using a pseudonym. "I was terribly worried that I would not be taken seriously as a female composer in what I felt was a highly male-dominated field. My famous family’s film musician genealogy also put the notion into my mind that I would not be accepted, much less respected, in the concert music world as a serious composer."[17] Newman used the name, M. Louis Parker, the name of her maternal great-grandmother, feeling that the name neither indicated that she was a Newman, nor a woman. In 1991, Newman began using her own name as a composer. Newman studied composition briefly with Martin Bresnick, at Yale University, though she received both her BM and MM in Violin Performance. To date, Newman's original music library consists of over 150 concert works.
Icicle Creek Music Center
In the Summer of 1995, Newman was appointed Composer-in-Residence for the Icicle Creek Music Center in Leavenworth, Washington. She held the post until the end of the 2004 summer season.
Montgomery Arts House for Music and Architecture and Malibu Friends of Music
As Composer-in-Residence at the Montgomery Arts House for Music and Architecture (MAHMA), a modern craftsman venue in Malibu, California, designed by Eric Lloyd Wright of the Frank Lloyd Wright family of architects, Newman participates in 40-plus concerts annually in this venue alone. Her duties at MAHMA include Composer-in-Residence for the Malibu Coast Chamber Orchestra, Malibu Madrigals, the Malibu Coast Silent Film Orchestra,[18] Malibu Coast String Quartet, the Malibu Ocast Chamber Ballet, and the Malibu Coast Chamber Orchestra Solisti. Newman has held the Louis and Annette Kaufman Composition Chair and the Joachim Chassman Violin Chair at the Montgomery Arts House for Music and Architecture (MAHMA) and the Malibu Friends of Music since 2005.
Newman’s achievement at MAHMA is the story of a dedicated classical musician, who, through perseverance, dedication and the belief that music is a highly powerful community-wide healing mechanism, is offering music and music making on an intimate level. Newman has a gift of making audiences feel valued and she effortlessly gains their trust. It is important to Newman that the musicians are happy as well. Says Newman, "I feel that at MAHMA we are in a place where dear friends gather to rehearse, perform, listen, experience, eat, laugh, and discuss music and art in depth. The level of music-making here is extraordinarily high and truly rare for a small town, as we bring in wonderful guest artists and speakers from around the world to collaborate with our outstanding group of resident artists. The entire experience at MAHMA is marvelously satisfying." In addition, Newman tours frequently as featured composer, performer, lecturer and master teacher.[19]
According to critic Jim Svejda, "Maria Newman is hugely musical, bewitching, profound and playful with an instantly recognizable and unusually appealing musical personality."
Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble
Along with pianist/longtime musical partner, Wendy Prober, Newman founded the Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble[20] in 1987. With Viklarbo, Newman and Prober have concertized in this country’s most prestigious concert halls, as well as for some of the poorest communities in the United States.[21] The ensemble has been awarded grants from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department, the California Arts Council, the Utah Tour for the Performing Arts, the Delta Arts Council, the Headwaters Council for the Arts, Hawaii Council for the Arts, and many others. The ensemble continues to present concerts today. Newman serves as Composer-in-Residence for the ensemble.
Guest residencies
Newman has been guest composer for Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra, Solisti New York, Brevard Symphony Orchestra, San Jose Chamber Orchestra, New West Symphony, Olympia Chamber Orchestra, Wichita Symphony, Los Angeles Jewish Symphony, Santa Monica Symphony, Pacific Serenades, Martha’s Vineyard Chamber Music Society, Chamber Music Palisades, Dorian Festival Chamber Orchestra at Luther College, Omaha Conservatory Festival and Cinema Orchestras, Azusa Pacific Grand Orchestra Festival, Central Washington University Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Omaha, Wonder of Words Festival (WOW!), Northwestern University, Indiana University, Bloomington, School of Music Philharmonic Orchestra, and more.[22]
Performance career
A bold and versatile performer, Newman’s performances of both her works and traditional masterworks are consistently programmed in concert halls and heard regularly on radio broadcasts and on television worldwide. In her role as violinist, violist and pianist, Maria Newman has concertized around the world as a soloist, recitalist, and as a member of the Malibu Coast String Quartet and the Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble.[20] As a concert soloist, Newman has also premiered many new works for violin, as well as for viola (including many of her own) in some of the United States and Europe. She was the viola soloist for the Grammy Award-winning album, "Symphonic Hollywood", in Miklos Rozsa’s "Viola Concerto" with the Nuremberg Symphony. Newman performed the U.S. premiere of Miklos Rozsa’s Violin Concerto No. 1 with the St. Matthew’s Chamber Orchestra, as well as the premiere recording of Rozsa’s Introduction and Allegro for Solo Viola.
Ms. Newman has collaborated in concert as soloist with celebrities Pierce Brosnan, Billy Crystal, Paul Reiser and Daniel Stern, and has performed as a featured soloist at the United States Capitol Building Complex on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C., headlining a Special Event representing the highly debated Victim's Rights Bill. Newman has been featured as commissioned composer and performer in the Private Theatre inside the Historic Hearst Castle in San Simeon, California, introduced by William Randolph Hearst III.
Selected works
This is only a list of selected works.[23]
String Quartet
- String Quartet No.1, Opus 33, No. 7 "Birthday of the Infanta" (1995)
- 1. The Party – Carneval
Birthday of the Infanta, Second Movement
Performed by John Michel | |
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
- 2. The Bull Fight
- 3. The Dance of the Dwarf
- 4. The Forest and the Minuet
- 5. The Search and the Mirror
- 6. Finale: The Death of the Dwarf
- String Quartet No.2, Opus 35, No. 1 "Lauds" (1998)
- 1. Maestoso feroce - Allegro
- 2. Poco andante – poco allegro
- 3. Stiltedly swaying, moderato
- 4. Intermezzo: Allegro molto
- 5. Finale: Allegro molto
Piano
- I. Largo-Presto
- II. Andante Iontano
- III. Allegro assai
- The Complete Ballet Music for Two Pianos, Opus 39, No. 1 "Emma McChesney" (2002)
- I. Moderato-Feroce (The Traveling Saleswoman)
- II. Moderato, molto legato (Emma Tells of Her Life)
- III. Andantino melancholica (The Robbery)
- IV. Feroce, accented (Mad Dance Lessons with Jock)
Song Cycles for Voice & Mixed Ensembles/Orchestra
- "A Breath of Mississippi," Opus 43, No. 5 Song Cycle for Soprano, Two Violins and Piano (2005)
- (On the poetry of Louise Moss Montgomery)
- I. Little Songs
- II. Watchword
- III. Under the Oak Tree
- IV. My Auntie Mother
- V. That’s Home
- "Songs on Motherhood," Opus 36, No. 2 Song Cycle for Soprano (or Mezzo Soprano), Violin, Clarinet (or Viola, and Harp (or Piano) (1998)
- (On poetry of Louise Moss Montgomery)
- I. To a Refractory Father
- II. Jeu, Intermede 1
- III. Pirouetting
- IV. Jeu, Intermede 2
- V. Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep (anonymous poetry)
- "Montgomery Carols, Set 1," Opus 39 No. 1 For SATB and Mixed Chamber Ensemble (2001)
- (On poetry of Maria Newman)
- I. Ring Your Bells
- II. Baby Lord of Majesty
- III. Little Saviour of Healing Light
- "Shirat Hayam," Opus 44 No. 4 For Tenor Voice (or Baritone) and String Orchestra/Harp OR Tenor Voice (or Baritone) and Piano Quintet OR Tenor Voice (or Baritone) and Piano (2006)
- I. Extol I
- II. Extol II
Flute with Mixed Chamber Ensembles
- Pennipotenti, Opus 42, No. 1 (2005)
- I. The Dipper
- II. The Snowy Owl
- III. The Humming Bird
- IV. The Falcon
- Sonata for Flute & Piano in the Style of the Harpsichord, Opus 44, No. 7 (1999)
- I. Misterioso, tiptoeing
- II. With virtuosic flourish (flute alone)
- III. Molto allegro possible
- IV. Largo
- V. Presto
- "The Pied Piper of Haemlin", Opus 47, No. 9 (2008)
- I. Reverie 1 (flute alone)
- II. Scene 1
- III. Reverie 2 (flute alone)
- IV. Scene 2
- V.Reverie 3 (flute alone)
- VI. Scene 3
- VII. Reverie 4
- VIII. Scene 4
- Colores de Mexico, Opus 44, No. 8 (2007)
- I. The Rain (La Lluvia)
- II. The Rattlesnake (La Culebra)
- III. The River (El Rio)
- IV. The Coyote (El Coyote)
- V. A Little Dance (Un Pequeno Baile)
Concerti for Solo Instruments & String Orchestra
- Cello Concerto, Opus 40, No. 6 (2002)
- I. Largo, poco intensivo
- II. Allegro molto
- III. Cadenza
- IV. Come prima, ma piu intensivo
(all movements attacca)
Othmar, First Movement
Othmar, Second Movement
Othmar, Third Movement
Performed by John Michel | |
Problems playing these files? See media help. |
- Othmar, Sonata for cello alone (2000)
- Viola Concerto, Opus 45, No. 10 (2006)
- I. Cadenza
- II. Chorale -Allegro
(all movements attacca)
- Violin Concerto, Opus 38, No. 7 "Lux Aeterna" (2001)
- I. Feroce Maestoso - Allegro
- Triple Violin Concerto, Opus 41, No. 4 "Trinitas et Unitas" (2003)
- I. Trinitas
- II Unitas (with soprano solo)
String Orchestra
- Concerto Grosso, Opus 34, No. 4 (1996)
- For String Orchestra
- I. Feroce maestoso - Allegro
- II. Quasi adagio ma non tanto, lontano
- III. Allegro energico
- "Le Livre D'Esther", Opus 38, No. 2 (2009)
String Duo
- Appalachian Duets, Opus 38, No. 8 (2001)
- For Two Violins
- I. Heart O' the Hills
- II. Goin' Fishin
- III. The Train
- IV. Mammy's Little Lullaby
- V. Granpap's Fiddle
Large Brass Ensemble
- Chorales for Brass and Percussion, Opus 35, No. 3 (1997, revised 2002)
- I. Chorale
- II. Dance
- III. Dirge
- IV. Finale
Filmography & commissions
Library of Vintage Silent Films
Maria Newman has been commissioned by the following organizations to score a revision of Vintage Silent Films by the following organizations: The Annenberg Foundation, The Mary Pickford Foundation, Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble, The Malibu Friends of Music,[24] Timeline Films, Luther College Dorian Festival, Omaha Conservatory of Music, Icicle Creek Music Center, Central Washington University, The Family of Mary Lofdahl, Milestone Films, A&F Productions, The Sierra Festival Symphony, Grand Performances Los Angeles, and Turner Classic Movies including the movie, "Mr. Wu" starring Lon Chaney (1927).[25]
A list of these films include:
Title of Film | Starring | Original Date | Running Time | Directed/Produced | Commissioned/Released by | Instrumentation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daddy-Long-Legs | Mary Pickford | 1919 | 85 minutes | Mary Pickford | Milestone Film and Video | For Piano Quintet and Percussion or Full Chamber Orchestra |
Heart o' the Hills | Mary Pickford | 1919 | 87 minutes | Marshall Neilan | Milestone Film and Video | For String Quartet and Percussion (Optional Prepared Piano)
-or- String Orchestra and Percussion |
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1917 film) | Mary Pickford | 1917 | 78 minutes | Marshall Neilan | Commissioned by the Mary Pickford Institute and Grand Performances, Los Angeles | For Flute, Two Violins, Viola, Cello, Piano and Percussion |
The Love Light | Mary Pickford | 1921 | 89 minutes | Directed by Frances Marion, Produced by United Artists | Milestone Film and Video | For Piano Quartet |
Quality Street | Marion Davies, Conrad Nagel | 1927 | 110 minutes | Produced by Marion Davies | Commissioned by the Annenberg Foundation | For Flute, Harp, Piano Quintet and Percussion |
Tom Sawyer | Jack Pickford | 1917 | 45 minutes | NA | Commissioned by the Library of Moving Images | For Flute, Violin and Percussion
-or- String Quartet |
Cinderella | Mary Pickford (Cinderella), Owen Moore (Prince Charming) | 1914 | 52 minutes | Directed by James Kirkwood | Commissioned by the Omaha Conservatory of Music | Famous Players Film Co., For Chamber Orchestra or Piano Quintet and Percussion |
Mr. Wu | Lon Chaney | 1927 | 92 minutes | Produced by MGM | Commissioned by Turner Classic Movies | For Piano Quartet and Percussion or Chamber Orchestra |
The Gibson Goddess | Marion Leonard (lead role), Mary Pickford (extra) | 1909 | 9 minutes | NA | Commissioned by the Omaha Conservatory of Music | For Violin, Viola and Piano, or Cello Quintet, or String Orchestra, or Chamber Orchestra |
What the Daisy Said | Mary Pickford, Owen Moore | 1910 | 12 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith, American Biography Company, Released by Milestone Film and Video | Commissioned by the Icicle Creek Music Center and Timeline Films | For String Quartet, or Solo Piano, or String Orchestra, or Chamber Orchestra |
Ramona | Mary Pickford | 1910 | 17 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith, American Biography Company, Released by Milestone Film and Video | Commissioned by Turner Classic Movies and Timeline Films | For Violin, Piano and Percussion, or Viola, Piano and Percussion or Cello, Piano and Percussion |
Willful Peggy | Mary Pickford | 1910 | 12 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith, American Biography Company | Commissioned by the Young Musicians Foundation | For Piano Quartet or String Orchestra and Piano |
As it is in Life | Mary Pickford | 1910 | 12 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith, American Biography Company | Commissioned by the Family of Mary Lofdahl | For Soprano, Flute, Viola, and Piano or Violin, Viola, Cello and Piano |
Tender Hearts | Mary Pickford | 1909 | 3 and 1/2 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith,American Biography Company | Commissioned by the Malibu Friends of Music | For Violin, Viola, Piano and Percussion, or Viola, Piano and Percussion or Cello, Piano and Percussion |
They Would Elope | Mary Pickford, Billy Quirk | 1909 | 12 minutes | Directed by D.W. Griffith, American Biography Company | Commissioned by the Malibu Friends of Music | For Piano Quartet and Percussion |
The Dream | Mary Pickford, Owen Moore | 1911 | 12 minutes | Independent Moving Picture Company (IMP) | Commissioned by the Sierra Symphony Orchestra | For Wind Ensemble and Percussion, or Chamber Orchestra, Piano and Percussion or Woodwind Quintet and Percussion |
Hearst Castle Home Movies: Short and Spicy Skits from the other side of Hollywood | Marion Davies | 12 minutes | Commissioned by the San Luis Obispo Int'l Film Festival and Malibu Friends of Music | For Piano Quartet and Percussion |
Additional Commissions in the Press
October 26, 2012: WOW! Wonder of the Words Festival (wonderofwordsfest.com), The Kate Shelley Story - featuring Marian Newman's original music, based on the story written by Mary Kay Shanley…"is the story of a young Iowa girl that has captured the attention of Iowans for decades…"The live mixed-media performance will showcase an original narrate and retelling of The Kate Shelley Story penned by best-selling author Mary Kay Shanley; an original musical score written and conducted by award-winning composer and virtuosic violinist Maria Newman, and the highly acclaimed federated actress with the Repertory Theatre of Iowa Allisa Schetter-Siedschlaw will play the role of Kate. The performance will be directed by Des Moines Social Club Artistic Director Matthew McIver…"[26]
July 25, 2012: "...Barak, a neoclassicist with four pieces in the New York City Ballet repertory, is creating an 11-minute ballet to a score by Los Angeles composer Maria Newman (of the Oscar-winning, film-composer Newman family)...." (National Choreographers Initiative a lab for ballet at UC Irvine, By Laura Bleiberg, Special to the Los Angeles Times, July 25, 2012)[27]
December 16, 2009: Composer Maria Newman conducting a live chamber orchestra to her original score for the fully restored Mary Pickford silent film classic, "Daddy Long Legs," hosted by Pickford Foundation curator Hugh Munro Neely.[28]
August 12, 2009: "Winston's family has donated the film projection equipment for the screening of "The Terminator" and for future Malibu Film Society screenings, which include a fully restored Blu-ray print of 1948 Academy Award winner "The Red Shoes;" Woody Allen's Oscar-winner "Annie Hall;" last year's "Waltz with Bashir," the Israeli animated documentary about the 1982 Lebanon War; and the 1919 silent film, "Daddy-Long-Legs," starring Mary Pickford, which will feature a chamber orchestra conducted by Maria Newman."[29]
Educational activities
Newman presents masterclasses,[30] coaches student performances of her original compositions and others,[31] and lectures at universities and many arts organizations nationwide.
Awards and recognition
Newman has recognition and commendations from the Annenberg Foundation, the United States Congress, the California State Senate, the California State Assembly, the County of Los Angeles, the City of Malibu, and the Malibu Times newspaper. Newman has appeared in subject spotlight articles by noted and esteemed newspapers and magazines. She received a Malibu Music Award for "Classical Artist of the Year", a "Variety Composer Legend" Award, a "Debut Award" from the Los Angeles "Young Musicians’ Foundation," the California Arts Commission. Newman’s works are featured on private and public radio, as well as on Turner Broadcasting.
- Annenberg Foundation Composition and Performance Fellowship, 2011
- Mary Pickford Foundation Composition Fellowship, 2011 and 2012
- Omaha Institute Residency Composition Fellowship and Commission, 2011
- City of Malibu Commission, Recognition and Commendation, 2010
- Recognition and Commendation from the United States Congress, 2009
- Recognition and Commendation from the California State Senate, 2009
- Recognition and Commendation from the California State Assembly, 2009
- Recognition and Commendation from the City of Malibu, 2009
- "Classical Artist of the Year" Malibu Music Awards, 2008
- The Malibu Times 2008 Citizens of the Year Dolphin Awards[32]
- "Composer Legend of the Year" Variety Magazine, 1997
- California Arts Council Composer Fellowship, 2002
- Mary Pickford Foundation Grants, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2008, 2011
Recordings
Newman's works have been performed and recorder by cellist Andrew Shulman, violist Paul Coletti, double bassist Nico Abondolo, artist Randy Newman, flutist Hal Ott, and pianists Wendy Prober, Delores Stevens, Peter Longworth, Bryan Pezzone, Kairos String Quartet, and Malibu String Quartet.
A list of her recorded works on the Montgomery Arts House Masterworks Recording label is as follows: Maria Newman: REQUIEM for the Innocents; Maria Newman: The Art of the Chamber Orchestra Books, I, II, & III; Maria Newman: Music for String Quartet, Book I; Maria Newman: Music for Cello, Book I; Maria Newman: Malibu Chamber Players - Pennipotenti; Maria Newman: Spooky Sonorities; Maria Newman: Dynamic Duos & Obscure Fantasy Heroes, Book I; Maria Newman: A Scented Garden of Music - "Melodies of the South," Book I; Maria Newman: Music for Piano, Book I; Maria Newman: A Holiday Festival of Music & Light - Myth, Mystery & Mysticism; Maria Newman: Music for Violin, Book I
Recorded clips of Maria Newman's work and selected public performances are available on YouTube.[33]
External links
- Dolphins to be honored Saturday[34]
- The Malibu Times 2008 Citizens of the Year Dolphin Awards[35]
- Chamber music, ballet tell Oscar Wilde's 'Birthday of the Infanta'[36]
- Malibu Coast Music Festival returns to Montgomery House[37]
- Composing a life in serious music[17]
- Roll film credits:[28]
- James Cameron to host tribute to Stan Winston[29]
References
- ↑ "Maria Newman Bio". IMDB. IMDB.
- ↑ http://malibufriendsofmusic.org/home.html
- ↑ "Music, dance and architecture".
- ↑ "MARIA NEWMAN Louis and Annette Kaufman Composition Chair Composer-in-Residence, Malibu Coast Chamber Orchestra". Malibu Friends of Music. Malibu Friends of Music.
- ↑ "http://www.annenbergfoundation.org/grants/grants-database/malibu-friends-of-music-2011". External link in
|title=
(help); - ↑ "Composer-in-residence Maria Newman". Viklarbo.
- ↑ "Joachim Chassman; Violinist's Career Spanned Half a Century".
- ↑ "The Hollywood String Quartet".
- 1 2 "Maria Newman - Biography". Malibu Friends of Music. Malibu Friends of Music.
- ↑ "Peter Salaff".
- ↑ "Blair P. Cosman".
- ↑ "Composer in Residence, Maria Newman". Viklarbo.
- ↑ "Yale School of Music Faculty".
- ↑ "Maria Newman". IMDB. IMDB.
- ↑ "Brosnan, Weintraub Families to Lend Hand to Malibu Nutcracker".
- ↑ "VIP Event at Hearst Castle – Silent Film & CITIZEN HEARST".
- 1 2 "Composing a life in serious music".
- ↑ "Maria Newman brings silent film 'Daddy Long Legs' to life".
- ↑ "An expression of pride and joy".
- 1 2 "Viklarbo Chamber Ensemble".
- ↑ Timothy Mangan. "Music Reviews : Viklarbo Ensemble Plays Messiaen's 'Quartet'". LA Times. ENTERTAINMENT. Retrieved September 22, 1992. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ "St. Matthew's Sets 10th Season, Composer". LA Times. Retrieved August 13, 1993. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ http://www.malibufriendsofmusic.org/purchasesheetmusic.html.
- ↑ "Maria Newman".
- ↑ "DocStoc-Maria Newman Biography". paragraph4 (insert). DocStoc.
- ↑ "Wonder Of Words Festival". WOW! Wonder of Words Festival, Special Advertising Section, Des Moines, IA (October 12, 2012): 4. October 12, 2012.
- ↑ Laura Bleiberg (July 25, 2012). "National Choreographers Initiative a lab for ballet at UC Irvine". LA Times (Special). Retrieved July 25, 2012.
- 1 2 "Roll film credits".
- 1 2 "James Cameron to host tribute to Stan Winston". August 12, 2009.
- ↑ "Malibu Playhouse Open House".
- ↑ "Malibu Playhouse Reaches Out".
- ↑ Newman, Maria. "The Malibu Times 2008 Citizens of the Year Dolphin Awards". Malibu Times. Retrieved 24 February 2009.
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cm7AMbdtkhA
- ↑ Maria, Newman (March 4, 2009). "Dolphins to be honored Saturday". Malibu Times.
- ↑ "The Malibu Times 2008 Citizens of the Year Dolphin Awards".
- ↑ "Chamber music, ballet tell Oscar Wilde's 'Birthday of the Infanta'".
- ↑ "Malibu Coast Music Festival returns to Montgomery House".