Tom Cipullo

Tom Cipullo (Born November 22, 1956) is an American composer. Known mostly for vocal music, he has also composed orchestral, chamber, and solo instrumental works. His opera, Glory Denied, has been performed to critical acclaim in New York, Washington, and Texas.

Early life

Tom Cipullo was born into a musical family on Long Island, New York.[1] His father, a jazz bassist playing under the name Ray Carle, performed throughout the New York area and hosted a successful radio show in the late 1950s and early 1960s, broadcasting with a quartet from the Café Rouge of the Statler Hilton Hotel. Cipullo’s brother, Chris, was a drummer in Los Angeles. Cipullo’s father named him after the bandleader Tommy Dorsey. Dorsey, who appeared frequently at the Café Rouge, died just a few days after Cipullo’s birth.

Cipullo attended Hofstra University, Boston University, and the City University of New York Graduate School. His teachers included David Del Tredici, Elie Siegmeister, Albert Tepper, Thea Musgrave (orchestration), and Graham Forbes, a highly regarded jazz pianist and the accompanist for Frank Sinatra during a period in the 1950s.[2]

Professional career

Cipullo’s song cycles may be said to have entered the standard repertoire. He has composed over 225 songs, one evening-length chamber opera, six works for voices and chamber ensemble, solo piano pieces, and works for chorus and orchestra.[1] Several of his song cycles are published by Oxford University Press, and others are distributed by Classical Vocal Reprints. His music appears on over a dozen commercially-released compact discs on the Albany, CRI, PGM, MSR Classics, GPR, Centaur, and Capstone labels.

Musical style and critical reception

Cipullo is a composer of tonal music, though his use of harmony may occasionally stretch to include bitonality and extremely dissonant passages. His vocal music is lyrical in the extreme, but marked by large leaps, lengthy phrases with surprising breaths, numerous shifts in meter, virtuosic piano accompaniments, and a love of musical allusion. Writing for the New York Times, Allan Kozinn said, “Mr. Cipullo’s vocal writing is fresh and natural, and he amplifies it with thoughtful, sometimes picturesque commentary in the piano line.”[3] Cipullo’s compositions are text-driven, and Fanfare magazine noted that “he excels by pulling off the conjuror’s trick mastered by all the great writers of poem-based song from Schubert forward—the blurring of the demarcation between where the word ends and the music begins.”[4] In presenting him with its ' Arts & Letters Award, the American Academy of Arts & Letters cited Cipullo’s music for its “inexhaustible imagination, wit, expressive range and originality.”

Personal

Cipullo is married to the Belgian artist Hedwig Brouckaert. They have one daughter, Lois.

Awards

Notable works

Glory Denied

Cipullo’s chamber opera Glory Denied has met with considerable success and garnered critical acclaim. The opera, based on the oral history by journalist Tom Philpott, tells the true story of Colonel Jim Thompson, an American soldier held as a prisoner of war in Vietnam from 1964-73. The story deals not only with Thompson’s suffering in the jungles of southeast Asia, but also chronicles the personal struggles that followed his liberation and repatriation. In short, Glory Denied is the story of an American family during one of the nation’s most turbulent eras. Richard Bernstein, in reviewing Philpott’s book for the New York Times, stated, “Indeed it is not too much to say that Glory Denied… encapsulate[s] something of the moral essence of the Vietnam War and the imperishable bitterness of its legacy.”[5] Some of the opera's success is no doubt due to the resonance audiences have found with the subject matter. As Allan Kozinn of the New York Times neatly summed up, “How is this for a story with operatic potential? A prisoner of war held for nearly a decade returns home to find that his wife has moved on, his nation has changed beyond recognition, and he is unable to find his bearings in the society he fought to defend. It is Monteverdi’s “Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria” in reverse: the story of the returning warrior, but in this thoroughly modern version, everything has gone wrong, and redemption is out of reach.”[6] Glory Denied is written for a cast of four (two sopranos, a tenor, and a baritone) and the score exists in three different orchestrations, from nine players to full orchestra. The work was recorded live by Fort Worth Opera and released on Albany Records in August of 2013 (Troy 1433). Critical reaction to the opera has been overwhelmingly enthusiastic. The following examples are typical:

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 Bell (Kling), Elizabeth (October 2011). "The Art Songs of Tom Cipullo" (PDF). Ph.D dissertation.
  2. Wilson, John (May 26, 1984). "Graham Forbes, 66; Band Pianist Played for Popular Singers (obituary)". The New York Times.
  3. Kozinn, Allan (May 26, 2011). "Music Review: Songs of the Poets, in Chamber Settings". The New York Times.
  4. Zagorski, William (March–April 2010). Fanfare. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. Bernstein, Richard (August 2, 2001). "The Glory and tragedy of a P.O.W. Scorned". The New York Times.
  6. 1 2 Kozinn, Allan (November 12, 2010). "Music Review: A Soldier's Torment in Vietnam and at Home". The New York Times.
  7. Spiegelman, Willard (July 2013). "Music Review: Fort Worth Opera". Opera News. 78 (1): 47–48.
  8. Chism, Olin (April 21, 2013). "Music Review: Fort Worth Opera Festival Continues with Glory Denied". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  9. Brown, Edward (May 1, 2013). "Music Review: Glory Denied, Daughter Roll". Fort Worth Weekly.
  10. Gay, Wayne Lee (April 22, 2013). "Opera Review: Fort Worth Opera Fest Kicks-Off with Trademark Mix of Classic and Contemporary Music". D Magazine.
  11. Reinthaler, Joan (April 3, 2011). "Music Review: Vietnam-era Saga "Glory Denied" doesn't withhold a single musical wish". The Washington Post.
  12. Isaacs, Gregory Sullivan. "Review: Glory Denied / Hope and Glory". Theater Jones. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  13. Moon, H. Paul. "Music Review Urban Arias: Glory Denied". DC Arts Beat. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
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