Press Kit




Download bios of Elizabeth Brown (Word documents):

Long, interesting bio
Short bio
Shakuhachi bio
Theremin bio



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Elizabeth Brown

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Reviews



'... couldn't write an uncaptivating phrase if she tried.'

- Village Voice



Read Kyle Gann's profile in Chamber Music



Rural Electrification

Read Molly Sheridan's review in newmusicbox

Read Silke Tudor's review in The Village Voice



Blue Minor: Chamber Music by Elizabeth Brown Troy 627

'Elizabeth Brown is a New York composer who, among other things, is a professional performer on flute and shakuhachi (the Japanese bamboo flute). Her experience as a player informs all her chamber music, which is subtly written, utterly idiomatic, and presented by some of the best freelance musicians in the city. Her aesthetic takes many traditional tropes from the standard repertoire and gently twists and subverts them. The result is genuine lyricism, but heard in a dreamlike state, even a little hallucinatory. There's a great wit evident, but mercifully no irony; this is music that's not afraid of beauty, but also refuses easy-listening romanticism.'

- Robert Carl, Fanfare



Lost Waltz

Read Bernard Holland's review in the New York Times

Read the Hartford Advocate article

'Depending on how you look at it, Lost Waltz is either an exercise in wistful nostalgia for a more clearly-ordered past, or a playful jest with conventions of a more recent vintage ... it uses the repetitive phrase structure of 20th-century minimalism with a nod to the multitempo constructions of Nancarrow and Carter. Continuity is achieved by overlapping superimpositions of various repetive waltz ideas, each in a different tempo. The effect is something like sitting in an elegant Viennese salon as recreated by Data on the holodeck of the Enterprise as the ship passes through anomalies in the space-time continuum. Susan Nidel, a veteran of New York's new-music scene, played the prominent flute part with shimmering microtonal inflections that made her music seem to come from another place. A most fascinating work.'

- Ithaca Times

'Brown's 'Lost Waltz', which had its world premiere on Monday, suggested a ballroom in Atlantis. Complicated and glittering passages in the winds flitted through swirling eddies of string arpeggios and wavy scales. The piece was a bit like quickly flowing water: attractive, allusive, even poetic.'

- Newsday



Archipelago

'Elizabeth Brown's Archipelago quite simply blows me away as the gentlest fusillade one is ever likely to hear. For a start, the work appears haynted by the spirit of John Dowland's Can she excuse my wrongs?, a.k.a. If my complaints could passions move. This is nowhere stated or indeed obvious. It is probably more a question of my wishing it so. Whatever, the hint of a powerfully beautiful melody appears almost immediately on cello, its full fruition borne by cello and flute against the narcotic luminosities of synthesizer, surrogate kithara, diamond marimba, and a pair of Dean Drummond's zoomoozophones, in a kind of free fantasy assembled with an attention to poetry and detail that plays for me as a beyond-brilliant union of common and uncommon parts.'

- Mike Silverton, Fanfare



Delirium

...'challenged listeners to listen between notes, as did the quieter Delirium by Elizabeth Brown, performed by Newband on Mr. Partch's instruments. The day's most beautiful moment involved abstraction transformed into tenderness.'

- Ann Powers, New York Times



Acadia

'... scored for western flute and shakuhachi, Acadia made magical use of the qualities of both instruments. Often, the personalities of the two flutes merged, with the western flute bending eastward in sliding pitches and breathy tones. Both could flash with hard brilliance in sharp, shrill notes. And both could return to their separate modes, their colors heightened by the encounter.'

- Taos Journal



The Memory Palace

'Elizabeth Brown's Memory Palace (1990) uses a tonally freewheeling language (neither strictly rooted nor fully atonal) and an abstract structure to paint a distinct, if fanciful, picture in which thematic relationships come increasingly into focus as the piece unfolds.'

- Allan Kozinn, New York Times

'The Memory Palace, for flute, cello, and piano, impressed for its cool, sustained architecture - emerging from ascending stepwise patterns, but immediately freezing any forward motion in a suspension of recollected memories.'

- Los Angeles Times



Migration

'... the music that left the strongest and most lasting impression was Elizabeth Brown's Migration ... The sonic landscape is generally spare and concrete, emphasizing sound in itself, and it unfolds in a sort of dreamlike slow motion that recalls thaditional Japanese music and theater. But the music also keeps one foot in the European tradition of melody and functional harmony, though without a clear tonal center. The result is music that is at once familiar and alien, constantly changing but consistently magical.'

- San Antonio Express-News

'Elizabeth Brown combined a shakuhachi with string trio in a delicate texture that reminded me, improbably, of Mozart's flute quartets.'

- San Francisco Chronicle



Catalog of Scents in the Garden at Night

Read the Vail Daily article



Travelogue
Innova 556

'Composer-flautist Elizabeth Brown weaves a potentially frightening microtonal vocabulary into pure innocence.'

- Grammophon



In a Dreamt Landscape

'... a tantalizingly brief exploration scored for western and Native American flute, harp, and string quartet, it pulled the listener into a fleeting, flickering world as haunting as a dream can be. Agitated measures with rapid string motifs and sharp outbursts reminiscent of birdsong from the western flute alternated with with passages of heightened calm from the Native American flute. Fragments dissolving in sliding pitches and sudden shifts conveyed the beguiling illogic of dreams.'

- Taos Journal



The Secret Life of Birds

'Brown's evocative piece proved the surprise hit of the evening. The blend of Western flute and Japanese koto supplied arresting sonorities. The composer is an inveterate birdwatcher and an adapt on the shakuhachi, a close cousin to our flute. She tuned the 13 strings of the koto in a traditional manner, shifting the top seven a half step up. But it's the flute line, with its slides, chirps and warbles that arrests the ear.'

- San Francisco Examiner



A Certain Light

'The music was quiet, hypnotic, and plaintive, the moment of respite as heartrending as the nightmare.'

- New York Native



Collected Visions

'... both sweetly innocent and foreboding.'

- The Houston Post



Orrery

'The word denotes an apparatus for measuring the planets, and the music suggested an immense serenity within tiny gears. Orrery also breathed a fresh, nonprimitive lyricism. No one banged a can at this dream of a work.'

- Leighton Kerner, Village Voice