Emerging Black Composers Project announces its next winner for S.F. Symphony premiere

Bay Area composer Jens Ibsen was awarded $15,000 and the opportunity to create a new work to premiere during the San Francisco Symphony’s 2023-24 season.Photo: Mike Grittani

TheEmerging Black Composers Project, the annual commissioning and mentorship program run in partnership by the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and the San Francisco Symphony, has named Bay Area composer and singerJens Ibsenas its second winner.

The prize brings a cash award of $15,000 and a chance to workshop a new work, which will then have its world premiere as part of the Symphony’s 2023-24 season conducted by Music DirectorEsa-Pekka Salonen.

“It feels pretty incredible,” Ibsen said. “I’d been making work for 11 years without any recognition, but since 2020 I’ve started to see a lot more interest in my music.”

Ibsen, 26, was born in Accra, Ghana, to a Ghanaian mother and an American father. He grew up in Pacifica and Daly City, studied music at the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts and sang with the Vienna Boys Choir, the ensemble’s first member to be born in Africa. He holds degrees in music from Pepperdine University in Malibu and from the Mannes School of Music in New York City.

As a composer, Ibsen boasts a varied musical portfolio that ranges from opera to heavy metal. He has been commissioned by the Oregon Bach Festival and the Kennedy Center.

“I still remember the first time I listened to the songs he gave us,” said Daniel Bartholomew-Poyser, the Symphony’s resident conductor of engagement and education and chair of the project. “One of them had me in tears and stuck with me the next couple of days. Another was in a completely different direction, in a heavy metal vein.

“然后,在他的音乐上抓住了情感上,我看着分数,看到了其中的工艺,结构和逻辑,我想,‘我需要从这个人那里听到更多的声音。’”

In addition to his compositional work, Ibsen is a singer who has performed with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and in recital with Bay Area pianist-composer Preben Antonsen. In 2014, he organized a choral flash mob in the Embarcadero BART station.

易卜生说:“随着乔治·弗洛伊德(George Floyd)被杀后的时代主义者的转变,人们开始向我接触更多。”“我不得不为此做一些灵魂搜索,因为我以前一直在努力工作。

“Where I ended up is that I just need to capitalize on this momentum while it’s here. And who knows how many times I’ve been passed over为了being Black?”

The Emerging Black Composers Project was创建于2020年向音乐学院捐款25万美元。迈克尔·摩根,late music directorof the Oakland Symphony, was an early backer of the project, along with Salonen and San Francisco Conservatory Music Director Edwin Outwater.

The first award was given in 2021 to New Jersey composer Trevor Weston, whose still-untitled orchestral work is scheduled for itsworld premiereSept. 29-Oct. 2 alongside Mahler’s Symphony No. 2.

In addition to Weston, the committee also gave $8,000 commissions to composers Jonathan Bingham, who holds degrees in composition from Howard and New York universities; Shawn Okpebholo, professor of music composition and theory at Wheaton College Conservatory of Music in Illinois; and Philadelphia native and jazz pianist Sumi Tonooka.

Bartholomew-Poyser说,奖品决定的因素之一是寻找具有潜力的年轻作曲家。

“有一些作曲家混合意图lly polished, like you could give them an opera commission现在. But we were also looking for composers with the most promise for development — like, ‘Imagine what this person could do if they were given the resources,’ ” Bartholomew-Poyser said.

Ibsen, when asked about his plans for the commissioned work, said it was too early to know.

“I have an eclectic music spirit. I wear my influences on my sleeve, including Arab and Indian music and progressive metal. So those may come into play,” he said. “I’m elated at the prospect of working with an orchestra. Even after several hundred years, I think there are still some things we have yet to hear an orchestra do.”

  • Joshua Kosman
    Joshua Kosman约书亚·科斯曼(Joshua Kosman)是旧金山编年史的音乐评论家。电子邮件:jkosman@sfchronicle.com Twitter:@joshuakosman