Marin Alsop, principal conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony
Orchestra and music director of the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, is
among the most accomplished conductors working today. In addition to her
masterful conducting technique and visionary artistic programming, Alsop is
distinguished by her extraordinary ability to communicate, both with her
orchestra and with her audience, successfully translating her musical ideas
into symphonic sound with a signature style. In presenting concerts, she often
addresses audiences directly and previews short passages demonstrating themes
and motifs of pieces to be played. These engaging presentations demystify
challenging music for a wide range of audiences. While honoring classical
music heritage, Alsop is also deeply committed to bringing the work of living
composers to orchestras, audiences, and critics around the world. Her
discography ranges from gospel recordings to traditional symphonies to the
music of contemporary American composers. Through her musicality, her skill in
making the unusual understandable, and her championing of contemporary music,
Alsop defies stereotypes and offers a new model of leadership for orchestras in
the U.S. and abroad.
Marin Alsop studied at Yale University (1973-75) and
received a B.M. (1977) and an M.M. (1978) from The Juilliard School. As a
violinist, she performed with the New York Philharmonic, the New York City
Ballet, the New York Chamber Symphony, and the American Composers Orchestra,
among others. She studied conducting with Carl Bamberger, Harold Farberman,
Leonard Bernstein, Gustav Meier, and Seiji Ozawa, and served as music director
for the Eugene Symphony Orchestra (Oregon) and the Long Island Philharmonic
(1989-95). In 1991, she was appointed music director of the Cabrillo Music
Festival, and in 1993, music director of the Colorado Symphony. Alsop assumed
her current position, principal conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony
Orchestra, in 2001. Beginning September of 2007, Alsop will become the music director
of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.