Martin Boykan


Martin Boykan is an American composer known for his chamber music as well as music for larger ensembles.

Biography

Boykan was born in New York City. He studied composition first with Walter Piston at Harvard, where he received a BA in 1951. He then went to Zürich to study with Paul Hindemith, with whom he continued his studies at Yale University, earning an MM in 1953. Subsequently, he went to Vienna on a Fulbright scholarship. He also studied composition with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood, and piano with Eduard Steuermann. Upon his return to the United States in 1955 he founded the Brandeis Chamber Ensemble, whose other members included Robert Koff, Nancy Cirillo, Eugene Lehner, and Madeline Foley. This ensemble performed widely with a repertory divided equally between contemporary music and the tradition. At the same time Boykan appeared regularly as a pianist with soloists such as Joseph Silverstein and Jan DeGaetani. In 1964–65, he was the pianist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Erich Leinsdorf.
He has had residencies at Yaddo, the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire, and at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Amherst, Virginia.
Boykan taught at Brandeis University starting in 1957, and was appointed professor there in 1976. He has held the title Irving G. Fine Professor of Music. Currently he is Professor Emeritus. Boykan has been Composer-in-Residence at the Composer's Conference in Wellesley and a Visiting Professor at Columbia University and at New York University. Boykan was Senior Fulbright Lecturer at Bar-Ilan University, Israel and Composer-in-Residence at Warebrook Contemporary Music Festival, Irasburg, Vermont. He has served on many panels, including the Rome Prize, the Fromm Commission, the New York Council for the Arts and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Over the years he has taught many hundreds of students including Steven Mackey, Peter Lieberson, Ross Bauer, Paul Beaudoin, Craig Walsh, and Marjorie Merryman.
Boykan's mature compositional style, beginning with the partly serial String Quartet No. 1, is marked by the influence of Anton Webern and the late works of Igor Stravinsky. After the First Quartet, he began consistently to use twelve-tone technique.
Boykan has written for a wide variety of instrumental combinations including four string quartets, a concerto for large ensemble, many trios, duos and solo works, song cycles for voice and piano as well as voice and other instruments, and choral music. His symphony for orchestra and baritone solo was premiered by the Utah Symphony in 1993 and in 2009 his Concerto for Violin was premiered by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project. His work is widely performed and has been presented by ensembles including the Boston Symphony Chamber Players, the New York New Music Ensemble, Speculum Musicae, the League-ISCM, Earplay, Musica Viva and Collage New Music.
He received the Jeunesse musicales award for his String Quartet No. 1 in 1967, and the League-ISCM award for Elegy in 1982. Other awards include a Rockefeller grant, NEA award, Guggenheim Fellowship, two Fulbrights, as well as a recording award and the Walter Hinrichsen Publication Award from the American Academy and National Institute of Arts and Letters. In 1994 he was awarded a Senior Fulbright to Israel. He has received numerous commissions from chamber ensembles as well as commissions from the Koussevitsky Foundation in the Library of Congress, and the Fromm Foundation.

Selected works and publications

His String Quartets Nos. 1 and 2 are both recorded on CRI. A disc of vocal music was released by CRI in 1998, along with the String Quartet No. 4. A second CD including the Piano Trio No. 2, Echoes of Petrarch, City of Gold and the Second Quartet was released in January 2000. A new CD of chamber works issued by CRI includes a violin sonata, Flume for clarinet and piano, a song cycle, and the First String Quartet. Sonata for Solo Violin is included on a CD by the violinist Curt Macomber.
In 2010 Albany Records released the CD Second Chances which includes String Quartet No. 3, Motet, Songlines and Second Chances featuring Pamela Dellal, mezzo-soprano and Donald Berman, Pianist. Scores are published by Mobart Music Press and C.F. Peters, NYC.
In 2004 Scarecrow Press, MD published a collection of essays entitled Silence and Slow-Time: Studies in Musical Narrative. His second book, The Power of the Moment: Essays on the Western Musical Canon, will be published by Pengragon Press in 2011.
Three artist books produced in collaboration with his wife, the artist Susan Schwalb, were recently purchased by the Music Division of the Library of Congress: City of Gold, Flume, and Nocturne.

Personal life

Boykan is the son of New York dentist Joseph Boykan and his wife Matilda, and the brother of mathematical logician Marian Pour-El. He married the silverpoint artist Susan Schwalb in 1983.