Discipline: Music Composition

Martin Boykan

Discipline: Music Composition
Region: Watertown, MA
MacDowell Fellowships: 1982, 1989

Martin (Marty) Boykan (1931-2021) was an American composer known for his chamber music as well as music for larger ensembles. Boykan studied composition with Walter Piston, Aaron Copland, and Paul Hindemith, and piano with Eduard Steuermann. He received a B.A. from Harvard University (1951) and an M.M. from Yale University (1953). In 1953–55 he was in Vienna on a Fulbright Fellowship, and upon his return founded the Brandeis Chamber Ensemble, whose other members included Robert Koff (Juilliard Quartet), Nancy Cirillo (Wellesley), Eugene Lehner (Kolisch Quartet), and Madeline Foley (Marlborough Festival). This ensemble performed widely with a repertory divided equally between contemporary music and the traditional. At the same time, Boykan appeared regularly as a pianist with performers such as Joseph Silverstein and Jan de Gaetani. In 1964–65, he was the pianist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Boykan wrote 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 instrumental ensembles and choral music. His Symphony for Orchestra and Baritone Solo was premiered by the Utah Symphony in 1993, and his Concerto for Violin and Orchestra was premiered by Curt Macomber in 2008 with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project conducted by Gil Rose. His work is widely performed and has been presented by almost all of the current new music 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, a Fulbright, 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 received numerous commissions from chamber ensembles as well as commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation in the Library of Congress, and the Fromm Foundation. In 2011 Boykan was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Boykan was an Emeritus Professor of Music at Brandeis University. His music has been recorded by CRI (available through New World Records or Amazon.com), Albany Records, and Boston Music Orchestra Project (BMOP). Scores are published by Mobart Music Press, and C.F. Peters, NYC. In 2004 a volume of essays entitled Silence and Slow Time: Studies in Musical Narrative was published by Scarecrow Press (Rowman and Littlefield). In 2011, a second volume of essays entitled The Power of the Moment was published by Pendragon Press. He was married to visual artist Susan Schwalb.

Studios

Irving Fine

Martin Boykan worked in the Irving Fine studio.

Youngstown Studio was given to MacDowell by friends of Miss Myra McKeown in Youngstown, OH, where she promoted both art and music. It was renamed Irving Fine Studio in 1972 in honor of Irving Fine, a distinguished composer, conductor, and teacher who was a MacDowell Fellow during the 1940s and 1950s. The simple interior of the studio…

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