MIGUEL A. ROIG-FRANCOLI - Curriculum vitae - English
Born in Ibiza (Spain) in 1953
EDUCATION
Ph.D. in Music Theory with high distinction, Indiana
University, 1990 Título de Profesor Superior de Armonía, Contrapunto, Composición e Instrumentación, Royal Superior Conservatory of Music, Madrid, 1988 (highest conservatory diploma issued in Spain) M.M. in composition with high distinction, Indiana University, 1985 Título Profesional de Piano, Conservatorio Profesional de Música de Baleares (Majorca), 1982 (equivalent to American B.M.) Private study of composition in Madrid with Spanish composer Miguel A. Coria, 1976-81 Languages spoken fluently: English, Spanish, French,
Catalan
First Prize, National Composition Competition of the Spanish Jeunesses Musicales, 1981, for Five Pieces for Orchestra ($5,000) Second Prize, UNESCO International Rostrum of Composers, Paris, 1982, for Five Pieces for Orchestra (prize carried broadcast of work in 24 countries) Grant, U.S.-Spain Joint Committee for Cultural and Educational Affairs, for graduate studies in composition at Indiana University, 1983-84 ($32,000) Nomination for Grawemeyer Music Award, 1985, by Sergiu Comissiona, Music Director of the Houston Symphony Orchestra Two grants, Spanish Ministry of Culture, for doctoral studies at Indiana University, 1985-86 and 86-87 ($4,000 each) Winner of 1987 Student Paper Competition, Indiana Musicologists
Association Dissertation Year Fellowship, Indiana University, 1988-89 ($8,000) Grant-in Aid for research in Spain, Indiana University, summer 1988 Dean's Dissertation Prize, Indiana University School of Music, 1991 ($1,000) Ithaca College Summer Research Grant, 1991 ($3,000) Dana Research Fellow Award, Ithaca College, 1992 ($2,000) Summer Grant for the Improvement of Undergraduate Education,
NIU, 1993 ($3,000) Graduate School Summer Research Grant, NIU, 1993 ($3,000) Graduate School Summer Research Grant, NIU, 1995 ($3,500)
2000- : Professor, College-Conservatory of Music, University
of Cincinnati
Textbooks Harmony in Context, McGraw-Hill, 2003 Articles and Reviews “A Theory of Pitch-Class-Set Extension in Atonal Music,” College Music Symposium 41 (Fall 2001): 57-90. “Procesos compositivos y estructura musical: Teoría y práctica en Antonio de Cabezón y Tomás de Santa María.” Forthcoming in a book on music in the world of Philip II to be published by the University of Madrid: El mundo musical de Felipe II: Corte, capilla y ciudad. “Santa María, Tomás de.” New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 7th ed. Diccionario de la Música Española e Hispanoamericana (Dictionary of Spanish and Latin-American Music), forthcoming (Madrid). Articles on “Tañer a consonancias” (“Playing in consonances”) and “Tañer fantasía” (“Playing fantasía”). “Paradigms and Contrast in Sixteenth-Century Modal Structure: Commixture in the tientos of Antonio de Cabezón.” Journal of Musicological Research 19 (2000):1-47. Review of the Italian book Canone infinito (540 pp.), by Loris Azzaroni. Analisi: Rivista di teoria e pedagogia musicale 30 (1999):24-31. “Dos tientos de Cabezón basados en tonos del Magnificat.” Revista de Musicología 21 (1998):1-19. “Teoría, análisis, crítica: Reflexiones en torno a ciertas lagunas en la musicología española.” Revista de Musicología 18 (1995):11-25. “Harmonic and Formal Processes in Ligeti's Net-Structure Compositions.” Music Theory Spectrum 17/2 (Fall 1995):242-67. Review of Historical Organ Techniques and Repertoires: An Historical Survey of Organ Performance Practices and Repertoires. Vol. 1: Spain, 1550-1830. MLA Notes (September 1995):297-99. “Playing in Consonances: A Spanish Renaissance Technique of Chordal Improvisation.” Early Music (August 1995):93-103. “Modal Paradigms in Mid-Sixteenth-Century Spanish Instrumental Composition: Theory and Practice in Antonio de Cabezón and Tomás de Santa María.” Journal of Music Theory 38/2 (Fall 1994):247-89. Review of Apparitions and Macabre Collage, by György
Ligeti. MLA Notes 51/1 (September 1994):421-23.
Invited to become a permanent member of a team of scholars on Spanish and French music organized and sponsored by the Musicology Department at the Sorbonne University in Paris (2001). “Submitting Articles to Journals: An Author’s Perspective.” Invited paper, presented at a special session on the process of publishing articles, organized by the SMT Committee on Professional Development. Society for Music Theory Annual Meeting, Chapel Hill, Dec. 5, 1998. Invited by the Universidad Complutense of Madrid to teach
and present his work at a one-week summer course on “The Musical
World of Philip II,” commemorating the 400th anniversary of the
Spanish monarch’s death. July 6-14, 1998, Monastery of El Escorial.
Attended by 50 students from all over Spain, and 16th-century scholars
from Australia, England, Hong-Kong, France, Spain, and the U.S.A. Duties
included two presentations: Chair, session on “Post-War Music.” Society for Music Theory National Meeting, Phoenix, Oct. 31,1997. Contributions to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s
Manuel de Falla festival, May, 1997: Organizer of a special session on the topic “Long-Range Pitch Coherence in Atonal Music: Methods and Issues,” Society for Music Theory National Conference, Baton Rouge, Nov. 1, 1996. Participants included James Baker, Fred Lerdahl, Joel Lester, Catherine Nolan, Miguel Roig-Francolí, and Peter Westergaard. “Beyond Prolongation: A Theory of Pitch Extension in Atonal Music.” Society for Music Theory National Conference, Baton Rouge, Nov. 1, 1996. “Unveiling a Well-Kept Secret: Highlights of Spanish Music.” Lecture presented at a joint seminar of the Women's Association of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Women's Board of The Art Institute of Chicago (Música y Arte: Sounds and Colors of Spain), Orchestra Hall, March 14, 1996. “Net-Structures, Symmetry, and Harmonic Transformation in the Music of György Ligeti” Society for Music Theory National Conference, Montréal, Nov. 5, 1993 “Net-Structures, Intervallic Constellations, and Symmetrical Designs in Ligeti's Ramifications” Music Theory Midwest Fourth Annual Conference, University of Wisconsin-Madison, May 16, 1993 “Modal Ambiguity and Commixture in the tientos
of Antonio de Cabezón” “Compositional Paradigms in Sixteenth-Century Instrumental
Music: Modal and Formal Structure in the tientos of Antonio de Cabezón” “Modal Structure in Sixteenth-Century Spanish Instrumental
Music: Theory and Practice in Antonio de Cabezón and Tomás
de Santa María” “Bass Emancipation in Sixteenth-Century Spanish
Instrumental Music: The Arte de tañer fantasía by Tomás
de Santa María.” “Sacred Time in Traditional Musics”
Published compositions
Diferencias y Fugas, for string quartet. Madrid: Fundación
Juan March, 1988
Unpublished Compositions Suite apócrifa, for piano, 1978
Recordings Diferencias y Fugas. Cassette tape by Fundación
Juan March, Madrid, 1988
Major Commissions Diferencias y Fugas, for string quartet. Fundación
Juan March, Madrid, 1987
PUBLIC PERFORMANCES
Works performed in numerous concerts in Madrid, Barcelona, London, Berlin, Mexico, Cincinnati, Bloomington, Salamanca, Valencia, Canary Islands, Majorca, and Ibiza. Concert Halls include Teatro Real, Teatro de la Zarzuela, Auditorio Nacional, and Fundación Juan March in Madrid; Palau de la Música Catalana and Fundación Joan Miró in Barcelona; Grosser Sendesaal in Berlin; and Teatro de la Danza in Mexico City. Orchestral works performed by the following orchestras: Orchestra of Spanish Radio and TV (Madrid), National Orchestra and Chorus of Spain (Madrid), Madrid Symphony Orchestra with the National Ballet of Spain (Madrid), Orchestra of the City of Barcelona, Municipal Orchestra of Valencia, Orchestra of the City of Palma (Majorca), Tenerife Symphony Orchestra (Canary Islands), CCM Philharmonia (Cincinnati). Live broadcast of Five Pieces for Orchestra premiere (Orchestra of Spanish Radio-TV) by Spanish National Television (Feb. 1982). Also performed by Orchestra of the City of Barcelona (1984), National Orchestra of Spain (2002, conducted by Jesús López Cobos), and CCM Philharmonia (Cincinnati, 2003). Same work broadcast in 24 countries as result of UNESCO prize. In 1987, the National Ballet of Spain included in its repertoire the ballet La Espera ("The Awaiting") by choreographer Ray Barra, based on Five Pieces for Orchestra. Since then, the ballet has been performed in most major Spanish cities.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Member of the editorial board, Gamut, the journal of
the Georgia Association of Music Theorists |
Resumen del Curriculum vitae...