From left: Jordan Nobles, who received the Azrieli Commission for Canadian Music; host Sylvia L'Écuyer; Jason van Eyk, Managing Director of the Azrieli Centre for Music, Arts and Culture; Ana Sokolović, Chair of the Advisory Council for the Azrieli Music Prizes and Juan Trigos, who won the first-ever Azrieli Commission for International Music Photo: Tam PhotographyThe Azrieli Foundation announces the 2024 Azrieli Music Prize Laureates and showcase concert The Montrealer September 22, 2024 598 Gala concert on October 28 with the OSM at Maison Symphonique with 155 musicians and the OSM Chorus Four outstanding composers from around the globe are the 2024 Azrieli Music Prizes (AMP) laureates, sponsored by the Azrieli Foundation. The biennial Azrieli Music Prizes aim to discover, elevate and amplify artistic voices that exhibit excellence. Yair Klartag, received the Azrieli Commission for Jewish Music; Josef Bardanashvili won the Azrieli Prize for Jewish Music; Jordan Nobles, received the Azrieli Commission for Canadian Music; and Juan Trigos, won the first-ever Azrieli Commission for International Music — a prize created to promote greater intercultural understanding. Each Laureate will receive a prize package valued at over CAD $200,000, including a cash award of CAD $50,000; a world-premiere performance of their prize-winning work in Montréal by the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal Chorus at the AMP Gala Concert on October 28, 2024; two subsequent international performances; and a professional recording of their prize-winning work. Each cycle of AMP’s four music prizes focuses on an instrumentation category. The 2024 Laureates composed choral works for a cappella choir and up to four additional instruments and/or vocal soloist(s). This year, three distinguished panels of luminaries and experts selected the winning submissions, including Chaya Czernowin, Tania León, Dr. Neil W. Levin, Samy Moussa, Gerard Schwarz and Ana Sokolović. The Azrieli Prize for Jewish Music is awarded to a composer who has written the best new undiscovered work of Jewish music. Josef Bardanashvili won for his Light to My Path Choral Fantasy for Mixed Choir, Saxophone, Percussion and Piano. Each movement in his composition grows from one of the various states of belief – supplication, ecstasy, doubt, gratitude – outlined in the Book of Psalms. The Azrieli Commission for Jewish Music is awarded to encourage composers to creatively and critically engage with the question, “What is Jewish music?” It is given to the composer who displays the utmost creativity, artistry, technical mastery and professional expertise in their response to this question. For the Commission, Yair Klartag created The Parable of the Palace, an 18-minute work for choir and four double basses. The work will draw on Jewish philosopher Maimonides’s (1138-1204) famous parable to investigate the limits of logic and reason in explaining reality and the metaphysical. The Parable of the Palace will divide the choir and double basses into four smaller ensembles, in which each choir approaches–but never quite reaches–the pitch of the double bass. The Azrieli Commission for Canadian Music is offered to a Canadian composer to create a new musical work that engages with the complexities of composing concert music in Canada today. Jordan Nobles’s proposal – Kanata for Large Choir – will be a 15-minute tribute to the Canadian landscape inspired by travel across Canada. Each section of the new work will be composed on the land as Nobles travels through it. The work will feature the modern and First Nation names of the rivers, lakes and mountains from each province. The Azrieli Commission for International Music is offered to a composer who engages with the world’s diverse cultural heritage. 2024 laureate Juan Trigos will honour the pre-Hispanic culture of his native Mexico with his commissioned work Simetrías Prehispánicas. The 20-minute composition for chorus, amplified flute, trombone, percussion and keyboards will incorporate text by anonymous and major Aztec poets from the 15th century in their original Nahuatl and Spanish translations. About the Laureates Yair Klartag is an Israeli composer living in Tel Aviv and teaching at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance. His music has been widely commissioned in Europe and North America and has been performed by ensembles such as the Berlin and Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestras, Munich Chamber Orchestra, Geneva Chamber Orchestra and Tokyo Sinfonietta. Klartag has received several awards and scholarships, including the Ernst von Siemens Composers Prize and the 61. Kompositionspreis der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart. Klartag studied composition at Tel Aviv University, Basel Musikhochschule and Columbia University with Ruben Seroussi and Georg Friedrich Haas. www.yairklartag.com/ Josef Bardanashvili’s numerous compositions, including five operas, four ballets, and four symphonies, have been performed all over the world by leading orchestras, including the Israel Philharmonic, the Berliner Symphoniker, the Georgian State Symphony Orchestra and the Dochnany Orchestra (Hungary). Bardanashvili is the composer-in-residence of the Israel Camerata Jerusalem. For over a decade, he served as a member of the public council of Israel’s Ministry of Culture and Art. He is currently a faculty member of the Academy of Music at Tel Aviv University and the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance. Bardanashvili was born in Georgia and studied at the Music Academy in Tbilisi under Aleksandr Shaverzashvili. Jordan Nobles is a JUNO award-winning composer known for creating music filled with an “unearthly beauty” (Mondo magazine) that makes listeners want to “close (their) eyes and transcend into a cloud of music” (Discorder Magazine). Jordan has received many honours in recent years, including a Western Canadian Music Award and the Jan V. Matejcek Award from SOCAN in recognition of his “overall success in ‘New Classical Music.’” www.jordannobles.com Juan Trigos is a Mexican-American composer. His Abstract Folklore compositions incorporate various native music traditions; his works include six operas, four symphonies, three cantatas and concertos for several instruments. Trigos’s music has been performed in many cities in Europe, the Americas and Japan. In 2023, Juan was appointed Assistant Professor of Music in Composition & Theory at the University of Kentucky in Lexington. Among his awards is a Fromm Commission of the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University. He is the Music Director and Principal Conductor of The Last Hundred Ensemble (Miami) and Sinfonietta MIQ (Guanajuato). Juan is a Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte (Mexico) member. His experience as a composition teacher includes serving as an assistant to Franco Donatoni. www.promusint.com/juantrigos/wp/home/ About the Azrieli Music Prizes Established in 2014, the biennial Azrieli Music Prizes (AMP) offers opportunities for discovering, creating, performing and celebrating excellence in music composition. Open to the international music community; AMP accepts nominations for works from individuals and institutions of all ages, nationalities, faiths, genders, backgrounds and affiliations, which are then submitted to its expert juries through an open call for scores and proposals. The four AMP prize packages – valued at CAD $200,000 per Laureate – make it the top music composition competition in Canada and one of the largest in the world. Past prize-winners include Iranian-Canadian composer Iman Habibi (2022), Israeli-Canadian composer Aharon Harlap (2022), Canadian composers Rita Ueda (2022), Keiko Devaux (2020), Kelly-Marie Murphy (2018) and Brian Current (2016), Dutch-born American composer Yotam Haber (2020), Israeli-Australian composer Yitzhak Yedid (2020), Israeli-American composer Avner Dorman (2018) and US-based Polish composer Wlad Marhulets (2016). To learn more and to buy tickets, please visit: https://azrielifoundation.org/amp/gala/