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Abstract

A native of Houston, TX, Wayne Oquin is chair of ear training/musicianship at the Juilliard School, where he has worked since 2008. He holds a bachelor of music from Texas State University and a master of music and doctor of musical arts from the Juilliard School. While a student at Juilliard, Oquin studied composition with Milton Babbitt and Samuel Adler, and served as a teaching fellow for Mary Anthony Cox. He also won the Richard F. French Prize for best doctoral dissertation, the Juilliard Inner-Arts Award, the Palmer Dixon Prize, and was the first recipient of the Arthur Friedman Award for his orchestral composition An Unbroken Chain to Infinity. The Danish National Symphony, the Munich Philharmonic, the Pacific Symphony, the King's Singers, and Marc-Andre Hamelin have all commissioned and performed Oquin's music. In the 2017-2018 season, the Philadelphia Orchestra (Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor, and Paul Jacobs, organ) performed his quasi-organ concerto Resilience six times, including on their season-opening performance and on tour in Europe. Other projects include an orchestral version of Tower Ascending, commissioned by the Pacific Symphony (Carl St. Clair, conductor) and Horizon, a twenty-minute piece for band, commissioned by Texas State University (Caroline Beatty, conductor). In addition to Song for Silent Voices, Oquin has contributed significant music to wind literature, including Flashback, A Solemn Place, Tower Ascending, and Affirmation. He has won the National Band Association's William D. Revelli Award twice for Affirmation (2014) and Song for Silent Voices (2018). In 2016, the United States Air Force awarded him the Commander's Medal of Excellence.

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