From the Shadow of the Mountain (2001), for string orchestra.
Commissioned and premiered by the Chamber Orchestra of Tennessee, Chattanooga, September 2001.
Jan Swafford’s music has been played around the U.S. and abroad by ensembles including the symphonies of St. Louis, Indianapolis, the Royal Philharmonic, and the Dutch Radio; Orchestra New England; Boston’s new-music groups Musica Viva, Collage, and Dinosaur Annex; and chamber ensembles including the Peabody Trio, the Chamber Orchestra of Tennessee, and the Scott Chamber Players of Indianapolis.
Over the years his work has evolved widely, but in all its avatars his music is forthrightly expressive, individual in voice, and steadily concerned with lucidity of texture and form. Beneath the surface there are contributions from world music, especially Indian and Balinese, and from jazz and blues. The titles of his works, including Landscape with Traveler, From the Shadow of the Mountain, Late Autumn, River, and The Silence at Yuma Point, reveal a steady inspiration from nature. The composer views his work as a kind of classicist aesthetic: a concern with clarity and directness, pieces that aspire to sound like they wrote themselves, and that seem familiar though each has a distinctive tonal and expressive language.
Also a well-known writer on music, Swafford is author of biographies of Ives, Brahms, Beethoven, and Mozart, as well as two introductions to music—The Vintage Guide and Language of the Spirit. His journalism has appeared in publications including Slate, Gramophone, The Guardian, and The Atlantic. He is a longtime program writer and pre-concert lecturer for the Boston Symphony, and has written program notes and essays for the orchestras of Cleveland, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Toronto, for the New York Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera, and Chamber Music at Lincoln Center, and for DG and Naxos recordings.
From the Shadow of the Mountain (2001), for string orchestra.
Commissioned and premiered by the Chamber Orchestra of Tennessee, Chattanooga, September 2001.
After Spring Rain (1982), for orchestra.
Commissioned and premiered by the Chattanooga Symphony in 1982. Published by Peer. Won Indiana State University Composition Contest 1983.
They That Mourn (2002), for piano trio.
In memoriam 9/11. Commissioned by Market Square Concerts for their 25th anniversary celebration. Premiered by the Peabody Trio in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, April 2002. Published by Peer.
Midsummer Variations (1985; second version 1987), for piano quintet.
Commissioned and premiered by the Minnesota Artists Ensemble in 1985. Published by Peer. Won Massachusetts Artists Council Grant 1989. Recorded on CRI by the Scott Chamber Players.
Peal (1976), for six trumpets.
Premiered at Yale in 1977. Chosen for the International Gaudeamus Festival in Holland, 1978.
In Time of War (2007), for cello and piano.
Written for and premiered by Emanuel Feldman and George Lopez, New England Conservatory, May 2007.
Shore Lines (1982), for soprano and flute.
Premiered in Deerfield in 1983. Published by Meridian. Performed at National Flute Conventions in 1994 and 1995. Won a National Flute Association Award for newly published work in 1995.
Magus (1977), for cello and tape.
Premiered by Gerhard Pawlica at Boston University in 1978.
“Swafford’s piece is a private outpouring scaled to a deeply felt, intimately scored trio … that seems to channel the energy of the trios of Ravel or Shostakovich.”
— Boston Globe
“The most immediate appeal of this excellently performed and recorded disc is Jan Swafford’s beautiful answer to what comes after Modernism.”
— American Record Guide
“Channels the energy of Ravel or Shostakovich.”
— Boston Globe
“Rich in mood and atmosphere, spare and transparent in sound, and lyrical in effect.”
— The Indianapolis News
“His music sounds only like itself.”
— The Pennsylvania Beacon
“Swafford does write well, very well indeed.”
— Fanfare
“Fresh”
— Boston Globe
“Jaunty with motoric rhythms, lyrical and bluesy”
— Boston Globe
“Unusual and haunting sonic combinations”
— Boston Herald