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Biography
Conductor-Composer Leo Eylar, born in Los Angeles in 1958, grew up in a musical family.
He began studying violin at the age of nine and was accepted into the
private studios of both Jascha Heifitz and Ruggiero Ricci. His early
teachers included Virginia Baker, Joachim Chassman and Eudice Shapiro.
Eylar attended Northwestern University and the University of Southern
California where he received his Bachelor of Music degree, summa cum
laude. His violin teachers included Glenn Dicterow, currently concertmaster
of the New York Philharmonic, and Samuel Magad, concertmaster of the
Chicago Symphony. In 1980 Eylar joined the Seattle Symphony and in 1982
he was awarded an International Rotary Foundation Grant to study conducting
at the Hochschule für Musik in Vienna, Austria. After studying
there with Otmar Suitner, he returned to the U.S. and completed his
Master's Degree in conducting at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music,
simultaneously holding the position of co-concertmaster of the San Jose
Symphony from 1984-89.
Eylar was on the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music from 1985-88,
during which time he conducted a nationally televised performance of
"America Sings" with Bobby McFerrin and the San Francisco
Conservatory of Music Orchestra. He is currently a professor and conductor
at California State University Sacramento, a position he has held since
1988. Since 1990 he has been Conductor and Music Director of the California
Youth Symphony. Under his masterful and spirited direction the orchestra
soon enhanced its reputation as one of the finest youth orchestras in
the world and won first prize in the International Youth and Music Festival
in Vienna, Austria, in July 1994. Over the past fifteen years of his
tenure, the orchestra has performed to great critical acclaim across
four continents. He has also guest-conducted extensively throughout
Europe and Asia, including prestigious music festivals in Japan, Austria,
France, and Australia. Eylar has also been a frequent guest conductor
of the San Jose Symphony. With a repertoire of over 250 symphonic works
and numerous operas conducted, Eylar brings a vast range of expertise
and depth to his conducting.
Eylar
is also a composer of international stature. His compositions, which
blend a rich, coloristic neo-romanticism with elements of jazz and driving
Eastern European rhythmic vitality, have been performed in Carnegie
Hall, as well as in England, the Netherlands, Japan, Germany and Austria.
His original works have been commissioned by the Dutch contemporary
orchestra "De Volharding", the San Francisco ensemble "Earplay",
and the prestigious German “Ensemble8”, among others. In
1993 The Temptation of St. Anthony for Horn and String Orchestra was
performed by the California Youth Symphony, and was acclaimed by the
press as a "symphonic gem." In 1994 the Seattle Symphony,
along with well-known trumpeter Jeffrey Silberschlag, recorded Eylar’s
Dance Suite for Trumpet and String Orchestra on the Delos label, which
was praised byreceived plaudits from the press. Also in 1994 his Variations
on a Troubadour Theme for String Orchestra was performed by the San
Luis Obispo County Symphony. In 1995 Eylar's Rhapsody for Orchestra,
which was subsequently nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, was performed
by the California Youth Symphony and recorded in Japan the following
year. In 1997 he conducted the world premiere of his Violin Concerto,
An Orpheus Legend, in San Luis Obispo with noted violinist Ralph Morrison
as soloist. An Orpheus Legend was featured by CYS during its Spanish
Tour in the summer of 1998, and recorded in Spain with violin soloist
Kenneth Hsu. The world premiere of Eylar's Concerto for Harp and String
Orchestra took place in 1998. In 2004 the internationally recognized
German string bass virtuoso Christine Hoockt recorded Eylar’s
Suite in Three Movements for Bass and Piano as the leading work on her
debut CD. Recent commissions have included an octet for the German contemporary
group “Ensemble8”, a 14-minute orchestral work titled Tonescapes
to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the California Youth Symphony,
and a Sonata for Saxophone and Piano commissioned by well-known saxophonist
Keith Bohm, to be recorded in 2006. Eylar is currently working on a
large-scale percussion quartet, Percussive Enigmas, to be premiered
in the spring of 2006.
7 January 2006
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