performers

Daniel Brewbaker

Daniel Brewbaker

Born in Elgin, Illinois, in 1951 and a pianist since the age of 4, Daniel Brewbaker had a brilliant academic career, starting with undergraduate study at the University of Illinois, then a Master’s and Doctorate degree from the Juilliard School. While beginning his career as a composer, he was an educator at Juilliard, Hunter, Queens Colleges (CUNY) and the Westminster Choir College. Further studies took him to Rome and other major European musical centers, where he became acquainted with many of the major composers of the last half-century.

His first composition, “Psalm 39,” for soprano and piano, was premiered at the University of Illinois in 1970.
After several decades and creating fifty-three compositions, Daniel has been established as an important
American composer, receiving a large number of commissions both in the United States and abroad. His works
have been performed by some of the world’s leading performers in the foremost musical centers of the world.
His awards include the Nadia Boulanger Award at the Ecole des Artes Americaines in Fontainebleau, as well as
first prize in the Lili Boulanger International Music Competition in Paris. He was a Tanglewood Fellow and
won an Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He has served as composer in residence at the Camargo Foundation in France in 1988 and 1994, and at the the 1997 Spoleto USA Music Festival in Charleston, South Carolina.

In 2000, Daniel’s choral work “Cincinnatus Psalm” was performed by the Cincinnati Orchestra and Chorus, and
conducted by James Conlon at the century-old May Music Festival in Cincinnati. As part of the introduction to
the performance of this music, Daniel said, “I like music that moves me, involves me intellectually, emotionally,
and physically. So I would hope to engage listeners in my music on those levels.” He said the piece
“Scheherezade,” which he first heard when he was about 10 years old, “opened up the world of imagination and
the world of travel and adventure…and filled me with this inexplicable sense of joy and of being alive…”

In 1995, his “Concerto for Cello and Orchestra” was premiered by the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and has
since been recorded by Carter Brey, principal cellist of the New York Philharmonic. In 2004, Daniel was
commissioned to write a violin concerto for one of the world’s leading violinists, Vadim Repin, and the
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. The work premiered in June of 2005 as part of the series of performances for
the American Symphony Orchestra League convention being held in Washington, D.C. Other works have been
featured in concert halls from Seattle to New York City to Dublin.

Daniel’s loyalty and fondness for the Elgin area has led to commissions for the Elgin Youth Symphony and the
Elgin Symphony Orchestra (ESO), for which he played for many years. In 1985, his work, “Rhapsody for
Orchestra,” received its world premier by the ESO. In 1999, renowned cellist Yo Yo Ma, the gala artist for the
ESO, performed one movement of Daniel’s cello concerto “La Serenissima.” In 2003, his composition “Psalm
51” for mixed chorus, organ, and string quartet was premiered at the Holy Trinity Church of Elgin. Daniel
conducted this work as well as other sacred music as part of the church’s 100th anniversary festival.

With his music licensed by BMI and published by the world’s leading publishing houses, Daniel Brewbaker was a
highly decorated composer of more than fifty published works. His music reflects his deeply spiritual and
somewhat mystical nature, and these spiritual values are communicated to the listener with powerful effect.
Daniel and his music are very much a product of the American Midwest, although he has been steeped in the
great traditions of European art music.

In Memorium, 1951 - 2017