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Kathrynn Lyle,
Composer
Kathrynn Lyle was born in 1955 and raised in Seattle,
Washington. Her performance history includes classical music, jazz,
cabaret, rock, blues, funk, world music, and multi-media. Early on she
became proficient with the piano, violin, and bass clarinet. Her career
as a composer and music director led her toward the field of education,
following in the footsteps of both her parents.
As a composer and music teacher in the Oakland Public
Schools for the past ten years, Kathrynn is currently Director of the Oakland
Elementary MUSE Orchestra, a program of the Oakland East Bay Symphony.
She composes concert pieces and solo ensemble material for students at over 15
area schools. Her compositions reflect the musical heritages of the over
66 ethnic groups represented in the school district. I want to
devote my musical talents to teaching children, says Kathrynn.
The music I compose for student performance is taken from class
activities. As the students learn concepts and techniques, I integrate
their ideas into compositions. Kathrynn was awarded the Keep Music
Alive in Our Schools Award from The Mr. Hollands Opus Foundation for her
contribution to music education.
Among her recent compositions for the general public
is a new opera-in-progress, Letters Home, excerpts of which were
performed and recorded by noted tenor John Duykers at Cal Arts in Valencia,
California. The opera is based on the book, Dear Miye,
Letters Home from Japan
(1939-1946), by Mary Tomita. The Los Angeles Times called it
tonal and emotionally engaging. (Oct. 13, 2000) Excerpts of
the opera are available on CD.
Kathrynns published works include the upcoming
12 Wings: 12 Pieces for Beginning Orchestra, a collection of
multi-cultural orchestra pieces to be published by KangarooLynx in 2003.
Her composition for gamelan orchestra (flute, string, and percussion music
originating in southeast Asia) is published by the American Gamelan
Institute.
Film buffs may remember Kathrynns score for
Samuael Topiarys dance piece, Atalanta, a silent film
accompanied by a live chamber orchestra. The film was featured at film
festivals around the Bay Area, as well as in New York, Montreal, and
Berlin. The San Francisco Bay Guardians review
of the film score said, Lyles score is rich and sophisticated, at
all times supportive of the film, yet with its own distinct voice. . . .
The score stands on its own. (Feb. 17, 1999).
As a Seattle musician in the 1980s, Kathrynn led
groups as a jazz pianist and co-founded and directed The Kit Kat Club (spoofing
the famous club in Cabaret), a performance art cabaret based on the
traditions of the 1880s Parisian literary
nightclub.
Kathrynns diverse music training is the
foundation for her music style. She studied composition with Janice
Giteck; West African master drumming with Obo Addy; and instrument building
with Paul Dresher at the Cornish Institute in Seattle. She received her
Bachelors Degree in music and technology from The Evergreen State College
in Olympia, Washington in 1984. She earned her Masters Degree in
composition from Mills College, Oakland, in 1988, where she received the
prestigious Darius Milhaud Scholarship to study composition with Anthony
Braxton, David Rosenboom, and Pauline Oliveros. She also attended the
Center for Contemporary Music where she studied computer music, signal
processing, and sound engineering, and studied and taught gamelan with Jodi
Diamond.
Kathrynns compositions mix melodic line,
harmonic progression, and polyrhythms contrasted with points of dissonance,
acidulated textures, and polymetric musical phrases. Her music, which is
aligned as much with impressionism as with improvisation, is facile, flexible,
and fluent in its ability to capture the colorist capabilities of either solo
or combinations of instruments. Says Kathrynn of her music: I
am inspired by juxtaposition and oddity. I use uplifting melodies,
modalities, and rhythms to express the human
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