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Biography
David Hush was born in Bristol, England.
He was educated at Clifton College, the University of Sydney,
and Princeton University.
Hush's music, that spans solo instrumental,
chamber ensemble, orchestral, and choral idioms, has been
performed, recorded, and broadcast on five continents. Hush
has received premieres in Buenos Aires, Caracas, Chicago,
Hagen, London, Los Angeles, Mexico City, New York, and San
Diego.
Hush has received fellowships and awards
from, inter alia, Princeton University, the Hinrichsen Foundation,
and the New Jersey State Council On The Arts. In addition
he has received the Ignaz Friedman Prize, was named the first
recipient of the Schoenberg Award in 1984, and has received
numerous awards from the American Society of Composers, Authors
and Publishers (ASCAP). Hush was composer in residence at
the Sydney Conservatorium of Music in 1993-4.
Hush's Sonata for Violin Solo was recorded
by Zina Schiff as the centrepiece of King David's Lyre, the
disc released in celebration of Jerusalem's 3,000th anniversary.
King David's Lyre was cited as one of the best recordings
of the year by the American Record Guide in its critics' choice
for 1997.
In 1997 Hush was commissioned by the Center
for Jewish Culture and Creativity to write Pictures of Israel,
a work for violin, double bass, and tabla. The premiere of
this piece, on 29 June 1997 in San Diego, saw Zina Schiff
joining forces with the acclaimed American double bassist
Bertram Turetzky.
Hush joined the Composition Faculty of the
Australian Institute of Music in 1998. Five of Hush's compositions
for solo violin were broadcast live on the Internet from Seattle
7 May 2001. The works - all performed by Zina Schiff - reached
an audience of 100,000 worldwide.
In 2002 Hush completed his first composition
for solo voice, Two Psalms for soprano and piano. Hush is
a Consultant and composer in residence to the Leopold Mozart
Academy of Music.
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