Dan Forrest, Jr.

For the politician with a similar name, see Dan Forest.
Dan Forrest

Dan Forrest, 2007
Born (1978-01-07)January 7, 1978
Elmira, New York
Nationality American
Education Bob Jones University, University of Kansas
Occupation composer
Employer Beckenhorst Press
Religion Christian
Website http://www.danforrest.com/

Daniel Ernest Forrest, Jr. (born January 7, 1978) is a composer, pianist, and music editor.

Biography

Dan Forrest was born in Elmira, New York and received a B.Mus. and an M.Mus. in Piano Performance from Bob Jones University and a D.M.A. in composition from the University of Kansas. He has studied composition with Joan Pinkston, Dwight Gustafson, James Barnes, and Alice Parker.[1] Forrest's compositions include choral, instrumental, orchestral, and wind band works. His church music appears in the catalogs of ten publishers, including Hinshaw, Hal Leonard, Beckenhorst, Shawnee Press, and Chorister’s Guild.[2]

Forrest's choral works have received the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer’s Award, the ACDA Raymond Brock Award, a Meet The Composer grant, and the ALCM Raabe Prize. His “A Basque Lullaby” for wind band was included in Volume 8 of the Teaching Music Through Performance In Band series. Forrest's music has been performed in leading venues including Carnegie Hall, the Lincoln Center, and on NPR’s “Performance Today.”[3] A review in The Salt Lake Tribune referred to Forrest's "superb choral writing" and gave as an example his arrangement of "The First Noel," which it said was "full of spine-tingling moments." [4] Forrest's Requiem for the Living (2013) received more than a hundred performances world-wide within a year of its composition, including performances in Canada, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and multiple performances at Carnegie Hall.[5]

Forrest is an associate editor at Beckenhorst Press, has a choral series in his name with Hinshaw Music,[6] and serves on the editorial board of The Artistic Theologian.[7] He served as chairman of the department of music theory and composition at Bob Jones University from 2007 to 2012.[8]

Awards

Notable Performances


References

  1. Beckenhorst Press bio.
  2. Forrest website.
  3. Teaching Music Through Performance in Band vol. 8. According to the composer's website, nearly a million copies of his choral works are in print. Forrest website.
  4. Salt Lake Tribune review, December 3, 2011.
  5. Paul Hyde, "Greenville Chorale presents Forrest's soaring 'Requiem,'" Greenville News, October 12, 2014; Forrest website. A review written for the Greenville News called the work "highly accessible, with soaring melodies and luminous harmony" that reminded the reviewer of Aaron Copland, John Rutter, and James Horner. Greenville News, October 21, 2014, 5A.
  6. Hinshaw Music website
  7. The Artistic Theologian website.
  8. Forrest website.
  9. John Ness Beck Foundation winners.
  10. 1 2 3 Vanguard website.
  11. Brock awards
  12. Beck Foundation website.
  13. ALCM Raabe prizes
  14. Ticheli contest.
  15. Carnegie Hall program. The Shawnee Mission East Choraliers, under the direction of Tracy Resseguie, performed "Arise, Shine!" on the same program with Morten Lauridsen's Lux Aeterna (1997).
  16. "Carol of Joy" was performed by The Brigham Young University Choirs and Orchestra with conductor Ronald Staheli at the Harris Fine Arts Center, Provo, Utah, and in October 2008 the University of Utah Singers released a Christmas album titled "Carol of Joy", which featured the song. See University of Utah combined choirs concert performance video of "Carol of Joy"
  17. Forrest website. The same month "You Are the Music" was performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.
  18. "On November 16, 2014 The Voices of the Commonwealth and the Northern Kentucky Youth Sinfonia wowed the Greater Cincinnati area with a magnificent performance."
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