the 50 state string orchestra project

Scroll down for project details, to listen to the piece, and to meet the consortium and composer!

ABOUT THE PROJECT

The 50 State String Orchestra Project is a large-scale consortium commission that is bringing new music to classrooms and concert halls all over the US, with educational and community orchestras in all 50 states commissioning a new piece for string orchestra.

This project is about helping young people make connections and memories across state and cultural borders, it is about introducing the breadth and strength of the US strings community to those outside it, and it is about celebrating the incredible resilience and courage of US strings programs and their directors as they restart and regroup in this post-covid Era.

The project’s resulting work, Four Future Memories is similar in difficulty level and scope to Stephanie’s 2011 work for string orchestra Beyond the Gate, and her consortium commissions for chamber music have already brought new string-centered music all across the world, from her 50 State Sonata Project for violin + piano, inspired by the work of her teacher John Kendall, and her World Sonata Project, which was commissioned by violinists from 35 countries in 2016.

The 50 State Projects are consortiums that work to connect people from all over the United States, using the creation, preparation, and performance of a new piece of music to help make connections and memories across state and cultural borders. See the original 50 State Project here.

PROJECT DETAILS

MUSIC:
for string orchestra with optional harp and 3rd violin parts
Grade 3/4 — Music (pdf score + parts) available now
10 minutes, three movements
email for perusal score + recording

EXTRAS:
includes an hour-long zoom clinic with your ensemble!
includes a page on this website about you and your program!
includes various press and social media efforts to publicize your concert(s)!

FEE: $500
(or preorder the music ($250))

WHY A CONSORTIUM?: Breaking the cost of composing a new work into many smaller parts helps the experience of working with a living composer a lot more feasible to a lot more people! And I love working with people! Read about how much new music really costs here.

TIMELINE:
The included zoom clinic can be scheduled through 2025
You can play and program the piece with your ensemble as much as you want and at any point during this time!
Consortium members have exclusive access to the piece through August 2024. If you don’t want to join the consortium but do want to play the music, you can pre-order it now.

Send me an email to Join the Consortium or Pre-Order Music

(I know that not all budgets are created equal—I definitely couldn’t have gone to orchestra camp (Blue Lake!) without a scholarship every year!! So reach out if your budget cannot accommodate and we’ll figure it out!)

FOUR FUTURE MEMORIES
AT CARNEGIE HALL

Performed by consortium members Peter Jagdeo and the Tomball Memorial Orchestra—March 2024

I. TWILIGHT MEMOIRE

a Lyrical short story:
takes us through a series of melodic tableaus as our main character reflects on an entire life in old age.

Twilight Memoir focuses on breathing and playing as a group, slurring in myriad patterns, and long dynamic builds and ebbs.

II. Watercolor to the Moon

a Vignette short story:
paints an eerie, dreamy trip around the moon in pastel hues.

Watercolor to the Moon focuses on tone color, employing harmonics and bowing techniques to make subtle shifts in the movement's pastel harmonies alongside sudden changes in dynamic.

III. RHYTHMICS ON MARS

an Adventure short story:
is just that: a short, fast, vibrant excursion.

Rhythmics on Mars focuses on grooves and hemiolas and the fiery side of the technique palette: accents, repeated down bows, Bartok pizzicati, and double stops.

The fourth memory? That's your own that you're making as you learn the piece, or play the piece, or listen to it. Ask any musician about their favorite memories from formative years and dollars to donuts their answer will include an eager retelling of some youth orchestra concert. And lucky you that you're here, in this moment, in the middle of creating this memory for the yourself that you'll be tomorrow, a year from now, and decades down the road.

Meet the Consortium!

Meet the composer!

Michigan-born, Manhattan-based American composer Stephanie Ann Boyd (b. 1990) writes melodic music about women’s memoirs and the natural world for symphonic and chamber ensembles. Her work has been performed in nearly all 50 states and has been commissioned by musicians and organizations in 37 countries. Boyd’s five ballets include works choreographed by New York City Ballet principal dancers Lauren Lovette and Ashley Bouder and include a ballet commissioned for the grand opening of the TWA Hotel at JFK Airport. Stephanie’s music has been praised as “a racing, brassy score” (New York Times), attractive lyricism (Gramophone), [with] ethereal dissonances” (Boston Globe), “[music that] didn’t let itself be eclipsed” (Texas Classical Review), and “arrestingly poetic” (BMOP).

Stephanie  grew up as a violinist in the Ann Arbor, Michigan string world. One of the last students of renowned pedagogue John Kendall, she was a member of the Pioneer High School Symphony Orchestra, the Michigan Youth Symphony Orchestra, and toured Europe with the Blue Lake International Youth Symphony Orchestra in 2006. Her string orchestra works have been performed by youth, amateur, and professional ensembles alike, and include Beyond the Gate, Dark Sky Soliloquy, Bright Dawn Chorus and A Kaleidoscoped Menagerie for advanced ensembles, and Eternal Golden Braid and Summer Walker Dances for Beginning/Intermediate level ensembles.

Current commissions include a new concerto, Nautilus, for Anthony McGill, principal clarinet of the New York Philharmonic, and recent commissions and premieres include a work inspired by Betty Friedan entitled Everywoman, with Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter, mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung, and 2022 Indianapolis Competition winner Sirena Huang as soloists and commissioned by the Peoria Symphony Orchestra with George StellutoJulia Louisa Esther: a Suffragette Symphony commissioned by the Wyoming Symphony Orchestra with Christopher Dragon, the premiere of which was the subject of a documentary on Wyoming PBS in 2022; Alleluia Olora commissioned by Astral Artists for cellist Tommy Mesa; Aurora, commissioned by the Kurganov-Finehouse Duo, and others.

Boyd’s music has been commissioned and performed by concertmasters of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, the Singapore Symphony, the New York City Ballet Orchestra, the Des Moines Symphony, the Faroe Islands Symphony, the Anchorage Symphony Orchestra, the Fort Smith Symphony, the Arkansas Philharmonic Orchestra, and principal players in the Colorado Symphony Orchestra.  Her music has been commissioned and/or played by the Wyoming Symphony Orchestra, the Peoria Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, the New England Conservatory Philharmonic, the Cape Cod Chamber Orchestra, the New York Jazzharmonic, the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra, the Detroit Civic Orchestra, the Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra, the El Paso Youth Symphony, and others.

Her work has been presented by the Thalia and her Sisters concert series, the Moirae Ensemble, and Sandcastle New Music in New York City; Æpex Contemporary Music in Michigan; Juventas New Music, Collage New Music, and the New Gallery Concert Series in Boston; Cincinnati Soundbox, and others. Stephanie has worked with conductors Andrew Litton, Lina Gonzales, Earl Lee, Nathan Aspinall, Cliff Colnot, Gill Rose, Julian Benichou, Kristo Kondakci, and Kevin Fitzgerald. Her work has been performed in venues like Merkin Hall, Detroit Symphony Orchestra Hall, the Martha Graham Studio, Singapore Symphony’s Esplanade Hall, The Joyce Theater, Boston’s Jordan Hall, the Midwest Conference, Poisson Rouge, Tenri Cultural Center, Ganz Hall, the DiMenna Center, and the TWA Hotel.

Boyd has made ballets with New York City Ballet principal dancer Lauren Lovette (Red Spotted Purple commissioned by the Ashley Bouder Project, 2018), New York City Ballet principal dancer Ashley Bouder (Out of the Dust made at NYU Center for Ballet and the Arts, 2019), New York City Ballet soloist Peter Walker (Eero, commissioned by Access Contemporary Music and Open House New York for the grand opening of the TWA Hotel at JFK, 2019), and choreographer Eryn Renee Young (EARTH, commissioned by the Eryc Taylor Dance Company, 2019, and Flower Catalog, for XAOC Ballet, 2022).

Stephanie has given talks about her work at Roosevelt University’s Chicago College of Performing Arts, the Longy School of Music of Bard College, the University of Northern Colorado, the University of Arkansas, the University of Central Florida, Texas State University, Northwest Arkansas Community College, and others, and has given talks on her work at the New Music Gathering conference and the Continuum Music Festival in Memphis. Stephanie especially believes in instilling agency and sparking initiative in young people, and as such has given talks on creativity at high schools in Wyoming, New Mexico, Michigan, and Hawaii.

Stephanie was the 2021-2022 Composer in Residence for the Peoria Symphony Orchestra, the 2016-18 Composer in Residence for the Eureka Ensemble in Boston, the 2013/14 Collage New Music Fellow, and has had composition residencies at summer festivals in Italy, Canada, and the US. She is a faculty member of the Iceberg Institute in Vienna. She holds degrees from Roosevelt University and New England Conservatory (with honors).

Boyd is represented by K and M Artists and is a member of the Iceberg New Music composers collective. For concert premieres and red carpet appearances, she is usually dressed by MILLY creator Michelle Smith or Boston-based designer Sasha Parfenova. Stephanie intensely adores jazz big band screaming trumpets, the smell of camp fires and old cars, that moment when planes leave the ground during takeoff, and reading contemporary fiction novels next to her fluffy black cat, Petra

The 50 State Projects are consortiums that work to connect people from all over the United States, using the creation, preparation, and performance of a new piece of music to help make connections and memories across state and cultural borders. See the original 50 State Project here.