Mr. Bayolo has been hailed for his “suggestive aural imagination” (El Nuevo Día) in works that are “full of lush ideas and a kind of fierce grandeur, (unfolding) with subtle, driving power” (The Washington Post). His “music combines the audacity of popular music, the verve-filled rhythmic language of Latin America, and the pugnacity of postmodern classicism into a heady, formidable concoction” (Sequenza21), and “deserves to be heard many more times, and in many more places. It is new, it is fresh, and it gets its message across” (The Charlotte Observer) “with quite a high degree of poetic expressiveness” (Music-Web International).
Mr. Bayolo’s music has been commissioned and performed throughout the world by some of today’s most important musicians and ensembles including National Symphony Orchestra and Peabody Institute bassist, Jeffrey Weisner, violinist Cornelius Dufallo, cellist Natalie Spehar, violist Jason Hohn, guitarist D.J. Sparr, flutist Rowland Sutherland, clarinetist Katherine Kellert, pianist Kathleen Supove, and French Hornist Armando Castellano; conductors Mei-Ann Chen, Harlan Parker, Mark Scatterday, John Gordon Ross, Robert Geary, Julian Wachner, Robert Ponto, J. Reilly Lewis, Carlo Boccadoro, and Maximiano Valdés; Loadbang, the Society for New Music in Syracuse, NY, the Grand Valley State University New Music Ensemble, Trio Montage, the Euclid Quartet, the Bleeker ST Quartet, Volti, Janus Trio, Orfeón San Juan Bautista, the American Modern Ensemble, Third Coast Percussion, The Percussion Plus Project, London’s Ensemble Lontano, Amsterdam’s Hexnut, the South Jutlands Symphony of Denmark, the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, Western Piedmont Symphony, Delaware Valley Symphony Orchestra, Wabash Valley Youth Symphony, Columbia Civic Orchestra, the Chicago Sinfonietta, the National Gallery of Art Orchestra and Vocal Arts Ensemble, the Washington Chorus and Washington Choral Arts Society, Great Noise Ensemble and the wind ensembles of Oregon State University, the University of Oregon, Arizona State University, the University of New Mexico, The Ohio State University and the Eastman School of Music.
Mr. Bayolo is the recipient of important commissions and awards from the Aspen Music Festival, Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University, the Music Department of the National Gallery of Art, the Arts Councils of the states of Iowa and North Carolina, the Cintas Foundation, the Minnesota Orchestra, and American Composers Forum, the Consortium for a Strong Minority Presence, the all-Virginia Intercollegiate Band, and the Festival Interamericano de las Artes.
Significant upcoming performances of Mr. Bayolo’s music include the European premieres of Wide Open Spaces and Gestos inútiles with Milan’s Sentieri Selvaggi and Carlo Boccadoro, the world premiere of Hidden Zen with Kathleen Supove at New York’s Di Menna Center for Classical Music, premiere performances of A Play of Mirrors by H2 Saxophone Quartet, A Hymnody for the Contemplation of Terrifying Mysteries for Atlanta’s Chamber Cartel, Five for Four by The Guidonian Hand, Last Breaths, in its original version by Loadbang and a new, wind ensemble version by the College of New Jersey Wind Ensemble. Recent important performances of his work include performances of Action Figure, Hermandad and Gestos inútiles at the Lontano Festival of American Music in London, Hesychasmos at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign new music series, The Books of Bokonon by The Deviant Septet at the Outside the Box new music festival at Southern Illinois University and in their regular series in New York (2017-18), Caprichos at the 2014 Bang on a Can marathon (where he also conducted works by Carlos Carrillo and Marc Mellits). In 2015-16, the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra opened their season with Mr. Bayolo’s concerto for orchestra, Ráfagas de baile to great acclaim. That same season, Great Noise Ensemble presented the world premiere of Mr. Bayolo’s fourth symphony, Chamber Symphony: Obsessioneering. Additionally, important performances and commissions of his works have been presented by the Chicago Sinfonietta, Trio Montage (at Carnegie Hall and the International Clarinet Association conference in Assisi), the Bowling Green New Music Festival, the Festival Interamericano de las Artes in San Juan, Volti, the Washington Chorus, and Choral Arts Society, the Cathedral Choral Society, Invoke, and others. His music has been presented at such important venues as the Aspen Music Festival, the Charlotte New Music Festival, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Orchestra Hall in Chicago, and Carnegie Hall, among others. Major ongoing projects also include Che/The Passion of Che Guevara, an opera-oratorio in two acts to a libretto by Kate Gale, with Matthew Principe, producer and Kevin Newbury, director, and Los Caprichos, a setting of 80 miniatures for ensemble and multimedia based on Francisco de Goya’s 1799 etchings.
Besides being active as a composer, Mr. Bayolo is an “adventurous, imaginative and fiercely committed (The Washington Post) advocate for contemporary music in American culture through his activities as Artistic Director and conductor of Great Noise Ensemble, curator, from 2011-2014, of the New Music at the Atlas series for the Atlas Performing Arts Center in Washington, and as a writer for such publications as Sequenza21 and NewMusicBox. With Great Noise Ensemble, Mr. Bayolo has led several world and regional premieres of music by a diverse group of composers, both emerging and established, like Joel Puckett, D.J. Sparr, Robert Paterson, Hannah Lash, Carlos Carrillo, Ryan Brown, David T. Little, David Smooke, John Adams, Michael Daugherty, Steve Reich, John Luther Adams, Frederic Rzweski, Poul Ruders, Ken Ueno, Gabriela Lena Frank, Martin Bresnick, Sean Doyle, Marc Mellits, Arlene Sierra, Eric Nathan, and Louis Andriessen. As a conductor of “precision, imagination and tangible electricity” (The Washington Post), Mr. Bayolo has led Great Noise Ensemble to become the premiere contemporary music ensemble in Washington, D.C., and one of the most important arts organizations in the District of Columbia. He has specialized, particularly, in the music of Louis Andriessen, leading the first professional American ensemble performance of De Materie in 2010 and of La Commedia during the 2013-14 season as part of a week-long festival of Andriessen’s music he curated in honor of the composer’s 75th birthday in 2014. As curator of the New Music Series at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, Mr. Bayolo developed an innovative, adventurous concert series which quickly became “a key destination for anyone interested in new American music” (The Washington Post) in the United States. His series featured such luminary performers as Ethel, the International Contemporary Ensemble, the Bang on a Can All Stars, Kathleen Supove, the Prism Saxophone Quartet, So Percussion, Janus Trio, Maya Beiser, Tim Brady, Imani Winds, Newspeak, and eighth blackbird. Mr. Bayolo currently serves as Director of the Publick Playhouse for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission as well as director of the Commission’s partnership with Bowie State University.
Mr. Bayolo has been featured on Public Radio International’s Studio 360 broadcast out of WNYC in New York and on the NPR program Fresh Ink broadcast out of WCNY in Syracuse, WQXR’s Q2, as well as the Washington Post and the New York Times’ Opinionator Blog. He has also contributed articles to New Music Box and Sequenza21, where he was a Contributing Editor until 2011. As an educator, he has served on the music faculties of Reed College, Hamilton College, the Peabody Conservatory of Johns Hopkins University, and Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, where he coordinated the Outside the Box new music festival. From 2013-15, he served as guest faculty with the Charlotte New Music Festival. He is the recipient of a 2011 Fromm Foundation grant from Harvard University, the 2008 Brandon Fradd Fellowship in music composition from the Cintas Foundation, a fellowship from the Consortium for a Strong Minority Presence from 2006-2008, and various other awards and honors from the American Composers Forum, the University of Michigan, BMI, ASCAP and the arts councils of Iowa and North Carolina. His cello concerto, Orfei Mors, and the cantata, Kaddish:Passio: Rothko, were each nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in music. Mr. Bayolo’s music can be heard on the Sono Luminus, Inova, New Focus, and Great Noise labels and is published by his own imprint, Olibel Music, and available through his website, www.armandobayolo.com.
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