Andy Akiho

(1979-02-02)February 2, 1979

composer, musician

1997–present

Education[edit]

Akiho, who is of Japanese heritage, is a graduate of the University of South Carolina with a B.M. in percussion performance, the Manhattan School of Music with a M.Mus. in contemporary performance, and the Yale School of Music with a second M.Mus. in composition.[4] He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in composition at Princeton University.[2] While he was an undergraduate, he was also a member of the Carolina Crown Drum and Bugle Corps of Fort Mill, South Carolina and then of The Cadets Drum and Bugle Corps of Allentown, Pennsylvania.[5]

Career[edit]

Akiho has tried to learn everything he could with what was available to him at the time as a percussionist while at the University of South Carolina. He has played in a percussion ensemble as a classical percussionist, concert band, and in orchestras. Akiho had also joined a local West African percussion ensemble, Brazilian drumming ensembles, and steel bands.[6] He began to realize once he finished at South Carolina that he truly loved playing the pans the most and from there he traveled to Trinidad several times without knowing anyone or having any connections. He started by speaking to the locals telling them that he had really wanted to play the steel pan there. During his first visit, he had stayed in Trinidad for five weeks playing with a big band who called themselves the PCS Starlift Steel Orchestra which was led by Ray Holman. In the following year, he played with another steel orchestra called Phase II which was led by Len "Boogsie" Sharpe.[6]


Akiho's interest and confidence in going in the direction of music composition was influenced by him doing the Bang on a Can Summer Festivals in 2007 and 2008. Akiho has studied compositions with Julia Wolfe, David Lang (composer), and Michael Gordon (composer) and was greatly influenced by his teachers Christopher Theofanidis, Ezra Laderman, and Martin Bresnick at Yale School of Music.[6] Jacob Druckman’s “Come Round,” performed at the Manhattan School of Music played a huge role in influencing Akiho when he began composing.[6]


Akiho is involved in a stage production collaboration with The Industry's director, Yuval Sharon, who re-imagines Bertolt Brecht’s play Life of Galileo by taking part in composing the original music for. He found it challenging to collaborate with someone because he was used to doing abstract work to then working in a disciplined environment collaborating with someone who knew what they wanted. The project gave him the feeling that he was writing music for a movie, which in turn inspired him to want to do more of those kinds of collaborative work.[7]

2008 Prize

Brian Israel

2009 Morton Gould Young Composers Award

ASCAP

2010 Horatio Parker Award

2011 Finale National Composition Competition Grand Prize

2011 Woods Chandler Memorial Prize

2011 Alumni Award

Yale School of Music

2012 Carlsbad Composer Competition Commission

2012 (CMA) Grant

Chamber Music America

2014 (CMA) Grant

Chamber Music America

2014 Underwood Emerging Composers Commission

American Composers Orchestra

2014 Commission from Harvard University

Fromm Foundation

2014–15 Luciano Berio

Rome Prize

2015 Memorial Fund

Lili Boulanger

2022 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition (Nominated)

2022 finalist for Seven Pillars [11]

Pulitzer Prize for Music

2023 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition (Nominated)

2024 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition

2024 Grammy Award for Best Classical Compendium

2024 Grammy Award for Best Classical Instrumental Solo

Sources:[8][9][10]

Phatamachickenlick (1997) for snare drum duet

Hip-Hopracy (2001) for 9 percussionists

Macqueripe (2002) for tenor steel pan

Omnipresent (2003) for tenor steel pan

Daidai Iro (Orange) (2005) for steel pan, cello, bass, and drums with toy piano & glockenspiel optional; also for solo tenor steel pan

Aka (Red) (2006) for steel pan, cello and/or double bass, drums, and optional violin

Momo Iro (Pink) (2006) for steel pan, guitar, bass, and drums; also for solo tenor steel pan

Murasaki (Purple) (2006) for steel pan, harp, cello, bass, and drums; also for solo tenor steel pan

Hadairo (Beige) (2007) for string quartet, harp, steel pan, bass, and drums; also for solo tenor steel pan

Karakurenai (Crimson) (2007/2011) flexible instrumentation for one or more players

I falleN TwO (2008) for steel pan and string quartet

the rAy's end| (2008) for trumpet, violin, and steel pan

Vick(i/y) (2008) for prepared piano

Ki-Iro (2009) for woodwinds, strings, harp, piano & 3 percussion

to wALk Or ruN in wEst harlem (2008) for flute, bass clarinet, violin, cello, vibraphone, and drums; also (2016) for 8 member percussion ensemble

21 (2009) for cello (double loop pedal and kick drum) and steel pan (double tambourine) or marimba (double tambourine)

Alloy (2009) for steel pans band & metallic drum set

Amalgamation (2009) for saxophone quartet and digital playback

NO one To kNOW one (2010) for soprano, flute, clarinet (doubles bass clarinet), cello, piano, percussion, vibraphone and/or steel pan (vibes & pan play same score)

LIgNEouS 1 (2010) for marimba and string quartet

Erase (2011) for flute, clarinet (doubles bass clarinet), violin, cello, piano, percussion

Five Movements for Piano Trio (2011) for piano, violin, and cello

In/Exchange (2011) for steel pan and string quartet

LIgNEouS 3 (2011) for marimba and string quartet

Six Haikus (2011) for baritone voice, trumpet, trombone, and bass clarinet

Stop Speaking (2011) for snare drum and digital playback

-intuition ) (Expectation (2012) for trumpet and marimba

Oscillate (2012) for string orchestra, piano, and 3 percussion

Three Shades, Foreshadows (2012) for cello and digital playback

Bagatelle (2013) for solo piano

Transparency (2013) for solo piano

Two Bridges (2014) Three Movements for Harp Duo

Deciduous (2014) for violin and lead/tenor steel pan

LIgNEouS 2 (2014) for marimba and string quartet

String Quartet 1 "Mobile on a Stream Into the Now" (2012) for string quartet

Revolve (2013) for string quintet

Speaking Tree (2013) for brass quintet, string quintet, and percussion

Tarnished Mirrors (2013/2015) Concerto for ping pong, violin, percussion, & orchestra

Ricochet (2015) Ping Pong Players (2), Solo Violin, Solo Percussion, Orchestra (2,2,2,2 | 2,2,2,1 | Timp, 2 Perc | Strings)

[14]

Pillar IV (2014) for percussion quartet

Two Bridges (2014) three movements for harp duo

Beneath Lighted Coffers (2015) Concerto for steel pan and orchestra

LIgNEouS 4 (2016) for marimba and string quartet

LIgNEouS 5 (2016) for marimba and string quartet

Prospects of a Misplaced Year (2017) for piano and string quartet

Lost on Chiaroscuro Street (2017) for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano

Cobalt Canvas (2018) for Flute, 2 Clarinets, Bassoon, Trumpet, Horn, Trombone, 1 Percussion Piano (2 players|4 hands), 3 Violins, 2 Violas, 2 Cellos, & Double Bass

Akiho's early works were largely Caribbean-themed, folk and jazz based works for steel bands and steel pan players like himself. With increased experience and education, he has evolved into a composer of contemporary concert music.[12]


Sources:[13]

Cover versions[edit]

An alumnus of two top Drum Corps International performing ensembles, Akiho is becoming a popular composer within the activity. In the summer of 2014, the Bluecoats performed to wALK Or ruN in wEst harlem. In 2016, it was performed by The Battalion while Golden Empire, Legends, and Oregon Crusaders played NO one To kNOW one. In 2017, the first corps he marched with, Carolina Crown, had NO one To kNOW one as a featured piece.[18]

Official website