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Maria Schneider (musician)

Maria Lynn Schneider (born November 27, 1960) is an American composer and jazz orchestra leader who has won multiple Grammy Awards.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Maria Schneider

Maria Lynn Schneider

(1960-11-27) November 27, 1960
Windom, Minnesota, U.S.

Composer, bandleader, musician

Piano

1980s–present

Biography[edit]

Born in Windom, Minnesota, Schneider studied music theory and composition at the University of Minnesota, graduating in 1983, then earned a master's degree in Music in 1985 from the Eastman School of Music, studying for one year as well at the University of Miami. After leaving Eastman, she was hired by Gil Evans as his copyist and assistant.[7]


She collaborated with Evans for the next few years, working with him on music for a tour with Sting and assisting him as he scored the film The Color of Money. Before she became one of the most acclaimed composers and bandleaders of her generation, Schneider received an NEA Apprenticeship Grant to study with Bob Brookmeyer in 1985.[8]


In 1988, Schneider formed her first band in collaboration with her then-husband, jazz trombonist John Fedchock, and that group appeared at Visiones in Greenwich Village.[9][10] Both that group and her marriage would dissolve, but Schneider followed up in 1992 by forming the Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra, which would appear weekly at Visiones from 1993 until the venue closed in 1998. Albums by the group have been released as by the Maria Schneider Orchestra since 2000.


From 2005 through 2019, the Maria Schneider Orchestra performed an annual Thanksgiving week-long gig at the Jazz Standard in New York City.[11] The orchestra has also performed at jazz festivals and concert halls in Europe, South America, and Asia. Schneider has performed with over 80 groups in over 30 countries and has taught at universities worldwide. In 2013, she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Minnesota.


Although three of the orchestra's albums had been previously nominated, Schneider's Concert in the Garden (2004) was the first to win a Grammy Award. It was also the first such award-winning album produced by ArtistShare, a fan funded platform that has (as of 2017) received 30 Grammy Award nominations and 10 Grammy Award wins.[12]


Aside from her jazz orchestral works, Schneider's Winter Morning Walks (2013) album featured soprano Dawn Upshaw, the Saint Paul and Australian Chamber Orchestras, bassist Jay Anderson, pianist Frank Kimbrough, and multi-instrumentalist Scott Robinson. The album accompanied poetry written by U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser and was funded by ArtistShare. It won Schneider a Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition. Dawn Upshaw also won a Grammy for her vocal performance, while the Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Classical award went to David Frost, Tim Martyn, and Brian Losch.[13]

Personal life[edit]

Schneider is an avid birdwatcher[23] and enlisted band members to contribute bird calls to "Cerulean Skies" on her album Sky Blue.[24] Other bird-related songs on her albums include "Waxwing" on Coming About, "Bird Count" on Days of Wine and Roses - Live at the Jazz Standard, and "Arbiters of Evolution" on The Thompson Fields.

Best Composer, Best Arranger, Best Big Band, magazine Annual Critics' Poll, 2006–2012; 2016[25]

DownBeat

Jazz Album of the Year, Composer of the Year, Arranger of the Year, Large Jazz Ensemble of the Year, , 2005[26]

Jazz Journalists Association

Concert in the Garden, 2004[27]

Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

"Cerulean Skies", 2007[28]

Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition

Winter Morning Walks, 2013[29]

Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition

The Thompson Fields, 2015[30]

Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

"Sue (Or in a Season of Crime)" (David Bowie) from Nothing Has Changed 2015[31]

Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals

2019 NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship

[32]

Concert in the Garden was inducted into the in 2019[33][34]

National Recording Registry

"Sputnik", 2020[35]

Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition

Data Lords, 2020[35]

Grammy Award for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album

Finalist for the for Data Lords, 2021[36]

Pulitzer Prize in Music

Elected member of the , 2023[37]

American Academy of Arts and Letters

(Enja, 1994)

Evanescence

(Enja, 1996)

Coming About

(ArtistShare, 2000 [limited edition], 2005 [regular release])

Days of Wine and Roses - Live at the Jazz Standard

(Enja, 2000)

Allégresse

(ArtistShare, 2004)

Concert in the Garden

(ArtistShare, 2007)

Sky Blue

(ArtistShare, 2013)

Winter Morning Walks

(ArtistShare, 2015)[38][39]

The Thompson Fields

(ArtistShare, 2020)

Data Lords

Decades (ArtistShare, 2024)

"Open Letter to YouTube, 'Pushers' of Piracy" (May 15, 2016)

"Content ID is Still Just Piracy in Disguise: An Open Letter to Rightsholders and a Music Industry Ready to Renegotiate with a Monster" (July 31, 2016)

"What Do Whore Houses, Meth Labs and YouTube Have in Common?" (Sept. 27th, 2016)

"Lyor Cohen Takes the Cake by Joining the Google Empire" (Oct 7th, 2016)

Maria Schneider (October 1, 2008). . NewMusicBox (Interview). Interviewed by Frank J. Oteri (published November 1, 2008). (includes video)

"Navigating Comfort Zones"