Anne LeBaron


Alice Anne LeBaron is an American composer, harpist, academic, and writer.
Frequently combining tonal and atonal techniques with an experimental approach, LeBaron's compositions utilize elements of blues, jazz, pop, rock, and folk music. She explores environmental, cultural, philosophical and cultural themes, incorporating theater, mixed media, literature, and humor. As an improvising harpist, she employs a wide array of electronic enhancements and extended techniques for the harp, including preparing the harp and bowing the strings.
Among other venues, LeBaron's work has been performed at Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, and the Kennedy Center, by orchestras including the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the National Symphony Orchestra. She is the recipient of an Alpert Award in the Arts, a Toulmin grant from Opera America, a Guggenheim fellowship, and a Fulbright Full Scholarship. She has been commissioned by the Fromm Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Library of Congress, among other organizations. She also served as Chair of the Board of the American Composers Forum from 2018 to 2020.
LeBaron was a professor at California Institute of the Arts, where she held the Roy E. Disney Family Chair from 2013 until 2015. In 2024, she retired from teaching and was appointed professor emerita.

Early life and education

LeBaron was born in Baton Rouge and raised in Memphis and Tuscaloosa. Her father, Gordon, was an advertising executive and bluegrass musician; in addition to singing, he played guitar, banjo, dobro and mandolin. She grew up listening to live bluegrass music at home, and gospel and choral music at the Southern Baptist Church she attended with her family.
As a child, LeBaron taught herself to play piano and read music. In her teens she took lessons with a Juilliard-trained pianist and wrote songs on an acoustic guitar, setting her poetry to music. Her grandmother taught her to play chess, and at the age of twelve LeBaron won a University of Alabama chess competition. She later said that chess taught her stamina and concentration, "but above all that you can always find a better move if you look long enough."
LeBaron attended the University of Alabama, intending to study piano. She shifted her emphasis to composition, with a parallel interest in the harp after coming across the instrument in an empty music room. As an undergraduate, she studied classical harp technique with teachers including Alice Chalifoux at the Salzedo Harp Colony. She was a member of the Raudelunas 'Pataphysical Revue, a surrealist art collective, along with Reverend Fred Lane, Davey Williams and LaDonna Smith.
LeBaron received a BA in music at the University of Alabama, where she studied with Fred Goosen, and a master's degree at Stony Brook University, where her teachers included Bülent Arel and Daria Semegen. As a Fulbright Scholar to Germany, she studied with Mauricio Kagel and György Ligeti. She was awarded a Doctorate in Musical Arts from Columbia University, where she was a student of Chou Wen-chung, Jack Beeson, and Mario Davidovsky. Her doctoral thesis, a significant composition and accompanying analysis sharing the title Telluris Theoria Sacra, was inspired by the 17th-century theologian Thomas Burnet and by James Gleick's book on chaos theory. She also studied Korean traditional music at the National Classical Music Institute in Seoul.

Career

LeBaron served as composer-in-residence in Washington, DC, sponsored by Meet the Composer from 1993 until 1996. She was an assistant professor of music at the University of Pittsburgh from 1996 to 2001. She was appointed Professor of Music at the California Institute of the Arts in 2001, where she held the Roy E. Disney Family Chair in Musical Composition from 2013 until 2015. In 2024, she retired from teaching and was appointed professor emerita.

Composition

LeBaron's composition in instrumental, electronic, and performance realms embraces a wide range of media and styles. Frequently combining tonal and atonal techniques, she has utilized elements of blues, jazz, pop, rock, and folk music in such scores as the opera The E. and O. Line, American Icons for orchestra, and Traces of Mississippi for chorus, orchestra, poet narrators, and rap artists. She has also used American literary sources with Devil in the Belfry for violin and piano, inspired by Edgar Allan Poe, and Is Money Money, a setting of Gertrude Stein texts for soprano and chamber ensemble.
Among her multicultural compositions are Lamentation/Invocation for baritone and three instruments, using Korean-derived gestures and long sustained tones for the voice; Noh Reflections for string trio, which draws upon the music of Japanese Noh theater; Breathtails for baritone, string quartet, and Japanese shakuhachi; and her large-scale celebration of Kazakhstan, The Silent Steppe Cantata for tenor Timur Bekbosunov, women's chorus, and an orchestra of traditional Kazakh instruments, premiered at Congress Hall in Astana.
Writing about LeBaron's 1989 Telluris Theoria Sacra, musicologist Susan McClary notes that the work "...points to LeBaron's more pervasive interest in music's ability to mold temporality, immersing the listener in a sound world in which time bends, stands still, dances, or conforms to the mechanical measure of the clock".
Theater has played an important role in LeBaron's music, with such scores as Concerto for Active Frogs for voices, three instruments, and tape,  and the harp solos I Am an American... My Government Will Reward You and Hsing. She has also composed a series of monodramas for female voice and chamber musicians: Pope Joan, Transfiguration, Sucktion, and Some Things Should Not Move. LeBaron's operas The E. and O. Line, Croak , and Wet were all collaborative works that led her to develop the genre she terms "hyperopera": "an opera resulting from intensive collaboration across all the disciplines essential for producing opera in the 21st century – in a word, a 'meta-collaborative' undertaking".
With her hyperopera Crescent City, LeBaron went a step beyond the nineteenth-century concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk, championed by Richard Wagner. A more lateral, inclusive, and intensive collaboration of artists occurs with hyperopera, breaking down the usual hierarchical structures of traditional opera, which define and limit the roles of individuals on creative and production teams. The genre of hyperopera involves the collaborations of a diverse group of artists, which pierce the regimented boundaries of the roles of creators, performers, designers, and producers. In the postmodern tradition of redefining opera, also seen in the work of Robert Ashley, Meredith Monk, and Robert Wilson, LeBaron replaced the Wagnerian orchestra with smaller and more specialized forces of instruments and electronic sound for Crescent City, with musicians who move readily among stylistic genres, just as the vocalists do. The opera's theatrical action is refracted through a prism of video work, lighting effects, and performance freedoms and simultaneities. For its world premiere production in Los Angeles in 2012, Crescent City also engaged six visual artists to participate in the collaborative process by designing and building set pieces as various locales in the opera. Prior to the full production of Crescent City, LeBaron composed Phantasmagoriettas from Crescent City, performed by the LOOS Electro Acoustic Media Orchestra and soloists from Los Angeles during the Dag in de Branding Festival in the Hague in 2007.

Improvisation

As an improviser LeBaron employs a wide array of extended techniques for the harp, including preparing the harp and bowing the strings, as well as a variety of electronic enhancements. Her development of a new performance vocabulary for the instrument began in the early 1970s, when she played in the Alabama improvising ensemble Trans Museq along with Davey Williams and LaDonna Smith. Her career as an improviser has included performance collaborations with such creative composer/musicians as Anthony Braxton, Muhal Richard Abrams, Evan Parker, George E. Lewis, Derek Bailey, Leroy Jenkins, Lionel Hampton, Fred Frith, Evan Parker, Anthony Davis, Wadada Leo Smith, Gerry Hemingway, and Shelley Hirsch. LeBaron's double-CD 1, 2, 4, 3 features collaborations with thirteen different musicians in solo, duo, quartet and trio configurations.
LeBaron performs in Los Angeles and elsewhere with the Present Quartet, composed of Ellen Burr; flutes, Charles Sharp, reeds, and Jeff Schwarz, bass.

Selected awards, grants, and fellowships

Major productions

Major works

Chamber

  • Concerto for Active Frogs
  • Rite of the Black Sun
  • I Am An American...My Government Will Reward You
  • Is Money Money
  • Transfiguration
  • Los Murmullos
  • Way of Light
  • Radiant Depth Unfolded -- Settings of Rumi
  • ''The Heroine with a Thousand Faces''

    Orchestral

  • Strange Attractors
  • Double Concerto for Two Harps
  • Southern Ephemera for Orchestra
  • American Icons
  • ''Traces of Mississippi''

    Choral

  • Story of My Angel
  • Silent Steppe Cantata
  • ''Floodsongs''

    Opera

  • The E. and O. Line
  • Blue Calls Set You Free
  • Pope Joan
  • Sucktion
  • Crescent City
  • LSD: Huxley's Last Trip''

    Selected bibliography

  • “What to Think About What to Wear,” Center for New Performance 20th Anniversary Publication, 2024.
  • "Anne LeBaron - Surreal Confluences" in John Palmer - Conversations, 2nd Edition, published by Vision Edition, 2023.
  • “Sonic Ventures in Post-Truth Surrealism: Raudelunas, the Rev. Fred Lane, and Huxley’s Last Trip”, Keynote address for the Totally Huge New Music Festival, 2017.
  • “Luminous Imagination: Thereafter, Transparence, and Wonders,” and “Timbral and Spatial Ambiguities in the Mesmerizing Music of John Palmer" in Looking Within – The Music of John Palmer, ed. by Sunny Knable, published by Vision Edition, 2021. 
  • “Return to Source: Contemporary Composers Discuss the Sociopolitical Implications of Their Work,” Leonardo Music Journal, Vol. 25, 2015.
  • "Composing Breathtails" in Current Musicology, 2014.
  • Crescent City: A Hyperopera" in International Alliance for Women in Music ''Journal, 2013.
  • "Down the Rabbit-Hole of Innovation" in UCLA Center for the Study of Women Special Issue: Writing About Music, 2010.
  • "The American Composer's Place in the New Grove II", NewMusicBox, 2002.
  • "Reflections of Surrealism in Postmodern Musics" in Postmodern Music/Postmodern Thought'', Lochhead, Judy and Auner, Joseph, eds. Routledge, 2002.