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Richard Wernick (born January 16, 1934) in Boston, Massachusetts is a US composer. He is best known for his composition "Visions of Terror and Wonder," which won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for Music.

Career
Wernick began his musical studies playing the piano at age 11. His high school music theory teacher took notice of his abilities, and introduced him to Irving Fine, who was teaching composition at Brandeis University. Wernick went on to complete his undergraduate studies at Brandeis, where he studied composition with Fine, Harold Shapero and Arthur Berger. He also studied at Tanglewood with Ernst Toch, Aaron Copland, and Boris Blacher and at Mills College with Leon Kirchner. Wernick studied conducting with Leonard Bernstein and Seymour Lipkin.

During the 1950s and early 1960s, Wernick worked as a film and television composer. His output during this time includes the film score for the short comedy A Bowl of Cherries.

Wernick spent much of his career as a composition professor, teaching at SUNY Buffalo and the University of Chicago. However, his longest tenure was at the University of Pennsylvania, from 1968 to 1996. His notable students include Daniel Dorff, Gerald Levinson, Philip Maneval, Ingrid Arauco, and Stephen Jaffe. David Patrick Stearns of The Philadelphia Inquirer considered Wernick's time at University of Pennsylvania, especially during the 1970s, to represent the height of his compositional influence.

In 1983, Riccardo Muti selected Wernick to be the contemporary music advisor to the Philadelphia Orchestra. His role as advisor was to assist Muti in identifying new orchestral works for the Philadelphia Orchestra to perform, with a stated emphasis on American composers. He held this position until 1989, though he continued to advise Muti as a special consultant until the end of Muti's tenure with the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1993.

Wernick won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for Music for his composition Visions of Terror and Wonder. He won Kennedy Center Friedheim Awards in 1986 (first place, tie with Bernard Rands), 1991 (first place), and 1992 (second place). He has also received awards from the Ford, Guggenheim and Naumburg foundations. (also see List of Awards)

Wernick currently lives outside of Philadelphia with his wife, bassoonist Bea Wernick.

Compositional Style
Wernick has described his style as one that attempts to find common ground with an audience:

"My expectation is that I’m not writing down to an audience, but I’m not trying to write above their heads. I’m not writing to an audience which is illiterate and I’m not writing to an audience which is technically educated in music, but I do write for an audience that I assume has experience in listening to music and is willing to at least meet me halfway.  So I’ll go halfway to meet them."

As such, critics have sometimes identified his style as more audience-accessible, particularly when compared to more strictly serialist composers of the 20th century. More recently, however, some critics have emphasized the modernist characteristics of his style, calling him a "modernist holdout against prevailing trends toward music that falls easier on the ears."

Harmonic analysis of Wernick's work suggests that his style makes reference to tonal harmony, but is usually based on fixed cells of intervals. He occasionally makes use of twelve-tone sequences and their permutations, but this technique is not necessarily a defining feature of his output. Wernick also makes extensive use of baroque-style counterpoint, especially in his string quartets.

In vocal and programmatic works, Wernick's choice of texts often reflect an ideological message. Kaddish Requiem mourns the victims of the Vietnam War, while the final movement of his Duo for Cello and Piano is a memorial for the attacks on September 11, 2001. Several of his works, most notably Kaddish Requiem and Visions of Terror and Wonder, combine religious texts from multiple traditions.

Performers with whom Wernick has frequently worked include the Juilliard String Quartet, David Starobin, Mstislav Rostropovich, Jan de Gaetani, Lambert Orkis, and Gregory Fulkerson. Wernick's works were represented on some of the earliest releases by Bridge Records, a label founded by Starobin.

Works
List of works from Theodore Presser Company (includes both works published by Presser and unpublished works)

Many of Wernick's manuscripts are held by the Special Collections of the Van Pelt Library at the University of Pennsylvania.

Discography

 * Duo for Cello and Piano, Scott Kluksdahl, cello, Noreen Cassidy-Polera, piano. Centaur Records 2765: Sound Vessels
 * Piano Sonata No. 2, Lambert Orkis. Bridge Records 9131: From Hammers to Bytes
 * A Prayer for Jerusalem for Mezzo-Soprano and Percussion, Jan DeGaetani and Glenn Steele. Composers Recordings, Inc. (New World Records) S-344.
 * Songs of Remembrance: Four songs for Shawm, English Horn, Oboe and Mezzo-soprano, Jan DeGaetani and Philip West. Nonesuch Records CD 71342.
 * Cadenzas and Variations II for Violin Solo, Gregory Fulkerson. New World Records CD 80313: Cadenzas and Variations
 * Cadenzas and Variations III for Cello Solo, Scott Kluksdahl. Composers Recordings, Inc. (New World Records) CD 762: Lines for Solo Cello
 * Musica Ptolemica for Brass Quintet, Chestnut Brass Company. Albany Records TROY 233: Contemporary Music for Brass Quintet
 * String Quartet No. 4, Emerson String Quartet. Deutsche Grammophon 437 537-2: American Contemporaries
 * Da'ase for Guitar, David Starobin. Bridge Records CD 9084: Newdance: 18 New Dances for Solo Guitar
 * Piano Sonata No. 1: Reflections of a Dark Light, Lambert Orkis. Bridge Records CD 9003: Lambert Orkis plays Music of Crumb and Wernick
 * Bridge Records CD 9082: Richard Wernick
 * Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, Lambert Orkis, piano; Symphony II, Richard Wernick, conductor.
 * Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Gregory Fulkerson, violin; Symphony II, Larry Rachleff, conductor.


 * Contemporary Chamber Players, Richard Wernick, conductor, Neva Pilgrim. Composers Recordings, Inc. (New World Records) S-379 (also CD 817)
 * Haiku of Basho for Soprano, Flute, Clarinet, Violin, Contrabass, Two Percussion, Piano and Tape.
 * Moonsongs from the Japanese for Soprano and Two Pre-recorded tracks of Soprano Voice, or Three Solo Sopranos.


 * Kaddish-Requiem: A secular service for the victims of Indo-China, Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, Arthur Weisberg, conductor, Jan DeGaetani, mezzo-soprano. Nonesuch Records CD 79222: Spectrum: New American Music
 * A Poison Tree for Flute, Clarinet, Violin, Cello, Piano, and Soprano, 20th Century Consort, Christopher Kendall, conductor, Lucy Shelton, soprano. Smithsonian Collection N027
 * A Poison Tree for Flute, Clarinet, Violin, Cello, Piano, and Soprano, Syracuse New Music Ensemble, Neva Pilgrim, soprano. Spectrum Records SR-183
 * Concerto for Viola: Do Not Go Gentle, Walter Trampler, viola, Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra of Boston, Leon Botstein, conductor. Composers Recordings, Inc. (New World Records) CD 618.

Awards

 * 2006: Composer of the Year Award (Classical Recording Foundation)
 * 2000: Alfred I Dupont Award
 * 1992: Kennedy Center Friedheim Award, 2nd Place
 * 1991: Kennedy Center Friedheim Award, 1st Place
 * 1986: Kennedy Center Friedheim Award, 1st Place
 * 1982: National Endowment for the Arts Composition Grant
 * 1979: National Endowment for the Arts Composition Grant
 * 1977: Pulitzer Prize in Music
 * 1976: Guggenheim Fellowship
 * 1976: National Institute of Arts and Letters Music Award
 * 1976: Naumberg Recording Award
 * 1975: National Endowment for the Arts Composition Grant
 * 1962-64: Ford Foundation Composition Grants