Arlene Sierra

Biography

Arlene Sierra is a London-based American composer whose music is lauded for its “highly flexible and distinctive style” (The Guardian), ranging from “exquisiteness and restrained power” to “combative and utterly compelling” (Gramophone). Notable premieres include Nature Symphony “memorable for its creation of wonderful sounds from a large orchestra” (Bachtrack.com) commissioned by BBC Radio 3 and the BBC Philharmonic, Butterflies Remember a Mountain for the the Benedetti-Elschenbroich-Grynyuk Trio, described as “precisely and joyously imagined” (The Times), and a New York Philharmonic commission for chamber orchestra Game of Attrition, described by Time Out as “at turns spry, savage, sly and seductive… so enrapturing.” Sierra’s highly individual works have been nominated and awarded on several occasions, including the prestigious Takemitsu Prize, a Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, PRS Composers Fund and Women Make Music awards, and a Leverhulme Fellowship. Her orchestral showpiece Moler was nominated for a Latin GRAMMY for Best Contemporary Classical Composition.

Arlene Sierra’s music is the subject of a series of portrait recordings by the esteemed Bridge Records label. Born in Miami to a family of New Yorkers, she holds degrees from Oberlin, Yale, and the University of Michigan, and serves as Professor of Music Composition at Cardiff University. Current projects include Birds and Insects, Book 3, commissioned by the Barbican Centre for pianist Sarah Cahill, and Bird Symphony, commissioned by the Utah Symphony as part of Arlene Sierra’s role as Composer-in-Association with that orchestra.