Steven Gellman was born in
Toronto in 1947. At an early age he showed great musical talent
and received a strong and thorough foundation under the
instruction of Dr. Samuel Dolin. Throughout his teenage years he
appeared frequently as a pianist and composer, notably
premiering his first Piano Concerto with the CBC Symphony at the
age of 15. In 1964 Steven Gellman was the first Canadian winner
of the international BMI award. Further studies followed, at the
Juilliard School in New York, with Vincent Persichetti and
Luciano Berio , and later at the Paris Conservatoire with
Olivier Messiaen. In 1970 he won the UNESCO prize for “the best
work by a composer under the age of 25”, for “Mythos” for flute
and string quartet.
Since his return to Canada
in 1976 Gellman has been a professor at the University of
Ottawa. He has composed works in many genres: including piano
solo, chamber music, vocal, choral and many orchestral works.
His music is distinguished by its great expressiveness and
variety of means. In 1983 he joined the Toronto Symphony on
their tour of Europe, which featured his overture “Awakening”.
“Universe Symphony”, for large Orchestra and Synthesizers
brought further international recognition and Steven Gellman was
named Canadian Composer of the Year in 1987.
Since then Gellman has composed a wide variety of works -
including
“Love’s Garden,” for Soprano and Orchestra , “ Canticles of
Saint Francis” for Choir and Orchestra( for the 150th
anniversary of the Red Cross ), “Keyboard Triptych” for
Piano/Synthesizer, “Musica Eterna” for String Quartet, Sonata
for Cello and Piano, “Jaya Overture” (for the N.A.C.O.),
“Fanfare for the New Millennium,” a “Piano Quartet” and “Viola
Concerto” - amongst others.
Steven Gellman lives in
Ottawa with his wife, Cheryl, an artist. They have two grown
children, Dana and Misha.