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'Neruda Songs' Wins Grawemeyer Award

This year's Grawemeyer Music Prize has been awarded to Peter Lieberson for Neruda Songs, a cycle of songs for mezzo-soprano and orchestra based on love sonnets by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda.

The Grawemeyer Foundation, at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, announced the award Dec. 2. The Grawemeyer is one of the most lucrative prizes in the music world, worth $200,000. Prizes are also awarded in three additional categories: Education, Improving World Order and Religion.

Lieberson composed Neruda Songs for his wife, the celebrated mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, who premiered the work with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in May 2005. The songs, which trace the arc of love from first yearnings to the end of life, turned out to be a poignant musical farewell from Lieberson to his wife. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson died of breast cancer in 2006.

Neruda Songs, and the recording by Hunt Lieberson, has been well-received: The CD has just been nominated for a Grammy Award, and the music was runner-up for the 2006 Pulitzer Prize.

"The piece has beauty and surface simplicity," said Marc Satterwhite, a University of Louisville music professor, "but great emotional depth and intellectual rigor, as well."

Peter Lieberson first gained attention as a composer in 1983 when Peter Serkin premiered his Piano Concerto with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He's the son of former Columbia Records president Goddard Lieberson and ballet dancer Vera Zorina. Lieberson's operas, chamber and orchestral works, and piano pieces have been performed around the world.

Copyright 2022 American Public Media. To see more, visit American Public Media.

Tom Huizenga is a producer for NPR Music. He contributes a wide range of stories about classical music to NPR's news programs and is the classical music reviewer for All Things Considered. He appears regularly on NPR Music podcasts and founded NPR's classical music blog Deceptive Cadence in 2010.
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