Eliot Bailen has an
active career as an artistic director, cellist, composer and teacher. Strings
Magazine writes, "At Merkin Hall ‘cellist
Eliot Bailen displayed a warm focused tone, concentrated expressiveness and
admirable technical command always at the service of the music.” Founder and
Artistic Director of the Sherman Chamber Ensemble, now in its 37th
year, whose performances the New York Times has described as “the Platonic
ideal of a chamber music concert,” Mr. Bailen is also Founder and Artistic
Director of Chamber Music at Rodeph Sholom in New York and Artistic Director of
the New York Chamber Ensemble. Principal cello of the New Jersey Festival
Orchestra, New York Chamber Ensemble, Orchestra New England, Teatro Grattacielo
and the New Choral Society, Mr. Bailen also performs regularly with the
Saratoga Chamber Players, Cape May Music Festival, Sebago-Long Lake Chamber
Music Festival as well as with the Orchestra of St. Luke's, New York City Opera
and Ballet, American Symphony, Stamford Symphony and New Jersey Symphony. Heard
frequently in numerous Broadway shows, in 2015 he was solo cellist for ‘Allegiance.’
As a composer, Mr. Bailen’s commissions include an Octet (“For Ellen”) for 3
winds and strings (2013), a Double
Concerto for Flute and Cello (2012) commissioned by the Johns Hopkins
Symphony Orchestra and Perhaps a
Butterfly (2011), for Soprano, child soprano, flute and string trio. His Saratoga Sextet, commissioned by the
Saratoga Chamber Players, premiered in June, 2014 (“The crowd loved it!” writes
the Schenectady Daily Gazette). Recently
Mr. Bailen’s musical, The Tiny Mustache,
received a third grant for further development from the Omer Foundation after its
successful debut. Mr. Bailen has received over thirty -five commissions for his
"Song to Symphony" project, an extended school residency program that
presents children's original musicals in an orchestral setting (subject of a NY
Times feature article Sept. 2006). This project was recently awarded a special
Alumni Grant from the Yale School of Music. In 2002
he received the Norman Vincent Peale Award for Positive Thinking. Mr.
Bailen received his Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) from Yale University and an
M.B.A. from NYU. He is on the cello and chamber music faculty at Columbia
University and Teachers College.Add caption |
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