Amos Elkana is a multi-award-winning composer, guitarist and electronic musician. In their decision to award him the Prime Minister Prize for Music Composition the jury noted that Elkana is the author of "very original music, independent of the prevailing fashion, guided by unique and delicate taste," and radiates "a strong sense of honesty."
Amos was born in Boston, USA in 1967 but grew up in Jerusalem, Israel. He returned to Boston in 1987 to study jazz guitar at the Berklee College of Music and composition at the The New England Conservatory of Music. His primary composition teacher at NEC was William Thomas McKinley. Later on he moved to Paris were he took composition lessons with Michele Reverdy and additional lessons with Erik Norby in Denmark and with Paul-Heinz Dittrich and Edison Denisov in Berlin. Elkana got his MFA degree from Bard College (New York) in music/sound. While at Bard, he focused on electronic music and took lessons with Pauline Oliveros, David Behrman, Richard Teitelbaum, George Lewis, Maryanne Amacher and Larry Polansky among others.
In 1993 Elkana had his Carnegie Hall debut with "Saxophone Quartet No.1" composed for the Berlin Saxophone Quartet. Since then his music has been performed all over the world by major orchetras, ensembles and soloists such as the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Ensemble Meitar, Musica Nova Consort, the Orquesta de CĂ¡mara del Auditorio de Zaragoza ("Grupo Enigma"), the Stockholm Saxophone Quartet and many more.
In 1994 Elkana composed "Tru’a", a concerto for clarinet and orchestra, that was recorded by Richard Stoltzman and the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. Tru’a was premiered in Israel by Gilad Harel and The Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra under Frédéric Chaslin and in Taiwan by the TNUA orchestra.
"Arabic Lessons", a tri-lingual song-cycle in Arabic, Hebrew and German to the words of Michael Roes, was composed in 97-98 and premiered in the Berlin Festival in 1998. For this work Elkana received the Golden Feather Award from ACUM. In its review of Arabic Lessons, the Jerusalem Post called it "a perplexing, beguiling 40-minute opus in which the composer challenges the so-called 'acceptable' form of the lieder, shattering it and building it anew, as if constructing a new world from its ashes. ...Arabic Lessons is one of the most significant works composed in Israel for quite a while."
In 2006 Elkana composed "Eight Flowers" for solo piano in honor of György KurtĂ¡g's 80th birthday. The work was premiered that same year in Schloss Neuhardenberg near Berlin during a festival celebrating KurtĂ¡g and in his presence. Since then this work has been performed all over the world including the ISCM World Music Days in Sweden in 2009.
Elkana’s short opera "The Journey Home" comments on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by telling the true and incredibly touching story of a Palestinian man who lived in this troubled land during most of 20th century. The opera was commissioned by opus21musicPlus and premiered in the Gasteig Auditorium in Munich in 2013.
In 2013-2014 Elkana was invited to be a fellow for a year at the International Research Center »Interweaving Performance Cultures« in Berlin where he worked on his next opera "Nathan the Wise". This fascinating project brings Lessing's play to life as a tri-lingual opera. The original text was edited into a libretto in Hebrew, German and Arabic by Elkana's long time collaborator Michael Roes while preserving Lessing's unique poetic language. Besides Nathan the Wise, Elkana is currently composing a Piano Concerto commissioned by the Israel Symphony Orchestra to be premiered in late 2015.
"Casino Umbro" is the title of Elkana's recent CD released to great critical acclaim on the American label Ravello in 2012. The CD includes four compositions: Casino Umbro, String Quartet No.2, Arabic Lessons and Tru'a. It was reviewd by Frank J. Oteri on New music box.
Apart from concert music, Elkana composes regularly for dance and theater. He frequently works with director/choregrapher Sommer Ulrickson and Artist/Stage designer Alexander Polzin. This team produced several works which were staged in the US, Germany and Israel. Among them "After Hamlet" which is a dance/theater piece that takes an original twist on Shakespear's Hamlet, "Never Mind" which deals with the Capgras syndrome, "Remains" and "Zwischenspiel".
Elkana is one of the few experts of the open-source program "Pure Data" and he teaches it and electronic music in general as well as composition in the Rimon School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and the Naggar School of Art (Musrara) in Israel. In the past he taught at UC Santa Cruz and gave lectures on his music at the Munich Academy of Music and Theater, Academia de Muzica "Gheorghe Dima" in Cluj-Napoca, the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance and the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music among others.
Amos is also an active performer. He regularly participates in concerts and performances of improvised music where he plays the electric guitar and the computer. In 2010 he opened the International Literature Festival in Berlin giving a concert of his music for Recorded voices of poets, Electric guitar and electronics.