Andrew J. Glick has been studying music since age four. After initial composition studies with Edward Applebaum at El Camino College, Glick went on to receive a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering at the University of Southern California where he also studied electroacoustic music with Frederick Leseman.
At Syracuse University, Glick received a Master of Music in composition, where he studied with Zhuang Liu, Christopher Hopkins and Andrew Waggoner. While there, he twice won the Eloise K. Heaton fellowship in composition and a Graduate School research grant for the development of a video system that can provide audience members a means of individualizing their experience of a live performance.
Glick's performed works include Four Nahuatl Settings for soprano, flute, harp and percussion; Life Cycle of Spirolignum Giocosa, for mixed woodwind quintet; Coral Elegy, for piano solo; and Collapsar 2 for piano, horn and bassoon. Four Nahuatl Settings was recently featured in a “Fresh Ink” radio program sponsored by The Society for New Music, and aired on WCNY, the Syracuse, NY NPR affiliate. His Six Duodecadent Duets for Euphonium was published and is currently available from Tuba and Euphonium Press, Alexandria, VA.
Glick currently resides with his wife and daughter in South Riding, Virginia.