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Michel Longtin

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Name
  
Michel Longtin

Role
  
Composer

Education
  
Universite de Montreal, Banff Centre

Michel Longtin; La Mort Du Pierrot (1971-1972)


Michel Longtin (born 20 May 1946) is a Canadian composer and music educator. An associate of the Canadian Music Centre and a member of the Canadian League of Composers, he won the Jules Leger Prize for New Chamber Music in 1986 for Pohjatuuli.

Contents

Born in Montreal, Longtin began his professional studies in the theatre arts, earning a Bachelor of Arts from the College des Eudistes in 1967. During the summers of 1963-1964 he also studied theatre at the Banff School of Fine Arts. He then pursued studies in computer science, stage directing, and music at the Universite de Montreal (UM) from 1968–1973, ultimately earning a Bachelor of Music in composition. His mentor at the school was composer Andre Prevost. In the summer of 1971 he studied for a short time with Samuel Dolin at The Royal Conservatory of Music.

From 1971-1975 Longtin worked at the electronic music studio of McGill University with Paul Pedersen, Bengt Hambraeus, and Alcides Lanza. He later taught on the faculty of that school. He continued studies in the graduate composition program at the UM with Prevost and Serge Garant, earning a Master of Music in 1975 and a Doctor of Music in 1982. He also con-currently worked on the music faculty of the UM from 1973-2008.

Source

  • Michel Longtin at The Canadian Encyclopedia
  • References

    Michel Longtin Wikipedia