Bio

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One of Canadaʼs most sought after composers, Alexina Louie has written for many of the countryʼs leading soloists, chamber ensembles, new music groups and orchestras. Her works have become part of the standard repertoire, in particular her many compositions for piano which are frequently performed by students and professionals alike. Perhaps best known of these is Scenes From A Jade Terrace, commissioned by Jon Kimura Parker.

 

 

Louie’s orchestral works have received a multitude of important international performances. Some of the world renowned conductors who have performed her music include Sir Andrew Davis, Leonard Slatkin, Alexander Lazarev, Charles Dutoit, Bramwell Tovey, Gunther Herbig, Pinchas Zukerman, Kent Nagano, Peter Oundjian, Carlos Kalmar, James Judd, and Ingo Metzmacher.

 

 

Louie’s music has also been selected for productions by The National Ballet of Canada. Dominique Dumais’ a hundred words for snow (2003) was set to Louie's O Magnum Mysterium: In Memoriam Glenn Gould, which The Globe and Mail described as Louie’s “profoundly beautiful” homage to the late Glenn Gould. In 2007, The National Ballet of Canada commissioned Louie to write Wolf’s Court, a new work in collaboration with choreographer Matjash Mrozewski.

 

 

In 2009, the Canadian Opera Company presented Louie’s full-length, mainstage opera The Scarlet Princess (with libretto by Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly) in concert before a sold-out audience in Toronto. The live recorded concert was broadcast across Canada and was received with enormous praise.

 

 

Her vocal and operatic works have been sung by widely celebrated singers, including Barbara Hannigan, Russell Braun, Daniel Okulitch, and John Relyea. Louie’s expertise in vocal writing are highlighted in her ground-breaking international award-winning humorous made-for-TV mini-operas Toothpaste and Burnt Toast, both of which were created in collaboration with director Larry Weinstein and librettist Dan Redican.

 

 

In 2014, acclaimed violinist James Ehnes commissioned Beyond Time, a highly virtuosic, colourful work for violin and piano which he has taken on tour. Audiences and critics alike have been thrilled by his performances of the piece.

 

 

Most recently, Louie’s highly anticipated Triple Concerto For Three Violins And Orchestra, jointly commissioned by the Toronto Symphony, the National Arts Centre Orchestra and the Montreal Symphony for their three concertmasters, was performed by all three orchestras during Canada’s celebratory 150th Anniversary year.

 

 

Louie has twice won JUNO awards (Canada’s equivalent of the Grammy) for Best Classical Composition. In addition to the JUNOs, she is the recipient of many awards and honours including the Jules Léger Prize for Chamber Music, the National Arts Centre Composers Award, the Chalmer’s Award in Composition, an honourary doctorate from the University of Calgary, as well as many other distinctions.

 

In 2002, Louie was named an Officer of the Order of Canada, Canada’s highest civilian honour. She is also a recipient of the Order of Ontario, a Queenʼs Golden Jubilee Medal, as well as the Queenʼs Diamond Jubilee Medal.

 

 





Listen to Alexina Louie's Triple Concerto For Three Violins And Orchestra (2017):

Additional past selected performances:

Echoes of Time (The Gryphon Trio) — on January 23, 2012, Toronto

Pursuit (Concerto For String Quartet and Orchestra) — on January 30, 2012 (Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Mickelthwate, cond., Winnipeg New Music Festival)

Filigree (oboe and piano) — premiere on February 14, 2012 Toronto (Keith Atkinson, oboe)

Arc (violin concerto) — on April 27, 2012, Montreal (Montreal Symphony Orchestra —inaugural season in the MSOʼs new concert hall, La Maison Symphonique, Richard Roberts, OSM concertmaster, Nathan Brock, cond.)

Toothpaste (made-for-TV comic opera) — on March 22, 2012 — film festival on the Opera of the 20th Century, Louvre Museum, Paris.

Take The Dog Sled (2 Inuit throat singers plus chamber ensemble) — October/November 2012. National Arts Centre tour of the north, including Iqaluit (Nunavut), Yellowknife, (Northwest Territories) and Whitehorse (Yukon) in addition to two performances in Southam Hall at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Since its first tour of Nunavik (northern Quebec, 2008) with commissioner, conductor Kent Nagano and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, Take The Dog Sled has been performed on numerous occasions, including a performances in Los Angeles in 2008 and at the Vancouver Cultural Olympiad in 2010. This NAC tour marks the second such tour of the north for the composition and its composer and is the fourth northern tour for Ms. Louie.

Echoes of Time — was recorded in May 2012 by The Gryphon Trio for future release on the Analekta label.

Echoes of Time — was selected for performance in the 21st International Review of Composer, Belgrade, November 6, 2012.

ALEXINALOUIE

Canadian Composer