John Harbison

John Harbison

Composer; Institute Prof. of Music, MIT

John Harbison is an American composer whose work is notable for its astonishing range and diversity. He has written for every conceivable type of concert performance and is also considered original and accessible for a wide range of audiences. His major works include four string quartets, four symphonies, the 1987 Pulitzer Prize-winning cantata The Flight into Egypt and three operas, including "The Great Gatsby," which was commissioned by The Metropolitan Opera and first performed in December 1999. Harbison has been composer-in-residence with the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Santa Fe Chamber Festival, the American Academy in Rome, Tanglewood, the California Institute for the Arts and Chamber Music West. He is also an Institute Professor at MIT and the Acting Artistic Director of Emmanuel Music. Harbison holds an MFA from Princeton University. 

6 min
Are we capable of imaging the world in which we are not there anymore.
2 min
Every decision about what’s worthwhile in this country has to do with its economic power.
7 min
Everyone in the world has written a poem.
< 1 min
Did you manage during the day to do one thing you really wanted to do?
5 min
On reconciling Bach and the Holocaust.
1 min
Harbison’s interest in history keeps him from being fully optimistic.
5 min
Sometimes just sitting down and knocking out a cord on the piano can be enough.