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Julia Wolfe: Anthracite Fields

3.5M streams

3,490,780

Gordon, Lang & Wolfe: Shelter

154.8K streams

154,772

Steel Hammer

121.5K streams

121,541

Julia Wolfe: Steel Hammer

112.4K streams

112,418

Julia Wolfe: Fire in my mouth

80.8K streams

80,813

Cruel Sister

63.1K streams

63,139

Cruel Sister

63.1K streams

63,139

Dark Full Ride

51.1K streams

51,083

The Carbon Copy Building

39.8K streams

39,821

The Carbon Copy Building

39.8K streams

39,821

Biography

Julia Wolfe takes inspiration from folk, classical, and rock genres, bringing a modern sensibility to each while simultaneously tearing down the walls between them. Her music is distinguished by an intense physicality and a relentless power that pushes performers to extremes and demands attention from the audience. In the words of The Wall Street Journal, she has “long inhabited a terrain of [her] own, a place where classical forms are recharged by the repetitive patterns of minimalism and the driving energy of rock.” Her Pulitzer-winning, Grammy-nominated oratorio, Julia Wolfe: Anthracite Fields, for chorus and instruments, draws on oral histories, interviews, speeches, and local advertisements to honor the people who persevered and endured in the Pennsylvania anthracite coal region. Wolfe’s interest in labor history has informed other recent works, including Steel Hammer, an evening-length art-ballad, culled from more than 200 versions of the John Henry legend, that explores the subject of human versus machine. “Fire in my mouth,” commissioned for the New York Philharmonic and premiered in 2019, focuses on the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911, which claimed the lives of 146 workers, most of them immigrant women. Wolfe is a co-founder of the Bang on a Can music collective, a 2016 MacArthur Fellow, and Associate Professor of Music Composition at NYU's Steinhardt School.