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Michael Morgan, Artistic Director
Artistic Director Michael Morgan was born in
Washington DC where he attended public schools and began conducting at the age
of 12. While a student at the Oberlin College Conservatory of Music, he spent a
summer at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood. There he was a student of
Gunther Schuller and Seiji Ozawa, and it was during that summer that he worked
with Leonard Bernstein.
In 1980 he won first prize in the Hans Swarovsky International
Conductors Competition in Vienna, Austria and became Assistant Conductor of the
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, under Leonard Slatkin. His operatic debut was
in 1982 at the Vienna State Opera in Mozart's The Abduction from the Seraglio.
In 1986, Sir Georg Solti chose him to become the Assistant Conductor of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a position he held for seven years. His debut
conducting a regular subscription concert of the Chicago Symphony came in 1987,
when he stepped in to replace the ailing Maestro Solti with no rehearsal and to
critical acclaim. During his tenure in Chicago he was also conductor of the
Civic Orchestra of Chicago (training orchestra of the Chicago Symphony) and the
Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra. In 1986 he was also invited by Leonard
Bernstein to make his debut with the New York Philharmonic; he has returned to
conduct that orchestra several times since.
In addition to his duties
with Oakland Youth Orchestra, Michael Morgan is the Music Director of Oakland
East Bay Symphony, the Sacramento Philharmonic, and Artistic Director of
Festival Opera in Walnut Creek. He makes frequent appearances as guest
conductor with orchestras throughout the United States, and has conducted the
San Francisco Symphony and San Francisco Ballet on many occasions. He was
honored as one of the ten most influential African Americans in the Bay Area in
2000 at CityFlight Newsmagazine's second annual Awards Gala. In 2005, he
received two national awards by major music associations. He was honored by the
San Francisco Chapter of The Recording Academy with the 2005 Governors Award
for Community Service. On the opposite coast, the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) chose Morgan as one of its five 2005
Concert Music Awards recipients. This fall he returns to the San Francisco
Conservatory to teach the graduate conducting course.
Michael Morgan is
a noted advocate for music education in Oakland and around the world. Not long
ago he visited the Congo where he worked with a youth orchestra in
Kinshasa.
He annually makes about 100 appearances in the nation's
schools, particularly in the East Bay, and is widely regarded as an expert on
the importance of arts education and minority access to the arts. He is on the
Board of the ASOL. |

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