John Corigliano is an American composer known for his contributions to contemporary classical music. His works, including symphonies, operas, and film scores, have received critical acclaim and numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Corigliano's compositions are celebrated for their emotional depth and innovative use of orchestration.
"I don't think that the Pulitzer should be given the way it is. I think the competition should be anonymous. I think completely different people would win it if the names were taken off because a lot of it is done on relationships and names."
"The French Revolution is the ultimate modernist statement. Destroy everything. Don't build on the past. There is no past."
"You become a great composer when you win a Pulitzer. But I think that now it's a completely meaningless award."
"Eighty percent of my pieces gravitate towards an A, as a tonal thing, not at the beginning, but somewhere in it."
"The structural thinking I use in the concert hall is unnecessary to most film projects, and most film composers make better use of the enormous range of pop and other materials and techniques required of them than I probably would, faced with the same challenge."
"What I think of as style - and I've gotten to this over years of really thinking about it - is that style is the unconscious choices I make."