Michael Lowenstern

{{Short description|American musician, composer and educator}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Michael Lowenstern

| image = 230px

| caption = Michael Lowenstern in 2017

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1968|8|23}}

| birth_place = Chicago, Illinois, United States

| occupation = Musician, educator

| years_active = 1994 - present

| notable_works = Spasm, Ten Children, Sway

| spouse = Katherine Cooke (m. 1997)

| children = Ariel Lowenstern

| awards = International Gaudeamus Interpreters Competition, Second Prize, 1991

| website = www.earspasm.com

}}

Michael Lowenstern (born August 23, 1968) is an American musician, composer and educator, specializing in bass clarinet. He is well known for his YouTube channel Earspasm{{Cite web|title=Earspasm Music - YouTube|url=https://www.youtube.com/earspasm|access-date=2021-08-14|website=www.youtube.com}} and for his many recordings featuring the bass clarinet as a solo instrument in classical, jazz, and electronica formats.

Early life

Lowenstern was born in Chicago, Illinois and grew up in the Hyde Park neighborhood on the city's South Side. His father Edward was a serial entrepreneur, most well known for his work developing the field of consumer debt consolidation in the late 1950s, and his mother Lois, a real estate appraiser for ABN Amro Bank. The youngest of four, he has one brother, Ken, and two sisters, Linda and Beth. Attending the University of Chicago Laboratory School beginning in 1973, he began playing the clarinet at age 8. He regularly shares his story of that instrument: "I had an old instrument my mom used in high school, and my sister used in high school, and dammit, I was going to play it, because my parent's weren't about to 'buy me an instrument that I would just quit in a few years.'"{{Citation|title=Andy's Licorice Talk - Interview with Michael Lowenstern| date=5 September 2020 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=466NA7eRSPw|language=en|access-date=2021-08-14}}{{cbignore}}{{Dead YouTube link|date=February 2022}} He was moved by his band director to bass clarinet after two years "because I was holding the band back and I would do less damage on the bass clarinet."{{Citation|title=Michael Lowenstern LIVE @ Clarinet Connections| date=14 May 2020 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6w2lhcMog4 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/X6w2lhcMog4 |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|language=en|access-date=2021-08-14}}{{cbignore}}

His first clarinet teacher was John Bruce Yeh, of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, whom his father contacted through a mutual friend, Dale Clevenger, the orchestra's principal French horn player. He spent summers at the National Music Camp (now Interlochen Arts Camp) in Interlochen, Michigan, graduating in 1985 from the Interlochen Arts Academy. While at Interlochen, Lowenstern studied with Richard MacDowell.

He attended the Eastman School of Music, graduating with a bachelor's degree in music with a performer's certificate in 1989, studying with Charles Neidich, and immediately received a Fulbright grant to move to Amsterdam,The Netherlands, to continue his studies with bass clarinetist, Harry Sparnaay. Post-graduate studies continued with Charles Neidich at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, where he received his MM and PhD in music and composition. It is at Stony Brook where he became interested in computer music, having been one of the early beta-testers of Cycling74's Max software. It is also at Stony Brook where he met and begain work with his long-time collaborator, violinist Todd Reynolds.

Performing career

In 1994, Lowenstern moved to Brooklyn, New York and began performing and recording with various ensembles, including Steve Reich and Musicians, Saxophonist John Zorn, The Klezmatics, and The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. In 1996, his first album, [https://www.newworldrecords.org/products/michael-lowenstern-spasm Spasm], was released by New World Records, which is a collection of contemporary classical Bass Clarinet compositions. In 2000, Lowenstern joined the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra as Bass Clarinetist, and performed on two Grammy Award winning albums with the ensemble under Zdenek Macal. That same year, his second album,[https://www.allmusic.com/album/michael-lowenstern-1985-mw0000127611 1985] was released by Capstone Records.

In mid-2005, Lowenstern made a major shift in his career, and resigned from all of his regular ensembles, including the Chamber Music Society and the New Jersey Symphony, deciding to focus entirely on his solo compositions and performances. Between 2003 and 2015, Lowenstern self-released several albums, though his imprint [https://www.earspasm.com/ Earspasm Music]. During this period, Lowenstern served on the faculties of New York University, the Juilliard School, and the Manhattan School of Music, teaching bass clarinet in their [http://www.msmnyc.edu/contemp/ Contemporary Performance Program].

Lowenstern's YouTube channel was established in early 2006, but early content was removed, and few videos exist prior to 2011. At that time, Lowenstern began making and posting videos on that platform for a student, so she could listen to her etudes between lessons. The channel grew consistently over the decade, and is now one of the highest-ranked clarinet channels{{Cite web|title=Earspasm Music's YouTube Stats (Summary Profile) - Social Blade Stats|url=https://socialblade.com/youtube/user/earspasm|access-date=2021-08-14|website=socialblade.com}} by viewership and subscriptions. A number of his videos have created some controversy in the clarinet world, and he is often the subject of intense debate on the long-established [http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/list.html?f=1 Clarinet Pages] of Woodwind.org{{Cite web|title=The Clarinet Pages - your guide to the clarinet|url=http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/|access-date=2019-03-06|website=test.woodwind.org}} and [https://www.saxontheweb.net/ Sax On The Web.]{{Cite web|title=Sax on the Web Forum|url=https://www.saxontheweb.net/|access-date=2021-08-14|website=Sax on the Web Forum|language=en-US}} In an interview from July, 2021, Lowenstern is [https://www.cassgb.org/uploaded/2021_CASS_Summer_sample.pdf quoted] as saying "I don't take myself, or music, too seriously, and I think that offends some people."

Advertising career

In the late 1990s, Lowenstern began working at large advertising agencies in New York City "as a way to supplement his habit of eating and paying rent."{{cite web |title=CHANGE YOUR TUNE |url=https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/double-majoring-with-michael-lowenstern/id1577500832?i=1000551667767 |website=Apple Podcasts |publisher=Apple |access-date=4 September 2022}} Once retired from orchestra work, he began work full time at MRM/McCann digital agency. In 2008, Lowenstern moved to R/GA to found that agency's Digital Advertising group. It was at R/GA that Lowenstern won several industry awards, including two Cannes Lions, OneShow pencils for his work on Barack Obama's presidential campaign, and several Webby Awards. In 2017, Lowenstern [http://was%20hiredhttps://www.adweek.com/agencyspy/michael-lowenstern-leaves-rga-to-join-amazon-media-group-as-group-creative-director/132735/ was hired] by Amazon to lead creative strategy and development for their automotive advertising [https://advertising.amazon.com/solutions/products/custom-solutions?ref_=a20m_us_hnav_p_cus Brand Innovation Lab].

Personal life

Michael is married to clarinetist Katherine Cooke, and together they have one daughter, Ariel Lowenstern (born August, 1999). He is a certificated pilot, and enjoys flying his small 4-seater 1972 Piper Arrow,{{Cite web|title=N468PM (1972 PIPER PA-28R-200 owned by LOWENSTERN MICHAEL) Aircraft Registration|url=http://flightaware.com/resources/registration/N468PM|access-date=2021-08-14|website=FlightAware|language=en}} which he calls a "Toyota with wings."

Recordings

class="wikitable"

|+

!Year

!Title

!Ensemble/Leader

1985

|Quiet City

|Eastman Wind Ensemble/Wynton Marsalis

1992

|Flying Swan

|Chen Yuanlin

1994

|The Travels of Babar

|Raphael Mostel

1995

|Xenakis Ensemble Music I

|Ensemble ST-X

1995

|Emergency Music

|Julie Wolfe/Bang on a Can

1995

|Jag

|Eliot Sharp/Quintet of the Americas

1996

|Spasm

|Michael Lowenstern

1996

|Rare Events

|Dan Weymouth

1996

|Works by Princeton Composers

|

1996

|Xenakis Ensemble Music II

|Ensemble ST-X

1996

|City Music

|Steve Reich Ensemble

1996

|Common Sense

|Common Sense Ensemble

1997

|State Of The Union

|Eliot Sharp

1997

|Eight Lines

|Steve Reich Ensemble

1998

|The Child God

|Bun Ching Lam

1998

|Arnold Schoenberg Op. 29

|Robert Craft

1999

|China Exchange

|Chen Yuanlin

1999

|The Character of American Sunlight

|Jerome Kitzke and The Mad Coyote

1999

|Café 1930

|Mark Gould

1999

|Schoenberg Chamber Symphony

|Robert Craft

2000

|Concertos I

|Sequitur

2000

|Where The Wild Things Are

|Randy Woolf

2000

|Reel Life

|Howard Shore

2000

|Pines Of Rome

|New Jersey Symphony Orchestra

2000

|1985

|Michael Lowenstern

2001

|In C

|Bang On A Can All-Stars

2001

|Spectre's Bride

|New Jersey Symphony Orchestra

2001

|Restless Spirits

|Dora Ohrenstein

2002

|Susquehannas

|Zeitgeist

2002

|When The Smoke Clears

|Barbara White

2003

|Three Musicians

|Robert Morris

2003

|Blurred

|Billband

2003

|Ten Children

|Michael Lowenstern

2003

|Chimeras

|John Zorn

2004

|To Have And To Hold

|Sequitur

2004

|Phases

|Steve Reich Ensemble

2004

|Heavy Light

|Stephen Mackey/Mosaic

2005

|Dvorak Requiem

|New Jersey Symphony Orchestra

2005

|When Crows Gather

|Sequitur

2005

|Webern 5 Canons on Latin Texts

|Robert Craft

2005

|Crossing the Boulevard

|Scott Johnson

2005

|Rituals

|John Zorn

2006

|Tell The Birts

|Eve Beglarian

2006

|Ottulpo!

|Larry Austin

2006

|Fade

|Michael Lowenstern

2007

|Pit Band

|William Bolcom

2007

|Schoenberg Pierrot Lunaire

|Robert Craft

2007

|Sing to the Sun

|Alvin Singleton

2007

|One Peace

|Gregg August

2007

|Things You Must Do To Get To Heaven

|Virgil Moorefield

2009

|In C Remixed

|Terry Riley/Bill Ryan

2010

|Spin Cycle

|Michael Lowenstern

2010

|Americans

|Scott Johnson

2011

|Outerborough

|Todd Reynolds

2013

|Toward Daybreak

|Billband

2014

|Sway

|Michael Lowenstern

2016

|Trending on the Verge of Normalcy

|Guy Klucevsek

2019

|The Goods

|Michael Lowenstern

2019

|Insight (single)

|Michael Lowenstern

2021

|Distant Places

|Tom Nazziola

2021

|Ten Children, Vol 1 & 2

|Michael Lowenstern

2021

|The Redness of Blood

|Jerome Kitzke

References