Early life and musical education Born in
Washington, D.C., and raised in
Reston, Virginia, Hersch was introduced to classical music at the age of 18 by his younger brother Jamie, who showed him a videotape of
Georg Solti conducting
Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. He began his studies at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore with
Morris Cotel. In 1995 Hersch studied at the
Moscow Conservatory, where he worked with
Albert Leman and
Roman Ledenev. That same year he also worked with
John Corigliano,
John Harbison, and
George Rochberg at a program for young composers. Hersch then returned to Peabody for graduate studies, graduating in 1997 with a Master of Arts.
Early recognition His first success came when
Marin Alsop selected Hersch's
Elegy as winner of the American Composers Prize, and conducted it at
Lincoln Center in New York in 1997. That year also saw Hersch awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship in Music Composition. He has also been a fellow at the
Tanglewood Music Center, where he studied under
Christopher Rouse, the Norfolk Festival for Contemporary Music, and the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan. In 2000, Hersch was awarded the Rome Prize, in 2001 the Berlin Prize. While in Europe Hersch worked with
Hans Werner Henze and
Luciano Berio. Other honors include the Charles Ives Scholarship (1996) and the Goddard Lieberson Fellowship (2006) from the American Academy of Arts & Letters. Hersch's earliest recordings appeared on the
Vanguard Classics label, the first released in 2003, with performances by the composer and the String Soloists of the Berlin Philharmonic. This was followed by two other Vanguard discs. The second, with Hersch performing his own work in addition to music of
Morton Feldman,
Wolfgang Rihm, and
Josquin des Prez, was selected by
The Washington Post and Newsday as among the notable recordings of 2004-05. In 2007, Hersch's multi-hour piano cycle,
The Vanishing Pavilions (2005), with the composer at the keyboard was released. David Patrick Stearns of
The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote on the October 14, 2006 premiere of the work given by the composer.
Music Described by
The New York Times as "viscerally gripping and emotionally transformative music … claustrophobic and exhilarating at once, with moments of sublime beauty nestled inside thickets of dark virtuosity", Hersch's work "marries a volcanic New World energy to a deeply skeptical, often angst-ridden spiritual climate." (Andrew Clark,
Financial Times) In 2014, Hersch's first work for the stage,
On the Threshold of Winter (2012), premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Fishman Space by the NUNC ensemble (Miranda Cuckson, director) with
Ah Young Hong as the soloist. The opera, about terminal illness, is a reaction to the passing of one of Hersch's closest friends in 2009, as well as the composer's own diagnosis of cancer several years earlier. Its text comes from the deathbed poems of Romanian writer
Marin Sorescu. Hersch has written a number of pieces premiered by Hong, including his one-act opera
POPPEA (2019) created alongside librettist
Stephanie Fleischmann, which premiered in at the Festival ZeitRäume Basel and the Wien Modern Festival in 2021. The opera is a continuation of the story of the Roman Empress Poppea, picking up where
Claudio Monteverdi's
L'incornazione di Poppea ended. The violinist has commissioned several works from Hersch, including his Violin Concerto, which she premiered with the
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra in 2015. It was recently announced that he will be writing a new work for her in 2018-19 to be premiered with
Camerata Bern. Other collaborations include those with Dutch contemporary music group
Ensemble Klang, violinist Miranda Cuckson, and the
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. Hersch's more recent music has been characterized as increasingly "spare, intense, fiercely inward-turning."
Piano performance A highly regarded pianist, Hersch has performed throughout the U.S. and internationally. Though he appears in public infrequently, he commands a wide repertoire from Josquin to Boulez. Since 2000, he has primarily focused on performances of his own music. ==Selected works==