He was winner of the 1983
American Piano Awards national competition and made his New York recital debut in 1984 at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. As a soloist, Bush has championed the work of many living composers, and has recorded piano works of
Ben Johnston and
John Zorn, among others. Bush is a regular at various chamber music festivals throughout the United States, and has collaborated with many major American instrumentalists. His work as a "sideman" in chamber and contemporary recording sessions currently stands at some thirty recordings on various labels including Virgin Classics, Sony, Koch International, Denon, and New World Records, with groups such as
The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. In 2007 he was named Music Director of the
Chamber Music Conference and Composers' Forum of the East, an annual month-long summer festival on the campus of
Bennington College in Vermont. In the autumn of 2014, Bush announced he would be stepping down from the position at the end of the 2015 BCMC, his ninth season. In the contemporary music field, Bush was a keyboardist with
Philip Glass' ensemble on and off from 1987 till 2007, and also with
Steve Reich and Musicians from 1986 until 2008. Bush was the pianist for Milwaukee's
Present music contemporary group from 1995 until he retired from the group in 2010. Other long group associations included a stint from 1992 to 1999 with the classical crossover piano quartet "Typhoon," led by violinist Iwao Furusawa and immensely popular in Japan through the 90s with several top-selling CDs. In 2001 Bush made his
Carnegie Hall solo concerto debut on short notice, replacing an ailing
Peter Serkin as soloist with the
London Sinfonietta in concerti by
Stravinsky and
Alexander Goehr to critical acclaim. Bush's efforts on behalf of contemporary American music have earned him awards and grants from the
Aaron Copland Fund and the
National Endowment for the Arts. In 2012 Bush was named Associate Professor of Piano and Chamber Music at the
University of South Carolina School of Music. ==References==