| SHARON
FARBER Composer-in-Residence |
Sharon began her musical career at the age of seven, as a classical pianist. After graduating from Thelma-Yelin High School for the Arts, she served in the IDF (Israeli Defense Force) and later worked as a theater composer and musical director in Israel. She won the first prize in Colors in Dance in 1992 for her music for choreography. In 1994, she moved to Boston upon receiving a scholarship from Berklee College Of Music. During her studies, she won the first prize in the yearly Professional Writing Division Concert with her first string quartet. After graduating Summa Cum Laude in 1997 (majoring in both Classical Composition and Film Scoring) she moved to Los Angeles to begin her professional career. Miss Farber was the recipient of the prestigious Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Internship in Film Scoring, as well as the Mentorship program of the Society of Composers and Lyricists, on which she currently serves as a board member. Ms. Farber has been writing concert and choir music in parallel to a film-scoring career, and has many international premieres and performances to her credit. To name a few: The Third Mother/Mothers’ Lament, in memory of slain reporter Daniel Pearl, which was world premiered by the distinguished Los Angeles Master Chorale, under the direction of Maestro Grant Gershon, and won her the First Prize in the Cincinnati Camerata Composition Competition in 2007 (published by Roger Dean Music publishing) ASHKINA, featuring Omar Faruk Tekbilek, premiered in New York, October 2004, and has had many performances since. Her recent commissioned piece, Translucent Rocks, was premiered by prestigious “Israeli Chamber Orchestra, October 2007 to rave reviews. In
the Film and TV industry, Sharon has been working with such prestigious
companies as NBC, Showtime, WB and CBS as well as writing music for independent
features and other projects. She won the Telly Award in 1998 for best
score for the docu-drama series "California 2000" and her work
can also be heard at the Museum of Sacramento, as part of the Museum's
permanent exhibition. Her orchestral score for “When Nietzsche Wept”,
starring Aramand Assante and Ben cross (Millennium Films) was released
recently, and she has recently complsted the score for Folie a Deux for
director Sean Martin (UK). "As
a rapturously beautiful score that makes psycho-analysis sound off with
more emotion than ever before, 'Nietzsche' introduces Sharon Farber as
a composer to watch." "An
intricately sensitive composition, When Nietzsche Wept, is an elegantly
classical score, rich in dramatic texture and musical sensitivity."
For more information please visit Sharon’s website: www.sharonfarber.com |