composer

Jean-Pascal Beintus has won global acclaim for his highly expressive and compelling compositions. Born in Toulouse, France in 1966, he studied double bass and composition at the conservatories of Nice, Lyon, and Paris during the 1980s. When John Eliot Gardiner created the Lyon Opéra Orchestra in 1983, he selected Beintus as a founding double bass player. The versatile young musician used the ensemble as a source of inspiration in composing his first work, Samskara for double bass and chamber orchestra.

In 1996 Kent Nagano, then music director of the Opéra de Lyon, recognized Jean-Pascal Beintus's talents as composer and began to commission works from him. Beintus quickly built up a reputation as a fluent and versatile composer and a brilliant orchestrator, receiving numerous prestigious commissions. Since then, he has written music for nearly every type of ensemble; for professionals and amateurs; for theatre, concert hall and film.

The hallmarks of Jean-Pascal Beintus's compositions are their harmonic richness, inventive metrical play, and lush orchestrations. Recent commissions have come from the Berlin Philharmonic (He's Got Rhythm: Homage to George Gershwin), the Russian National Orchestra (Wolf Tracks), the Hallé Orchestra (Couleurs cuivres), the Berkeley Symphony (Berkeley Images, Luna Tree and Bremen Town Musicians), the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra (Kobe Symphony), l'Orchestre de Paris (Cordes et lames), the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Nature Suite), and the State of California (Manzanar: An American Story).

A recording of Jean-Pascal Beintus's Wolf Tracks featuring Bill Clinton, Mikhail Gorbachev, and Sophia Loren as narrators (PentaTone Classics) received a 2004 GRAMMY Award. Beintus's Kobe Symphony is featured on David Benoit's 2005 release, Orchestral Stories, on Peak Records.

Forthcoming projects include a Spanish language rendition of Wolf Tracks, narrated by Antonio Banderas, and, in collaboration with Kent Nagano, an ambitious project to arrange and orchestrate the music of Akira Kurosawa's legendary films.

Performances

World Financial Center - Winter Garden | May 17, 2003
Kresge Auditorium at MIT | April 26, 2003