Messa per Papa Celestino V (2025)

For most of 2025, I have been working on a large-scale project for narrator, soprano soloist, bass-baritone soloist, children’s choir, adult choir, and orchestra. My Messa per Papa Celestino V honors Pope (and Saint) Celestino V who served as Pope for 161 days from July 5-December 13, 1294. It is a remarkable story of a humble priest, Pietro da Morrone, who lived most of his life as a hermit high in the Apennine Mountains of Central Italy. Commissioned by the Camerata Musicale Sulmonese, the premiere performances of this 80-minute work will take place in the Abruzzo Region of Italy on December 14 (Sulmona) and December 15 (Pescara). If you live in Italy or are visiting in mid-December, I hope that you will be able to attend.  

Click on the following link to view the 24-page program booklet for the Sulmona and Pescara performances. The work consists of six poems and thirteen movements of music. All of the Italian, Latin and Greek texts are included with English translations. In the case of my poems, the English versions are the originals. It should be noted that I have written these poems in the imagined voice of Papa Celestino V.

Sulmona Performance on 14 December 2025

Conductor Pasquale Veleno and LAS

Saxophonist Gaetano Di Bacco and LAS – On the first page of the Messa per Papa Celestino V, I have written the following: Dedicated to to Gaetano Di Bacco, Artistic Director of the Camerata Musicale Sulmonese, with profound gratitude.

News articles about the premiere performances:

Il Centro – 14 December 2025

Abruzzo Sera

allevents.in

ANSA.it

Centro Abruzzo News

Corriere Peligno

Eco Italiano

Notizie D’Abruzzo

ONDA TV

Rete Abruzzo

Tiscali

ZAC7

A photo from the rehearsal at the Music Conservatory in Pescara on 12 December 2025

Music theorist Li Qing and two song cycles by Larry Alan Smith

I first met music theorist Li Qing in November 2022 when she attended a series of online lectures and classes that I gave for Xinghai Conservatory in Guangzhou, China. A few months later, she reached out to me about using two of my song cycles for her graduate research. I was grateful for her interest in my music (and Emily Dickinson’s poetry!), and I found our many subsequent conversations fascinating because, as has often been the case throughout music history, theory was following practice. What I heard and wrote was . . . what I heard and wrote! She was analyzing my work and putting it in context with the harmonic practices of our time. Now, two years later, I want to congratulate Li Qing on the successful defense of her thesis and the completion of her Master of Arts degree. 

The title of Li Qing’s thesis: 

拉里· 艾伦 ·史密斯两部声乐套曲中的后调性音乐技法研究  

Studies in Post-Tonal Techniques in Two Vocal Cycles by Larry Alan Smith 

The thesis will be published by CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure). Click here for the CNKI website.

Recordings of the two LAS/Dickinson song cycles can be found at the following link.

 Li Qing received the following degree from South China University of Technology in Guangzhou, China.  

作曲与作曲技术理论和声方向艺术学硕士  

Master of Arts in Composition and Composition Technology Theory (Harmony) 

For my original October 2023 post about Li Qing’s thesis plans, click here.  

I believe that Li Qing is a music theorist with a very bright future, and I look forward to following her career during the coming years. 

Upcoming performances in Italy

The creation of The Soul of Wine (2025) has been in the works since 2017, and it will be premiered in Vittorito (AQ) on May 9-11, 2025.

As the poster indicates, there will be five performances:

Friday, May 9 at 18.00

Saturday, May 10 at 16.00 and 18.00

Sunday, May 11 at 16.00 and 18.00

This is a multimedia work that brings together poetry, acousmatic music, movement, live music, sounds, and extensive improvisation. Click here for details.

Click here to purchase tickets.

And, if you want to know more about the roots of Larry Alan Smith’s passion for wine, click here.

Adding content . . .

Extensive family-related travel included trips to Japan and Europe during the late spring and early summer. As a result, my summary posts became a little less frequent, but some of the recent additions to my website appear below.

Gokurakuji Temple on Naoshima Island (Japan)

Of note . . .

You will find many recordings of my music on this website, but I have recently added the following works:

Euterpean Serenade (1977) for violin and piano

Concerto for Winds, Brass, and Percussion (1983).

I am excited about a new page entitled The composer as performer, and the first comments and recordings pay tribute to my mother who died of cancer in 1981.

There is now a List of Works by Medium. Not only will visitors find it easier to search my catalog, but the formatting will enable me to add details about pieces that surface during my on-going research.

Many students from 2000-04 have been added to My Students (1979 to the present), but I still have a long way to go to complete this project. Three large stacks related to my private and classroom students await my attention.

Finally, for information about the arts-related business I formed back in 1995, please visit the Berg Associates, Inc. page.

Hiking down to the village of Schönried (Switzerland)

Onward!

Some news and recent additions:

On February 16th, Neuma Records released Kinesis, Vol. 2, a double album featuring the the Athens-based Galan Trio. My Piano Trio No. 3 (2022), a work written for and premiered by the ensemble in Italy last January, is one of the 12 works on this new recording.

For more information, click here. Please note: This link also includes links to the streaming services where the recording is currently available. They include Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Amazon, Pandora, and Deezer. Although it is not listed, I found the album on my YouTube Premium service.


Recordings of two piano works have been added:

Third Piano Sonata (1979) – Marguerita Oundjian Smith, piano

Fortune (1985) – Mary Kathleen Ernst, piano


Our National Anthem . . . Two arrangements by Larry Alan Smith

The Star-Spangled Banner for solo violin

The Star Spangled Banner for an ensemble of strings

If you want to read and hear more, click here!


The website will eventually include several photo galleries. Today, I want to launch a gallery that focuses on musicians. Click here to see the first of many photos.

Giving thanks!

I have enjoyed many different roles during the course of my career, but perhaps the most important and most consistent role has been serving as a teacher and mentor.

After a two-year graduate assistantship at The Juilliard School from 1977-79 (while pursuing my Master of Music degree in composition), I was hired to teach full-time at the Boston Conservatory for the 1979-80 academic year. That new opportunity required boarding a 2:00 AM train on Monday at New York’s Penn Station, arriving in Boston bright and early, teaching all day, and then taking a 10 PM train back to New York that arrived at 3:00 AM on Tuesday. Tuesday was taken up with my doctoral studies at Juilliard, and on Tuesday night/Wednesday morning, I headed back to Boston for part two of my weekly travels. It was an absolutely wild schedule, but I loved every minute of it, and I really enjoyed working with my students. Clearly, teaching would be a major part of my life.

During the 1980-81 academic year, I joined the full-time faculty of The Juilliard School where I taught for six years before assuming a series of positions that would combine academic, artistic, and administrative roles with my love of teaching.

My life has been enriched by my students, and I am in their debt. Click here to explore My Students (1979 to the present).

AND . . .

Frequent visitors to this site will know that I have been steadily adding recordings of my music. The 2023 Thanksgiving edition includes one of my acousmatic works, Una donna, un uomo ed alcune pecore ( A woman, a man and some sheep). Click here to read the program notes and access the audio file.

Veterans Day 2023

My website continues to develop . . .

1) A recording of my Three Pieces for Piano (2015), as performed by my wife, pianist Marguerita Oundjian Smith, has been added. Click here for the page that includes the audio files, as well as photos of the art in Mexico City that inspired the music.

2) Today, I am introducing a page I call LAS Musings.

My father, Lawrence Alexander Smith (1918-70), was a veteran of World War II.

This morning, I spent some time going through documents, photos, and memorabilia related to his military service in the early 1940’s, and I thought they would provide a fitting introduction to what I have written about January 27, 1973, the end of the Vietnam War, and draft numbers for Americans born in 1955.

Having my father’s uniform means a great deal to me. More than 80 years have passed. Remarkable.

Click here for LAS Musings.

Just back . . .

. . . from three invigorating weeks of music, art, family, friends, colleagues, walking, wine, and writing (piano music and poetry). 

There were three stops.

New York City: Activities included attending a Tertulia performance that featured violinists Livia Sohn and Jimmy Thompson, violist Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt, and cellist Sterling Elliott; celebrating our recent 45th wedding anniversary with members of our family who took us to the Trevor Noah performance at the Beacon Theater; taking in MoMA’s Picasso in Fontainebleau; hearing a performance at Christ and St. Stephen’s Church by Juilliard organ students; and attending James Austin Smith’s Hearing Memory at National Sawdust in Brooklyn.

Switzerland: Activities included attending the first six days of Le Bois qui Chante (a music festival in its 23rd season) in Château-d’Oex where I heard performances by Le Concert impromptu, Le Quintette du Jet d’Eau, pianist and alphornist Christophe Sturzenegger, and soprano Beatrice Villiger. Beatrice is the Artistic Director of the festival.

Italy: In addition to attending a program honoring the memory of Italian musician and composer Mario Giusti, my time in Abruzzo was spent planning future performances with artist friends, including an instrumentalist, a choral conductor, and a choreographer/dancer. Wine, as is usually the case, was an important part of my three-week trip. However, one morning stood out as a friend and I held our meeting at a winery, walking through the vineyards and an olive grove.

LAS and Emily Dickinson – Research that is now taking place in China

After giving a series of remote lectures at Xinghai Conservatory in Guangzhou, China during November 2022, I was approached by a graduate student who wanted to know more about my music. She was particularly interested in my harmonic writing and my work with art song. I happily shared some music with her, and now, ten months later, two of my works have become the topic of her approved Master of Music thesis. That thesis is scheduled to be completed in 2025.

拉里.艾伦.史密斯两套声乐套曲的和声特点研究 – A Study on the Harmonic Characteristics of Two Song Cycles by Larry Alan Smith

Li Qing is a student at the South China University of Technology’s School of Arts majoring in composition technique theory, and she will be researching my Emily Dickinson Songs (2005) and A Slash of Blue! A sweep of Gray! (2010). Both of these song cycles involve poems written by Emily Dickinson. (Recordings of both works are included on this website.)

I have seen a summary of Li Qing’s preliminary research plans, and she will be including information about my training in France with Nadia Boulanger, as well as my study at The Juilliard School with Vincent Persichetti. She will also be focusing on the 14 Dickinson poems I used to create the two song cycles. Most importantly, she will be delving into my harmonic language and my approach to the writing of art song.

This is an exciting project, and I look forward to providing Li Qing with any information and documents she might need to complete her work. I am humbled by her interest in my music. Stay tuned for updates on the research during the coming months.

October 4, 2023 – feeling 68 years young!

Today happens to be my birthday. When I was in my late-40’s and early-50’s, I used to dread my birthdays. My father died at age 52 when I was 14, and my mother died at age 54 when I was 25. Each time a doctor would ask about my family history, I would cringe and reluctantly provide the details. However, as I grew older and actually outlived my parents, it seemed that there might be some reason for hope.

Now, at 68, I feel healthy, vital, and nowhere near my age. 68 must be the new 48 . . . or perhaps even younger! Each day is a blessing, and I try to celebrate by being careful about what I eat, walking as much as possible (I am currently on a nearly 800-day walking streak), and enjoying the tremendous blessings of having a wonderful family that includes my wife (we just celebrated our 45th wedding anniversary!), my four sons, their spouses, and my four grandchildren. I am also fortunate to have a large extended family.

With one of my grandchildren

What I am trying to accomplish with this website . . .

To be honest, I am not the biggest fan of social media these days. Advertising overwhelms content, content is meant to be brief (and “catchy”), and posts are quickly buried as the newest material appears. This is distinctly unsatisfying for someone like yours truly who has spent his life building work (artistic and otherwise) that is meant to be carefully constructed and hopefully long lasting.

Therefore, I am trying a different approach as this new website takes shape. Part blog . . . part online exhibit . . . part whatever I want it to be! I like the idea of creating something that can be explored over time during multiple visits. My goal is to communicate with intention and care.

The irony is that I will probably use social media to advertise new content on this site!

Welcome! This is an on-going attempt to capture my varied professional interests and activities through pages on this website, as well as links to related websites. I hope that you will be a frequent visitor because the website will be dynamic with new content being added on a regular basis.

Larry

Quick links:

About Larry Alan SmithRecordingsCommercial RecordingsCommissioning New WorkCurrent ProjectsList of Works by MediumList of Works by Title (in alphabetical order)The Composer as PerformerThe Soul of Wine (2025)Berg Associates, Inc. – Larry Alan Smith Honorary FundLAS MusingsMy Students (1979 to the present)Photo Gallery-MusiciansPoems by Larry Alan SmithLAS and WineContact

A podcast from 2013

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In early 2013, a friend put me in touch with musician, web/graphic designer and audio/video producer George Marshall. George was just starting a podcast devoted to contemporary music and living composers, and he asked if he could interview me. I agreed, and I was very pleased with the results.

The interview focuses on my work for soprano and piano, A Slash of Blue! A sweep of Gray! (2010). You can hear the complete work in the Commercial Recordings section of this website under I dwell in Possibility. It features soprano Cherie Caluda.

To hear the podcast, click here, and select the March 1, 2013 episode.

Aria da Capo

By chance, I came across an interesting blog post by Rhoda-Gale Pollack about Edna St. Vincent Millay’s play,  Aria da Capo. With the permission of Edna St. Vincent Millay’s sister, Norma Millay Ellis, I set the play to music in 1980. Near the end of her post, Dr. Pollack mentions my opera which is scored for five singers (soprano, tenor, two baritones and a bass-baritone) and a chamber ensemble consisting of the following instruments: clarinet, bassoon, trumpet, trombone, one percussionist, piano and string quintet. The work is available on rental from the Theodore Presser Company.

Click here to read Dr. Pollack’s blog post.