Janice Giteck

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Om Shanti 00:00 Tools
Tara's Love Will Melt the Sword: I. Light Suspended 00:00 Tools
Tapasya 00:00 Tools
Leningrad Spring 00:00 Tools
Home (Revisited) 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs From a Turning Sky (excerpt). 00:00 Tools
Home 00:00 Tools
breathing songs from a turning sky (excerpt) 00:00 Tools
Ricercare (Dream upon Arrival) 00:00 Tools
I. Light Suspended 00:00 Tools
Tara's Love Will Melt the Sword: III. Rocking, Blue Interior 00:00 Tools
Tara's Love Will Melt the Sword: II. Tear Drops 00:00 Tools
Tara's Love Will Melt the Sword: IV. Affectionately Outward 00:00 Tools
III. Rocking, Blue Interior 00:00 Tools
IV. Affectionately outward 00:00 Tools
II. Tear drops 00:00 Tools
Where Can One Live Safely, Then? In Surrender. 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: II. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: I. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: V. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: IV. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: III. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: X. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: IX. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: VI. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: VII. — 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky: VIII. — 00:00 Tools
Tara's Love Will Melt the Sword 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs From a Turning 00:00 Tools
Breathing Songs From A Turning Sky 00:00 Tools
Thunder like a White Bear Dancing 00:00 Tools
Thunder, Like A White Bear Dancing 00:00 Tools
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Janice Giteck (born June 27, 1946 in New York) is an American composer. Giteck grew up in Hicksville, Long Island and moved to Arizona when she was twelve years old.[1] She attended Mills College, completing her Master's in 1969 and studying under Darius Milhaud. She later studied under Olivier Messiaen, and following this she studied percussion with Daniel Schmidt and gamelan music with Obo Addy.[2] Her works came into wide circulation in the 1970s and 1980s, with a style heavily influenced by world music and the music of American Indians. Awards for her music include the National Endowment for the Arts Composer's award for Breathing Songs from a Turning Sky, and the Norman Fromm Composers Award for Thunder, Like a White Bear Dancing.[3] Giteck returned to school and received a Master's in psychology in 1986, and worked in the mental health field from 1986 to 1991.[2] She has taught at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle since 1979. Her 1992 recording collection Home (Revisited), released on New Albion, is dedicated to AIDS patients.[4] Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.