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    Foundation for Modern Music

    A composer's legacy lives on: Robert Avalon new music competition hosts winnersconcert

    Joel Luks
    May 19, 2012 | 6:40 am

    Had composer Robert Avalon lived to witness the first contemporary classical music composition competition that he started to organize back in 2004, he would been thrilled at the outcome. Had he lived long enough to see that his efforts carried on for another six years, he would have been ecstatic. But Avalon died of a cardiac arrest shortly after being diagnosed with cancer. He was 47.

    The Foundation for Modern Music (FMM) continues his legacy on Saturday, 7:30 p.m. in Cullen Hall at the University of St. Thomas.

    "This signature event year after year brings home to Houston audiences the reason we believe in Robert Avalon's dream," Paul Boyd, associate artistic director at FMM, says. "Every day, musicians are still creating notes that must leave the page in order to realize their magic. The foundation launches their music."

    At the sixth annual Robert Avalon International Competition for Composers Concert, the chamber works (up to five players) of the winners will be performed alongside pieces by the distinguished panel of judges whose task was to parse the submissions and make the tough calls.

    This year's panel included Boyd, opera composer Daron Hagen, whose Amelia was staged by Moores Opera Center and whose Vera of Las Vegas was produced by Opera Vista, and Renaissance woman Kyong Mee Choi of Roosevelt University in Chicago.

    The competition started at a local high school level. Now, it awards prizes in four categories: Junior high school, high school, college and professional, with applications coming in from as far as Taiwan, South Korea, Greece, Brazil, Mexico, Australia and Canada.

    "Composers need and deserve our support now more than ever. To throw in your hat in with the likes of Beethoven is not for the faint of heart. Personally I've learned how worthwhile it is to give these works a chance — they want us to discover something with them."

    "Since we have entrants at all stages of their careers, it's exciting to see both newly forming voices and established artists who continue to create a body of work," Boyd, says.

    Avalon's goals were clear: He wished to fashion an international competition that nurtured the art form, helped composers get their works published, create recordings and award cash prizes — a Van Cliburn for tunesmiths.

    "Composers need and deserve our support now more than ever," Boyd says. "To throw in your hat in with the likes of Beethoven is not for the faint of heart. Personally I've learned how worthwhile it is to give these works a chance — they want us to discover something with them."

    Spiritual minimalism, pentatonic materials, modality, tonality and atonality gave rise to extra-musical associations that stepped outside references to popular or traditional styles, something which Boyd points out has not been the case before.

    "The finalists were apparently steeped in their knowledge of concert art music and drew from this very effectively," Boyd says. "As I looked through the scores it was striking to see influences from Bach, Ravel, Stravinsky, Corigliano and Pärt for example. Virtually all displayed a fondness for note-cluster colors varying from dissonant to lush."

    In the winner's circle . . .

    Washington State-resident high schooler Daniel Karcher's Gift for the Darkness for string quartet caught the judges' ear. Inspired by William Golding's Lord of the Flies, it was the first time the young composer had manipulated a four-voice texture. His approach complemented the tension between the fictional characters with collections of pitches and intervals as the thematic anchor.

    "Placing in the Robert Avalon competition and receiving a professional recording are two extremely helpful things for a budding composer like myself because they allow me to get my name out into the musical community, and to let other people have access to my music," Karcher said. "When applying to a music college, a professional recording can help me standout and also demonstrates how serious of a composer I am."

    Also from Washington State, Miles Jefferson Friday's Call to Mind for clarinet, violin, contrabass, percussion and piano contrasts an ambient opening with a rough, crass and furious B section. Though the 18-year-old's opus wasn't composed with narrative allusions in mind, he opens up the possibilities that listeners create whatever imagery that comes to mind — there isn't a right nor wrong.

    "When applying to a music college, a professional recording can help me standout and also demonstrates how serious of a composer I am."

    Seasoned composer Greg A. Steinke's Expressions III on the Paintings of Gustav Klimt (Image Music XXIX) for clarinet, violin, violoncello, percussion and piano is part of a larger series mused by visual arts or poetic metaphors. Taking cues from Klimt's style, the Oregon resident strived to create idiomatic and interesting partitures for each musician.

    The exposure from the competition is something that Steinke hopes will result in more performances of Expressions III and other pieces in his oeuvre, and leads to future opportunities for commissions.

    Matthew Tommasini, 33, has established himself in the professional world of new music already. Awaken this Feeling was premiered last year at the Hong Kong-based composers/performers festival, The Intimacy of Creativity, where he serves as associate artistic director. He hoped to garner interest and attention for his initiative overseas.

    Tommasini works with a tonal framework dotted with experimental elements mirroring the persona he was trying to honor with his music, Alfred Einstein. Tommasini represents the fusion of art and science with tonality and avant-garde as a way to "awaken a sense of cosmic order."

    Other winners in the junior high school division include Zachery Detrick and Dara Li; in the high school division is Christopher Poovey; in the university and emerging artist category are Ka Chun Ng, Alexander Winkler (a student of Rob Smith at Moores School of Music) and Youn-Jae Ok, and in the professional group is also Geoffrey Gordon.

    The Robert Avalon International Competition for Composers Concert is set for 7:30 p.m. in Cullen Hall at the University of St. Thomas. Tickets can be purchased online and at the door, and are $20 for general admission, $10 for seniors over 65 and students.

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    news/entertainment

    RIP, Chuck

    Actor Chuck Norris, star of 'Walker, Texas Ranger,' dies at 86

    Associated Press
    Mar 20, 2026 | 10:30 am
    Chuck Norris
    Courtesy photo
    Chuck Norris, star of "Walker, Texas Ranger," has died at 86.

    Chuck Norris, the martial arts grandmaster and action star whose roles in “Walker, Texas Ranger” and other television shows and movies made him an iconic tough guy — sparking internet parodies and adoration from presidents — has died at 86.

    Norris died Thursday, in what his family described as a “sudden passing.”

    “While we would like to keep the circumstances private, please know that he was surrounded by his family and was at peace,” the family said in a statement posted to social media.

    Before he would become a star in movies and on TV, Norris was wildly successful in competitive martial arts. He was a six-time undefeated World Professional Middleweight Karate champion. He also founded his own Korean-based American hard style of karate, known sometimes as Chun Kuk Do, and the United Fighting Arts Federation, which has awarded more than 3,300 Chuck Norris System black belts worldwide. Black Belt magazine ultimately credited Norris in its hall of fame with holding a 10th degree black belt, the highest possible honor.

    Born Carlos Ray Norris in Ryan, Oklahoma, on March 10, 1940, he grew up poor. At age 12, he moved with his family to Torrance, California, and joined the U.S. Air Force after high school, in 1958. It was during a deployment to Korea that he started training in martial arts, including judo and Tang Soo Do.

    “I went out for gymnastics and football at North Torrance high,” he told The Associated Press in 1982. “I played some football, but I also spent a lot of time on the bench. I was never really athletic until I was in the service in Korea.”

    After he was honorably discharged in 1962, he worked as a file clerk for Northrop Aircraft and applied to be a police officer, but was put on a waitlist. Meanwhile, he opened a martial arts studio, which expanded to a chain, with students including such stars as Bob Barker, Priscilla Presley, Donnie and Marie Osmond, and Steve McQueen, whom he later credited with encouraging him to get into acting.

    From one studio to another
    Norris made his film debut as an uncredited bodyguard in the 1968 movie “The Wrecking Crew,” which included a fight with Dean Martin. He had also crossed paths with Bruce Lee in martial arts circles. Their friendship — sometimes, as sparring partners — led to an iconic faceoff in the 1972 movie “Return of the Dragon,” in which Lee fights and kills Norris' character in Rome's Colosseum.

    He went on to act in more than 20 movies, such as “Missing in Action,” “The Delta Force” and “Sidekicks.”

    “I wanted to project a certain image on the screen of a hero. I had seen a lot of anti-hero movies in which the lead was neither good nor bad. There was no one to root for,” Norris said in 1982.

    In 1993, he took on his most famed role, as a crime-fighting lawman in TV's “Walker, Texas Ranger.” The show ran for nine seasons, and in 2010, then-Gov. Rick Perry awarded him the title of honorary Texas Ranger. The Texas Senate later named him an honorary Texan.

    “It’s not violence for violence’s sake, with no moral structure,” Norris told the AP in 1996, speaking about the show. “You try to portray the proper meaning of what it’s about — fighting injustice with justice, good vs. bad. … It’s entertaining for the whole family.”

    Norris also made a surprise comedic appearance as a decisive judge in the final match of the 2004 movie “Dodgeball.” He only on occasion has taken acting roles in recent years, including 2012's “The Expendables 2” and the 2024 sci-fi action movie “Agent Recon.” He's due to appear in “Zombie Plane,” an upcoming film starring Vanilla Ice.

    Chuck Norris: the man, the meme, the legend
    It was around the time of “Dodgeball” that his toughman image became the stuff of legend, literally: “Chuck Norris Facts” went viral online with such wildly hyperbolic statements as, “Chuck Norris had a staring contest with the sun -- and won,” and, “They wanted to put Chuck Norris on Mt. Rushmore, but the granite wasn’t tough enough for his beard.”

    Norris ultimately embraced the absurdity of the meme craze, putting together “The Official Chuck Norris Fact Book,” which combined his favorites with supposedly true stories and the codes he aimed to live by. He would also write books on martial arts instruction, a memoir, political takes, Civil War-era historical fiction and more.

    “To some who know little of my martial arts or film careers but perhaps grew up with 'Walker, Texas Ranger,' it seems that I have become a somewhat mythical superhero icon,” Norris wrote in the forward to the fact book. “I am flattered and humbled.”

    That book raised money for a nonprofit he founded with President George H.W. Bush that promoted martial arts instruction for kids.

    The intentionally outlandish statements featured in the 2008 Republican presidential primary, when Norris endorsed Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and shot an ad playing on the “Chuck Norris facts.”

    President Donald Trump's supporters later promoted Trump Facts in the same vein, and political pundits tried it as well, describing the commander-in-chief's decision to seize Venezuela's sitting president, Nicolas Maduro, as a “Chuck Norris Moment,” and its initial effect on oil prices a “Chuck Norris Premium.”

    Norris was outspoken about his Christian beliefs and his support for gun rights, and backed political candidates for years — he even went skydiving with Bush for the former president's 80th birthday. As for Trump, Norris endorsed him in the 2016 general election and wrote guest columns praising him without explicitly endorsing him the in the days before the 2020 and 2024 elections.

    Norris has five surviving children: stunt performers Mike and Eric with his late ex-wife Dianne Holechek, twins Dakota and Danilee with his wife Gena Norris, and Dina, the result of an early 1960s “one-night stand” revealed in his autobiography.

    Norris celebrated his birthday just over a week before his death, posting a sparring video on Instagram.

    “I don't age. I level up,” he wrote.

    celebritieschuck norrisdeathsobituary
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