Brussels Philharmonic | Who is Joan Tower?

Who is Joan Tower?

On 24 April, we will perform Sequoia by Joan Tower: wildly branching sequoias as a metaphor for the sound bath from which she distils her own voice.
Not familiar with her music yet? No worries, here is a quick introduction.

Stravinsky: Petrushka · 24.04.2026 · Flagey

Beyond The Score – This concert series celebrates the power of imagination: our fantasy transforms what we see in the real world into a universe that is entirely our own, coloured by who we are. What is real? What is illusion? What is imagination? What is reality?

The visual dimension enhances this sense of estrangement – and invites the audience to imagine a personal parallel universe. The new works by artist Ellen Vrijsen, inspired by the music, activate the viewer’s imagination.

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Vertigo in the Andes

Joan Tower was born in 1938 in New Rochelle, New York, but spent a significant part of her childhood in Bolivia, where her father worked as a geologist. Surrounded by mountains, high plateaus and distant horizons, she developed a keen ear for space and sonic mass. The sense of height, tension and physical energy that would later define her music finds its first foothold here.

From keyboard to drawing board

Tower began her musical life as a pianist. She studied at Bennington College and later at Columbia University, where she pursued both performance and composition. Gradually, her focus shifted: the performer made way for the maker. Yet her background at the keyboard remains clearly audible—in music that often feels strikingly physical, almost athletic, with an immediacy you can sense in the body.

Minimalist, but with muscle

In the 1970s, Tower became part of New York’s contemporary-music scene, notably as a founding member of the Da Capo Chamber Players. While minimalism and conceptual rigor set the tone, she forged a voice that never quite fits the mould. Her music, too, is rhythm-driven, layered, and fiercely energetic, but less a mantra than an engine. She clears her own path — not always fashionable, but unmistakably her own.

fanfare for the uncommon woman

With Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman, Tower wrote one of her best-known works, along with a title that leaves little to the imagination. Playful yet powerful, it offers a knowing nod to Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man and has become a kind of musical calling card. Not only because of the music itself, but also because of her singular position as a woman composer.

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Press Play: pure imagination

Stravinsky's Petroushka as the starting point for film journalist Robin Broos to dive into the history of cinema—discover it all in his personal selection

Brussels Philharmonic Kazushi Ono DREAMS 2023 c Wouter Van Vaerenbergh 71

Beyond the Score

With Beyond The Score, Brussels Philharmonic looks beyond the notes, exploring what symphonic music awakens in other voices across our society. These concerts are born from creation, encounter, and cross-pollination with the wider arts field.

More voices. More impulses. And above all: music. More than music.