Mason Bates (born January 23, 1977, in Philadelphia) is an American composer of contemporary classical music, renowned for blending orchestral traditions with electronic and multimedia elements, as well as performing as a DJ under the moniker Masonic.[1][2][3] Raised in Richmond, Virginia, Bates studied music at Columbia University (BA), The Juilliard School (MM), and the University of California, Berkeley (PhD), where he developed his distinctive style under mentors including John Corigliano.[4][5]Bates achieved widespread acclaim with his opera The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs (2017), which won a Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording in 2019 and became a bestseller at the Santa Fe Opera.[2][3] Named the most-performed composer of his generation, he has created innovative works such as the multimedia symphony Philharmonia Fantastique (2021), which earned a 2023 Grammy Award for its soundtrack and has reached hundreds of performances worldwide, and Mothership (2011), a symphonic exploration of electronic influences.[3][6] His compositions also extend to film, including the score for Gus Van Sant's The Sea of Trees (2016), and projects like the opera The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (2025), which premiered at the Metropolitan Opera on September 21, 2025, opening the 2025–26 season.[5][2][7]As an advocate for innovative concert experiences, Bates served as the first composer-in-residence at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (2018–2022) and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (2010–2015), where he curated events blending classical and electronic music through his organization Mercury Soul.[3][6] He was honored as Musical America's 2018 Composer of the Year and received the Heinz Award in the Arts and Humanities in 2013.[3][5] Currently, Bates is a faculty member at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where he teaches composition, and artist-in-residence at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco (2025–2026).[5][2]
Early Life and Education
Childhood and Early Influences
Mason Bates was born on January 23, 1977, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was raised primarily in Richmond and Newtown, Virginia, where his family maintained a homestead and operated a hunt club. The son of a surgeon and a schoolteacher, Bates grew up in a supportive environment that encouraged his early interests in the arts, though his parents' professions leaned toward medicine and education rather than music.[8][9]Bates' initial exposure to music came through piano lessons at his childhood home in Richmond, beginning with instructor Hope Armstrong Erb. He attended St. Christopher's School, an all-boys preparatory institution in Richmond, where he developed his foundational skills in music during his formative years. Bates began composing choral and instrumental works before his teen years, marking an early foray into creative expression through classical forms. He attended the Brevard Music Center Summer Institute in 1993 as a piano and choir student, premiering his early choral composition "Timor et Tremor." During high school, he studied composition with Dika Newlin, a student of Arnold Schoenberg.[10][11][8][12][13]During his adolescence, Bates drew significant inspiration from classical traditions, immersing himself in the works of composers such as Handel, Mozart, and Bach. These influences shaped his initial understanding of symphonic and keyboard music, fostering a deep appreciation for orchestral structures and historical repertoires that would later inform his compositional style. School activities at St. Christopher's, including piano practice and possibly ensemble participation, provided practical outlets for exploring these traditions before his transition to formal studies.[14][15]
Formal Education
Bates enrolled in the joint program between Columbia University and The Juilliard School, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in English literature and a Master of Music in composition in 2001.[13] During these studies, he developed his foundational compositional techniques while balancing literary and musical pursuits.[12]His primary composition teacher was John Corigliano, with additional guidance from David Del Tredici and Samuel Adler, who influenced his approach to orchestral writing and narrative forms.[16] At Juilliard, Bates began exploring electronic music in the school's labs, marking an early shift toward integrating technology into classical structures.[12]Bates then pursued doctoral studies at the University of California, Berkeley, earning a PhD in composition in 2008.[4] There, he worked with Edmund Campion and Jorge Liderman at the Center for New Music and Audio Technologies (CNMAT), focusing on the fusion of electronic and acoustic elements in orchestral music.[17][16] His dissertation explored innovative ways to incorporate electronica into symphonic works, laying the groundwork for his signature style.[18]These academic experiences honed Bates' ability to bridge traditional composition with electronic experimentation, evident in early pieces like his Juilliard-era explorations of sound synthesis.[12]
Professional Career
Classical Composition Milestones
Bates' entry into professional classical composition occurred in the early 2000s, with initial commissions for orchestral works that showcased his innovative blending of traditional and modern elements. By 2004, he had garnered attention for symphonic pieces performed by major ensembles, establishing him as an emerging voice in contemporary American music.[19] These early opportunities, including collaborations with violinist Anne Akiko Meyers in the mid-2000s, laid the foundation for his rising prominence among orchestras seeking fresh repertoire.[20]A significant breakthrough came in 2010 when Bates was named co-composer-in-residence for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a five-year appointment that facilitated deep institutional integration and multiple performances with the ensemble under music director Riccardo Muti.[21] This residency was extended in 2012, underscoring his impact on the orchestra's programming.[22] In 2015, he achieved another milestone as the first composer-in-residence at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a role that expanded through 2020 and involved curating series to broaden classical music's reach.[23]Bates' collaborations with leading American orchestras further highlighted his stature, including a longstanding partnership with the San Francisco Symphony beginning in the late 2000s, which featured repeated commissions and performances under conductors like Michael Tilson Thomas.[24] Similarly, his work with the Chicago Symphony extended beyond the residency, encompassing recordings and ongoing projects that reinforced his role in symphonic innovation.[25]In recognition of his widespread appeal, a 2018 survey of American orchestras ranked Bates as the second most-performed living American composer, behind only John Adams, reflecting his success in engaging diverse audiences through accessible yet sophisticated scores.[26] That same year, Musical America named him Composer of the Year, affirming his influence on orchestral programming nationwide.[27]Recent developments culminated in Bates' Metropolitan Opera debut with a new opera premiere on September 21, 2025, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, which opened the company's 2025–26 season and received an extension due to strong demand.[28] This event marked a pinnacle in his operatic trajectory, building on prior successes in symphonic and multimedia realms.[29]
DJ and Electronic Music Activities
In the early 2000s, Mason Bates adopted the DJ persona "Masonic" to explore electronic dance music, particularly house and electronica, while incorporating elements of classical music into his sets.[30] This dual identity allowed him to perform in underground clubs, galleries, and warehouses, where he spun bass-heavy techno tracks alongside live improvisations by jazz and classical musicians.[31] His approach created a "post-classical rave" style that bridged nightlife scenes with orchestral traditions, drawing crowds to venues like San Francisco's DNA Lounge, The Great Northern, and Monarch.[32]Bates established notable DJ residencies and performances through initiatives like Mercury Soul, a curatorial project he co-founded with conductor Benjamin Shwartz in 2008, which fused DJ sets with chamber ensembles such as Philharmonia Baroque and the Jazz Mafia.[32] These events, held in clubs across the U.S., including collaborations with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Miami's New World Symphony, typically attracted over 600 attendees per show and included free afternoon sessions for high school students to promote accessibility.[32] At the Kennedy Center, where Bates served as the first composer-in-residence from 2015 to 2020, he curated the KC Jukebox series, featuring immersive video projections and ambient music from Erik Satie to Aphex Twin, often culminating in DJ post-parties with artists like Kyle Dixon and Caroline Shaw.[33] Additional performances included festival appearances, such as sets at the American Academy in Rome, emphasizing electronic curation in non-traditional spaces.[34]A key curatorial endeavor is Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra, a 30-minute animated film and concerto co-created with Oscar-winning director Gary Rydstrom and animator Jim Capobianco, whose world premiere was delayed from 2020 and first performed in 2021, featuring Bates' score performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Edwin Outwater.[35] Guided by a magical sprite, the multimedia experience explores orchestral instruments through vibrant animations—depicting vibrating violin strings, brass valves, and resonating drums—while blending electronic sound design with live symphonic elements to educate and engage younger audiences.[36] The project, which received a Grammy for Best Engineered Album, Classical, in 2023, has been screened with live orchestral accompaniment worldwide and made freely available online by the Kennedy Center in 2025.[37] Bates has also developed installations like Skylight Soundscapes at the Kennedy Center's Reach campus, a two-week immersive exhibit in 2021 that layered techno, bluegrass, and synthesizer sounds in a meditative environment.[32]Through these activities, Bates has advocated for integrating new music into club and festival settings, expanding classical reach beyond concert halls by hosting hybrid events that attract diverse, younger demographics.[6] His efforts underscore a commitment to immersive production and technology, such as large-scale visuals and electronica-infused performances, to revitalize audience engagement in electronic and classical crossover spaces.[32] As of 2025, Bates resides in Burlingame, California, where he maintains an active DJ schedule, including his role as Artist-in-Residence at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco—featuring electro-acoustic works—and a November performance of his electronic piece Alternative Energy with the San Mateo Symphony.[38][39][40]
Residencies and Teaching
Composer-in-Residence Positions
Mason Bates began his series of prominent composer-in-residence positions with the California Symphony, serving from 2007 to 2010. In this role, he collaborated closely with the orchestra to develop new works tailored to its programming, resulting in multiple commissions and world premieres that highlighted his emerging style blending orchestral and electronic elements.[41][42]From 2010 to 2015, Bates held the position of Mead Composer-in-Residence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a five-year appointment that marked one of his most extensive institutional engagements. During this period, the residency facilitated commissions from the orchestra and guest ensembles, leading to several world premieres performed under conductors including Riccardo Muti, and fostering collaborations that expanded the orchestra's contemporary repertoire.[21][43]Bates also served as artist-in-residence with the San Francisco Symphony around 2012, concurrent with his Chicago role, where he contributed to innovative programming and received commissions that resulted in world premieres integrating multimedia elements. This residency emphasized his dual identity as composer and DJ, bridging classical traditions with modern performance practices.[8][44]In 2015, Bates became the first composer-in-residence at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a three-year term extending through the 2017-2018 season. This groundbreaking appointment involved curating series like KC Jukebox and securing commissions for national ensembles, culminating in world premieres that reached diverse audiences across the Center's venues. The role occasionally extended to brief educational outreach, complementing his faculty positions elsewhere.[45][23]In 2025–2026, Bates serves as artist-in-residence at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco. During this tenure, he presents DJ appearances, fireside chats, and Mercury Soul events blending classical and electronic music, alongside commissions including "Stable of Grace" for chorus and organ, a new work for chorus and mixed ensemble, and a piece for the cathedral's bell tower.[2]
Faculty and Educational Roles
In 2014, Mason Bates was appointed to the composition faculty at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM), where he teaches applied lessons in composition and leads specialized courses such as "Themify the Theme," a technique focused on developing thematic material in contemporary music.[46][5] As a mentor, Bates has guided emerging composers including Daniel de Togni, Taylor Rankin, Jonah Gallagher, and Yangfan Xu, emphasizing innovative approaches that blend classical traditions with electronic elements to foster creative fusion in their work.[5]Bates' pedagogical efforts extend beyond traditional classroom instruction through outreach programs that promote music education. He created Sprite’s World, an interactive digital ecosystem linked to his multimedia orchestral work Philharmonia Fantastique, which has engaged hundreds of thousands of students and educators as of 2025 via the Kennedy Center’s platform, introducing young audiences to classical music concepts through immersive, technology-driven experiences.[2][47] Additionally, Bates has developed the "Curating the Concert Experience" video series, a set of masterclasses exploring programming, production, and platform strategies for modern classical performances, aimed at broadening access and innovation in the field.[3]His contributions to music education were highlighted in 2018 when he was named Musical America's Composer of the Year, recognizing not only his compositional achievements but also his role in shaping the next generation of musicians through teaching and innovative outreach.[3] During his residencies, such as at the Kennedy Center, Bates incorporated educational components like workshops and lectures to mentor young artists on integrating electronic and classical styles.[3]
Awards and Honors
Grammy Awards
Mason Bates received the Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, held at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, for his opera The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.[48][49] The award recognized the Pentatone Records release of the opera's original cast recording, captured live during its world premiere at the Santa Fe Opera in July 2017.[50][51]The winning project involved key collaborators, including librettist Mark Campbell, conductor Michael Christie, and performers such as baritone Edward Parks as Steve Jobs, tenor Garrett Sorenson as Steve Wozniak, mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke as Laurene Powell Jobs, bass Wei Wu as Kōbun Chino Otogawa, baritone Kelly Markgraf as Mike Markkula, and soprano Jessica E. Jones as Chrisann Brennan, alongside the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra.[48][49] Producer Elizabeth Ostrow oversaw the recording, with engineering by Mark Donahue and Dirk Sobotka, co-produced by the Santa Fe Opera, Seattle Opera, San Francisco Opera, and Indiana University’s Jacobs School of Music.[48]This Grammy win significantly elevated Bates' profile as a composer, leading to sold-out performances and additional runs of the opera across major venues, while enhancing visibility for contemporary opera through its innovative fusion of electronic and symphonic elements.[51][52] The accolade underscored the genre's potential to engage modern audiences with timely narratives, broadening its cultural relevance and inspiring further explorations of technology-themed works.[52]Bates received the Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Classical at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards on February 5, 2023, for Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra (Sony Classical, 2022).[53][54] The album features the soundtrack to Bates' multimedia symphony, performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Edwin Outwater, with engineering by Jesse Lewis and others. This win recognized the technical excellence in capturing the work's blend of orchestral and electronic elements in its animated film accompaniment.Bates earned another Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Classical at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards on February 2, 2025, for the recording of Anton Bruckner’s Symphony No. 7 coupled with Bates' Resurrexit (Reference Recordings, 2024).[55][56] Performed by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra under Manfred Honeck, the album's engineering by John Newton and others was honored for its sonic clarity in presenting Bates' transformative symphonic work alongside Bruckner's masterpiece.
Other Major Recognitions
In 2004, Bates received the Rome Prize in Musical Composition from the American Academy in Rome, a prestigious fellowship awarded annually to emerging artists for a year-long residency in Italy to foster creative development; at age 27, this early-career honor allowed him to focus on innovative works blending classical and electronic elements without financial pressures.[57][58]The following year, in 2005, he was granted the Berlin Prize by the American Academy in Berlin, recognizing his potential to bridge American and European musical traditions through a semester-long residency in Germany, where he explored multimedia compositions amid Berlin's vibrant arts scene.[59][60]Bates earned the American Academy of Arts and Letters Music Prize in 2007, an accolade given to promising composers for exceptional originality and technical mastery, highlighting his symphonic innovations at a pivotal stage when he was transitioning from academic training to professional commissions.[58][61]In 2008, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, supporting mid-career artists with unrestricted funding for creative projects; this grant enabled Bates to deepen his electronic-classical fusion, resulting in key orchestral pieces performed by major ensembles.[62][16]The 2012 Heinz Award in Arts and Humanities, presented by the Heinz Family Foundation, recognized Bates as one of America's most innovative contemporary composers at age 35—the youngest recipient ever in the category—awarding him $250,000 to advance boundary-pushing works that revitalize classical music for diverse audiences.[63][64]In 2018, Musical America named Bates Composer of the Year, an industry honor celebrating his leadership in expanding classical music's reach through multimedia and curation, underscoring his status as the most-performed living American composer of his generation at that time.[27][65]
Compositions
Symphonic Works
Mason Bates's symphonic works are characterized by their innovative fusion of traditional orchestral forces with electronic elements, often drawing on narrative themes inspired by science, nature, and mythology to create immersive sonic landscapes. His compositions frequently incorporate laptop-generated sounds, field recordings, and spatial effects, expanding the symphonic palette while maintaining a core of virtuosic orchestral writing. These pieces reflect Bates's dual identity as a classical composer and electronic artist, emphasizing rhythmic vitality and thematic evolution over conventional symphonic forms.One of his breakthrough works, Desert Transport (2010), is a symphonic poem for orchestra that evokes a helicopter journey over the Arizona landscape, beginning in the bustle of an airport and progressing through Sedona's red rock formations to the ancient site of Montezuma Castle. Commissioned by the Arizona Music Festival, it premiered on February 22, 2011, in Scottsdale, Arizona, under conductor Robert Moody. The instrumentation includes three flutes (all doubling piccolo), three oboes (third doubling English horn), three B-flat clarinets (third doubling E-flat clarinet), two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two tenor trombones, bass trombone, tuba, three percussionists, timpani, harp, piano, and strings. A key innovation is the integration of a field recording of Pima Indian chanting, which emerges toward the end to infuse the piece with a spiritual resonance, blending orchestral textures with ethnographic audio to heighten the sense of place.[66][10]Bates's early symphonic output also includes pieces like Liquid Interface (2007), a work for orchestra and electronics that explores fluid, water-inspired motifs through layered electronic pulses and string glissandi, premiered by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in 2008. These formative compositions established his signature style of hybridorchestration, paving the way for larger-scale works.Mothership (2011) represents a pivotal electronic-orchestral hybrid, structured as a single-movement scherzo with trio sections that "dock" improvisatory solos from wind players into the ensemble, evoking a cosmic vessel amid techno-infused rhythms. Commissioned by the YouTube Symphony Orchestra, it premiered on March 20, 2011, at the Sydney Opera House under Michael Tilson Thomas, with additional performances at Carnegie Hall. The score calls for a cappella chorus, three flutes (first doubling piccolo), two oboes and English horn, two B-flat clarinets (both doubling bass clarinet), two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns in F, three C trumpets, two tenor trombones, bass trombone, tuba, three percussionists, timpani, harp, piano/celesta, and strings, plus electronics. Its stylistic hallmark is the seamless interplay between live improvisation and pre-recorded electronica, including club-like beats and synthesized textures that propel the orchestra into high-energy, dance-derived propulsion.[67][15][68]Alternative Energy (2012), a four-movement "energy symphony" for orchestra and electronica, traces humanity's evolving relationship with power sources across time—from a 19th-century Midwestern junkyard to a futuristic Icelandicrainforest—unified by a recurring fiddle motif that distorts and transforms. Premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Riccardo Muti on February 2, 2012, at Symphony Center, it features three flutes (second alto, all piccolo), three oboes (third English horn), three B-flat clarinets (second E-flat), three bassoons (third contrabassoon), four horns, three C trumpets, two tenor trombones, bass trombone, tuba, laptop (for electronics), three percussionists, harp, piano, and strings. Innovations include site-specific recordings, such as Fermilab particle collider sounds in the second movement and hip-hop percussion in the third, which underscore themes of industrial progress and environmental caution through a blend of acoustic and digital timbres.[69][70]Philharmonia Fantastique (2022), a 25-minute multimediaconcerto for orchestra and animated film, guides audiences through the inner workings of the orchestra via a fantastical narrative featuring a sprite character exploring instrument families. Co-created with director Gary Rydstrom and animator Jim Capobianco, it premiered on May 12–14, 2022, with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Edwin Outwater. The score employs vivid orchestral colors and electronic elements to match the animation, earning a Grammy Award for Best Engineered Classical Album in 2023 and reaching over 1,000 performances worldwide as of 2025. Instrumentation includes standard orchestral forces with added percussion for dramatic effects.[35][71][53]Bates's Anthology of Fantastic Zoology (2015), a multimedia symphony in 11 movements, draws from Jorge Luis Borges's imaginary bestiary to conjure mythical creatures like sprites and gryphons in a palindromic, ballet-inspired structure reminiscent of The Carnival of the Animals. Commissioned by and premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Riccardo Muti in June 2015, it marked the end of Bates's tenure as the orchestra's Mead Composer-in-Residence. Instrumentation comprises three flutes (third piccolo), three oboes (third English horn), three B-flat clarinets (second E-flat and bass clarinet), two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns in F, three C trumpets, two tenor trombones, bass trombone, tuba, three percussionists, timpani, harp, piano/celesta, and strings with spatial placement. While primarily acoustic, it innovates through antiphonal effects—such as offstage violins for sirens and a solo flute "hopping" between stands for the sprite—creating a three-dimensional soundscape that enhances the fantastical narrative without electronics.[72][73]Silicon Hymnal (2025), a concerto for the ensemble Time for Three (violin, cello, electric guitar) and orchestra with electronics, explores themes of innovation and Silicon Valley culture through a suite of dances evolving into expansive movements. Premiered on March 28, 2025, with the Brevard Music Center under Steven Reich, it features the soloists' amplified instruments interacting with orchestral and digital layers for rhythmic drive and thematic transformation.[74]
Operatic Works
Mason Bates's operatic output explores themes of innovation, personal transformation, and historical adventure, often blending orchestral traditions with electronic elements to reflect modern narratives. His works demonstrate a commitment to staging stories that resonate with contemporary audiences, drawing on collaborations with acclaimed librettists to craft intimate yet expansive dramatic arcs.[2]Bates's breakthrough opera, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs (2016), with libretto by Mark Campbell, premiered on July 22, 2017, at the Santa Fe Opera under conductor Michael Christie. The opera traces the life of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, focusing on key relationships and epiphanies—from his early influences like Zen meditation and Steve Wozniak to reflections on family and mortality—culminating in a poignant reckoning with his legacy. Bates incorporates subtle electronic textures, such as synthesized beats and ambient sounds, to evoke the technological world Jobs inhabited, while the score's lyrical arias and ensemble scenes highlight emotional depth amid rapid innovation. The production received widespread acclaim for its accessible storytelling and musical vitality, earning the 2019 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording for its live Santa Fe recording on Pentatone.[75][48][76]In The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (2025), Bates collaborates with librettist Gene Scheer to adapt Michael Chabon's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which premiered on September 21, 2025, at the Metropolitan Opera, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin and directed by Bartlett Sher. The opera follows two Jewish cousins, Josef Kavalier and Sammy Clay, who flee Nazi-occupied Prague and create the superhero comic "The Escapist" in 1940s New York, weaving themes of escape, heroism, and anti-fascist resistance against the backdrop of World War II. Bates's score fuses sweeping orchestral passages with electronic flourishes to mimic comic-book dynamism, including rhythmic pulses for action sequences and nostalgic melodies for personal longing, innovating the Met's soundscape by integrating live electronics into the pit. The production achieved the highest opening-night ticket sales in Met history this decade and prompted additional February 2026 performances due to demand.[28][77][38][78][79]These operas exemplify Bates's signature approach, using technology as a narrative and sonic device to bridge historical events with modern sensibilities, fostering collaborations that prioritize character-driven drama over abstraction.[2]
Chamber Works
Mason Bates's chamber compositions emphasize intimate ensembles, often integrating electronic elements to blend acoustic precision with digital textures, creating immersive sonic landscapes suitable for small performance spaces. His works for chamber groups typically feature innovative instrumentation, such as unconventional percussion or amplified strings, to explore themes of nature, technology, and American folklore. These pieces, scored for groups ranging from duos to octet-sized ensembles, highlight Bates's skill in balancing live performers with pre-recorded layers, fostering a sense of expanded spatial depth without overwhelming the performers.[80]Shenandoah (2019), composed for violin and piano, evokes the pastoral serenity of the American Appalachians through lyrical melodies and subtle rhythmic pulses. Commissioned by the Naumburg Foundation and premiered by violinist Grace Park, the work employs extended techniques on the violin, including harmonics and sul ponticello, to mimic the flow of rivers and wind-swept landscapes, lasting approximately six minutes. Its chamber intimacy allows for nuanced interplay between the instruments, emphasizing emotional restraint over virtuosic display.[81][82]In 2013, Bates produced two contrasting chamber pieces: Carbide and Carbon, for eight cellos, and Difficult Bamboo, for Pierrot ensemble (flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano) plus percussion. Carbide and Carbon, premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's MusicNOW ensemble under Cliff Colnot, draws inspiration from the Art Deco skyscraper in Chicago, using the cellos' rich timbres to create interlocking ostinatos that simulate metallic resonances and urban energy; the ensemble's homogeneous texture enables precise control over microtonal glissandi and percussive col legno strikes. Difficult Bamboo, also premiered by MusicNOW, transforms a minimalist opening into a chaotic, jungle-like frenzy, incorporating innovative percussion such as waterphones and bamboo rods to evoke exotic flora, with the electronics subtly underscoring the acoustic frenzy in a duration of about ten minutes. These works exemplify Bates's chamber-specific techniques, where percussion innovation drives textural evolution without dominating the ensemble.[83][80][84]Bagatelles (2012), for string quartet and electronica, comprises four short movements that fuse classical form with club-inspired beats, premiered by the Del Sol String Quartet. The piece innovates through synchronized electronic loops that interact with the quartet's pizzicati and harmonics, creating a "scrapyard exotica" in the second movement via sampled industrial sounds; ensemble size remains traditional at four strings, but the added layer expands the perceived space, totaling around ten minutes. Similarly, Stereo is King (2011), for percussion trio and electronica, celebrates auditory binaural effects, with performers on marimba, vibraphone, and drums navigating polyrhythms against tape delays; premiered by Eighth Blackbird, it highlights Bates's percussion focus, using unconventional implements like brake drums for metallic accents in a twelve-minute arc.[85][86][87]Earlier works like The Life of Birds (2008), for flute, clarinet, violin, and cello, portray avian behaviors through fluttering motifs and imitative counterpoint, premiered by the Seattle Chamber Players; the quartet's transparency allows for birdcall simulations via multiphonics and rapid articulations, spanning fifteen minutes without electronics for a purely acoustic intimacy. White Lies for Lomax (2007), arranged for chamber octet by Eighth Blackbird, reimagines folk blues fragments in a percussive, rhythmic framework, incorporating toy piano and prepared strings for a gritty, intimate texture; its premiere context at the Tanglewood Music Center emphasized ensemble coordination in evoking Alan Lomax's field recordings. Red River (2007), for clarinet, violin, cello, piano, and electronics, maps the Colorado River's course across five movements, with the quintet-plus-tape setup using spatialized audio to suggest geographic vastness in a small venue; premiered by the Adorno Ensemble, it features piano-prepared innovations like muted strings to mimic riverbed gravel.[86][88]Bates's chamber oeuvre extends to Digital Loom (2005), for organ and electronics, where the solo organ weaves contrapuntal lines against digital glitches, premiered by Isabelle Demers; the "ensemble" of live and pre-recorded elements innovates pedal techniques for bass ostinatos, lasting over ten minutes and blurring soloist with accompaniment. Concluding this period, From Amber Frozen (2004), for string quartet, captures prehistoric insects in resin through slow, crystalline harmonies and microtonal shifts, premiered by the Biava Quartet; its four strings employ sul tasto and col legno battuto for fossil-like textures, in a concise three-minute form that prioritizes stillness and resonance.[89][90]
Vocal Works
Mason Bates's non-operatic vocal compositions encompass choral works and song cycles that often integrate electronic elements, drawing on diverse texts to explore themes of creation, conflict, and human experience. His choral output frequently sets American poetry, sacred scriptures, and mythological narratives, emphasizing vocal textures that range from intimate a cappella ensembles to expansive forces with orchestra or organ. These pieces reflect Bates's signature fusion of traditional vocal writing with contemporary sound design, creating immersive sonic landscapes.[91]Children of Adam (2018), commissioned by the Richmond Symphony for its 60th anniversary, is a set of songs for chorus and orchestra celebrating creation through a mosaic of texts including Walt Whitman's poetry from his Children of Adam cycle, Hebrew Psalms, and Native American invocations such as an Algonquian prayer. The work unfolds in five movements, beginning with Whitman's exuberant "From Pent-Up Aching Rivers," which evokes sensuality and vitality in SATB choral writing that builds to orchestral climaxes. Interspersed choral fanfares frame perspectives on genesis, from biblical renewal to indigenous reverence, underscoring themes of American identity and the natural world. Premiered by the Richmond Symphony Chorus and Orchestra under Steven Smith, it highlights Bates's ability to blend Whitmanian optimism with rhythmic vitality and electronic undertones in the orchestral fabric.[92][93][94]Drum-Taps (2017), a choral setting for unaccompanied mixed voices commissioned by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and premiered by Chanticleer, draws on Walt Whitman's poetry from his Civil War-era collection of the same name to meditate on sacrifice and resilience. The piece sets two poems—"First O Songs for a Prelude" and "Come Up from the Fields Father"—in a 12-part texture that contrasts martial rhythms with elegiacintrospection, capturing the raw emotion of Americanconflict and loss. Through layered polyphony and dynamic shifts, Bates evokes Whitman's exploration of national trauma, performed in vocal ranges spanning soprano to bass for dramatic narrative flow.[95][96][97]Passage (2017), composed for mezzo-soprano soloist, orchestra, and electronica to commemorate the centennial of John F. Kennedy's inauguration, sets Whitman's "The Last Invocation" in a poignant reflection on legacy and transcendence. The work's vocal line, demanding a wide tessitura from the mezzo's lower register to soaring highs, intertwines with orchestral swells and subtle electronic pulses to evoke American idealism amid historical passage. Premiered by the National Symphony Orchestra with Sasha Cooke and Joshua Weilerstein, it briefly nods to operatic expressivity in its lyrical phrasing while focusing on solo vocal introspection.[98][99][100]Earlier works like Mass Transmission (2012) for chorus, organ, and electronica expand Bates's choral palette with biblical texts from Psalm 19 and the Magnificat framing wordless inner movements that simulate cosmic signals through radio static and virtuosic organ interludes. Scored for SATB chorus in up to 12 parts, it explores themes of divine communication across vast distances, with the organ's toccata-like flourishes demanding pedal and manual ranges for dramatic effect. Recorded by Cappella SF under Ragnar Bohlin, the piece premiered Bates's innovative use of electronics to process ethereal vocal harmonies.[91][101][102]Observer in a Magellanic Cloud (2009), an a cappella choral work for 12-part men's voices commissioned and premiered by Chanticleer, evokes a telescope's gaze on the distant galaxy through wordless Maori-inspired chants and imitative vocal effects. The SATB-divisi texture, ranging from deep basses to high tenors, simulates cosmic observation and indigenous ritual, tying into broader explorations of human connection to the universe. Its brief, atmospheric structure highlights Bates's early interest in vocal mimicry of natural and extraterrestrial phenomena.[103][104][105]Sirens (2009), a cycle for 12-part a cappella chorus, draws on global myths of seduction across six movements, including Homer's Odyssey (Book XII), the German "Die Lorelei," and biblical passages from Matthew, to probe allure and peril through varied vocal colors. Texts in multiple languages are set in polyphonic webs that span soprano to bass ranges, creating beguiling yet dissonant harmonies without electronics. Premiered by Chanticleer and later recorded by Cappella SF, the work's thematic depth underscores Bates's fascination with narrative voices in choral form.[106][107][102]Stable of Grace (2025), for chorus, organ, and chamber orchestra, premiered on November 14, 2025, at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco as part of Christmas concerts. The work draws on themes of nativity and grace, blending choral textures with organ and orchestral support for a reflective, immersive experience.[108]
Film Scores
Mason Bates entered the realm of film scoring with his debut contribution to Gus Van Sant's 2015 drama The Sea of Trees, starring Matthew McConaughey and Naomi Watts.[109] The score, recorded at Skywalker Sound, employs a full symphonic orchestra to evoke the film's themes of loss and redemption set in Japan's Aokigahara forest.[109] Bates incorporates exotic instrumentation, such as shakuhachi flute and alto flute paired with percussion, to create atmospheric motifs that mirror the narrative's introspective journey, including cues like "Forest Walk" that underscore moments of ethereal tension.[110]In addition to feature films, Bates has composed for immersive media projects, notably the animated film Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra (2022), co-created with writer-director Gary Rydstrom and animator Jim Capobianco.[35] This 25-minute work functions as a concerto for orchestra synchronized with animation, guiding viewers—via a magical Sprite character—through the inner workings of orchestral sections, from vibrating violin strings to resounding percussion.[35] The score highlights Bates' programmatic approach, using distinct thematic motifs for each instrument family to blend educational narrative with dynamic orchestral color, and has been performed hundreds of times worldwide, including by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.[71][37]Bates' scoring techniques emphasize precise synchronization between music and visuals to enhance storytelling, as seen in Philharmonia Fantastique, where a click track ensures alignment during live performances with the film.[111] His thematic motifs often draw from narrative context, developing recurring ideas that evolve with on-screen action, reflecting influences from his background as a DJ and electronic composer.
Discography
Orchestral Recordings
Mason Bates' orchestral recordings highlight his symphonic works performed by premier ensembles, often integrating electronic elements with traditional orchestration.The album The American Masters, released on September 30, 2014, by Entertainment One Music, features the world premiere recording of Bates' Violin Concerto (2012), alongside works by Samuel Barber and John Corigliano.[112] Violinist Anne Akiko Meyers performs the concerto with the London Symphony Orchestra under conductor Leonard Slatkin; the recording captures the work's acoustic lyricism and structural elegance in a studio setting, earning praise for its clarity and emotional depth.[113]In the same year, CSO Resound issued Riccardo Muti Conducts Mason Bates and Anna Clyne – Alternative Energy as a digital-only release, documenting the 2012 live premiere of Bates' Alternative Energy (2011) for orchestra and electronica.[114] The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, led by Riccardo Muti, delivers a dynamic performance that emphasizes the piece's four movements inspired by energy sources; critics noted the live recording's vivid energy and precise integration of electronic layers, though some observed minor balance issues in the electronica amid the orchestral forces.[115]Works for Orchestra, released on March 11, 2016, by the San Francisco Symphony's SFS Media label, compiles three of Bates' large-scale symphonic pieces: The B-Sides (2012), Alternative Energy, and Liquid Interface (2010).[116]Michael Tilson Thomas conducts the San Francisco Symphony in these live recordings from January 2014 performances at Davies Symphony Hall, showcasing the composer's blend of acoustic and electronic timbres; the album received a Grammy nomination for Best Orchestral Performance and was lauded for its high-fidelity sound quality, which highlights the orchestra's precision and the innovative electronic textures.[117]Closing Bates' tenure as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's Mead Composer-in-Residence, Anthology of Fantastic Zoology appeared on June 10, 2016, via CSO Resound, presenting the 11-movement work (2015) inspired by Jorge Luis Borges' imaginary creatures.[118]Riccardo Muti directs the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in this live recording from June 2015 subscription concerts at Orchestra Hall, capturing the piece's whimsical and evocative narrative; reviewers commended the recording's immersive sonic detail and the ensemble's rhythmic vitality, making it a standout for its atmospheric depth.[73]Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra, released on April 22, 2022, by Sony Classical, features the multimedia symphony Philharmonia Fantastique (2012) for orchestra and animated film, performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Edwin Outwater.[53] The recording, which accompanies a 25-minute animated film following a sprite through the orchestra's instruments, won the 2023 Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Classical, and has been praised for its immersive blend of orchestral and electronic elements.[54]
Chamber and Electronic Recordings
Mason Bates's chamber and electronic recordings highlight his innovative fusion of classical instrumentation with electronic elements, often drawing from his parallel career as a DJ under the alias Masonic. These albums showcase intimate ensemble performances enhanced by digital production techniques, including sampling, wave manipulation, and techno rhythms, distinguishing them from his larger-scale orchestral works.[86][119][120]Digital Loom, released in 2009 by MSR Classics, exemplifies Bates's early explorations in blending organ with electronics. Performed by organist Isabelle Demers alongside the Antares Chamber Ensemble, Biava Quartet, and vocal group Chanticleer, the album features the title track—a five-movement work for organ and electronics that incorporates drum-machine beats, sampling, and atmospheric sound design to evoke spatial depth reminiscent of club music. Additional pieces like Red River, a five-movement suite for mixed chamber ensemble (clarinet, violin, cello, piano) and electronics, draw on American landscapes with interludes of manipulated waves and techno-infused rhythms. Interludes such as Siren Music and Amber further integrate vocal and string elements with digital effects, creating a narrative arc that merges ecclesiastical traditions with contemporary electronica.[119][121]In 2014, Innova Recordings issued Stereo is King, a collection that expands Bates's electronic palette through diverse chamber groupings. The title track, a 12-minute percussion piece performed by Cynthia Yeh, Jacob Nissly, and Eric Banks with custom electronics, layers a multitude of sonic textures—ranging from gongs and vibes to synthesized motifs—to argue for the democratic potential of stereo sound. Other highlights include Observer in the Magellanic Cloud for unaccompanied chorus, sung by Chanticleer, which employs subtle electronic processing to simulate cosmic distances; Difficult Bamboo for piano trio, interpreted by the Claremont Trio with integrated digital loops; and String Band for string quartet and electronics, featuring the Grand Valley State University New Music Ensemble. The album's production repurposes historical musical motifs via modern technology, emphasizing Bates's DJ-influenced approach to sound layering.[86][122]Scrapyard Exotica, released in 2015 on Sono Luminus, captures Bates's collaborative process with the Del Sol String Quartet in crafting Bagatelles for String Quartet and Electronica. This four-movement work, born from studio improvisations where the quartet's recordings were morphed by Bates's electronic treatments, includes the energetic Scrapyard Exotica (movement II), which juxtaposes gritty industrial samples with lyrical string lines to evoke urban scrapyards. Rough Math (I) opens with pulsating rhythms and harmonic complexity; On a Wire: Mating Dance (III) features agile, dance-like motifs enhanced by subtle digital effects; and Viscera (IV) delves into visceral, textural depths through amplified strings and synthesized undertones. The album's chamber focus underscores Bates's ability to transform live acoustic performances into hybrid electronic landscapes.[120][123]Mass Transmission, released on April 19, 2019, by Pentatone, features choral works by Bates including the title piece for chorus, organ, and electronica, performed by Cappella SF under Ragnar Bohlin with organist Isabelle Demers.[124] The album explores themes of long-distance communication through 1920s radio transmissions, blending choral textures with electronic effects; it has been acclaimed for its innovative fusion and emotional depth.[125]Horn Discoveries, re-released on February 5, 2021, by Alpha Classics (originally 2014), includes Bates' Mainframe Tropics for horn and electronics, performed by Sarah Willis with ensemble.[126] The work layers electronic beats with horn lines to evoke digital landscapes, highlighting Bates' electro-acoustic style in a chamber setting.[127]Hearsay, released on September 1, 2023, by Swineshead Productions, features Bates' Rags and Hymns of the River City for chamber ensemble, performed by the Atlantic Chamber Ensemble.[128] The suite draws on American urban themes with rhythmic vitality and layered textures, praised for its playful energy.[129]
Operatic Recordings
The principal operatic recording of Mason Bates is the 2018 Pentatone release of his opera The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, captured live during its world premiere run at the Santa Fe Opera in July 2017.[130][48] Conducted by Michael Christie with the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra, the two-disc set (PTC 5186 690) features a principal cast including Edwards Parks in the title role of Steve Jobs, Garrett Sorenson as Steve Wozniak, Sasha Cooke as Laurene Powell Jobs, Jessica E. Jones as Chrisann Brennan, and Wei Wu as Kōbun Chino Otogawa, alongside supporting singers such as Corrie Stallings, Tyler Zimmerman, and members of the Santa Fe Opera Apprentice Program for Children.[130][131] The production integrates Bates' signature electro-acoustic elements, with electronic processing handled by the composer himself during performances, and the recording preserves the opera's non-linear structure and kinetic energy in high-resolution surround sound.[130] Released on June 25, 2018, it is commercially available in SACD, CD, and digital formats through retailers like Amazon and streaming platforms including Spotify.[130][132]This recording earned the 2019 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording, honoring conductor Michael Christie, producer Elizabeth Ostrow, and the principal soloists, marking Bates' first Grammy win and highlighting the opera's innovative blend of classical orchestration and contemporary electronics.[48][50] As of November 2025, no commercial audio recordings exist for Bates' other operas, including the recently premiered The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay at the Metropolitan Opera (world premiere September 21, 2025), though a live video capture of the latter is scheduled for cinema broadcast in January 2026.[133][134][135]
Vocal Recordings
Alburnum, released on September 9, 2022, by Bright Shiny Things, features Bates' song cycles including Songs from the Plays (2001) and As Long As We Live (2010), performed by baritone Brian Mulligan with pianist Timothy Long.[136] The album sets poetry by Kenneth Koch and others, blending lyrical vocal lines with subtle accompaniments, and includes world premiere recordings of select songs.[137]Ways You Went, released on September 20, 2024, by Navona Records, includes Bates' choral works performed by The Crossing with PRISM Quartet and organist Scott Dettra.[138] The album pairs Bates' pieces with those of Martin Bresnick, emphasizing innovative choral textures and has been noted for its uplifting and vibrant sound.[139]