
| Heritage! American Composer Series Concert XIII | |
| Program | |
| Fanfare for Fred, S. F4F | P.D.Q. Bach |
| March of the Cute Little Wood Sprites, S. Onesy Twosy | P.D.Q. Bach |
| Little Suite for Summer | Peter Schickele |
| The Tribe of Ahasuerus | Peter Schickele |
| Metropolitan Wind Seranade | Peter Schickele |
| Six Contrary Dances | P.D.Q. Bach |
| Dutch Suite, S. - 16 Featuring: Staff Sargeant Alex Serwatowski, Tuba Airman First-Class Alexander Plotkin, Bassoon |
P.D.Q. Bach |
| Grand Seranada for an Awful Lot of Winds and Percussion, S. 1000 | P.D.Q. Bach |

His commissions are numerous and varied, ranging from works for the National Symphony, the Saint Louis Symphony, The Minnesota Opera, The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, The Audubon and Lark String Quartets, the Minnesota Orchestral Association, and many other such organizations to compositions for distinguished instrumentalists and singers. His recent premieres include:
Among the recordings recently released are:
Peter Schickele arranged one of the musical segments for the Disney animated feature film, Fantasia 2000. He also created the musical score for the film version of Maurice Sendak's children's classic Where the Wild Things Are, issued on videocassette along with another Sendak classic In the Night Kitchen (Weston Woods), which Mr. Schickele narrates.
Among his ongoing projects is a weekly, syndicated radio program, Schickele Mix, which has been heard nationwide over Public Radio International since January 1992 and which won ASCAP's prestigious Deems Taylor Award.
In 1993 Telarc released a recording of Prokofiev's Sneaky Pete (a.k.a. Peter) and the Wolf and Saint-Saëns' Carnival of the Animals with new texts authored and narrated by Peter Schickele, accompanied by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra under Yoel Levi. Mr. Schickele gave the New York premiere of Sneaky Pete and the Wolf at Carnegie Hall as part of the 1993 Toyota Comedy Festival and has performed the Saint-Saëns work with major American orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic at its gala New Year's Eve concert in 1991. He also continues to tour with a program of original cabaret songs, which he sings from the piano with the harmonizing assistance of David Düsing. Another program, Condition of My Heart, presents reflections on a long marriage in a continuous montage of poems by Susan Sindall and songs by Peter Schickele. As a lecturer, he has appeared in cities coast to coast; the Smithsonian Institution presented him in a series of four integrated lectures in 1997. Peter Schickele toured with his close acquaintance Prof Schickele in two new programs, Peter Schickele Meets P.D.Q. Bach and P.D.Q. Bach and Peter Schickele: The Jekyll and Hyde Tour.
Peter Schickele was born on July 17, 1935, in Ames, Iowa, and brought up in Washington, D.C. and Fargo, North Dakota. He graduated from Swarthmore in 1957, having had the distinction of being the only music major (as he had been, earlier, the only bassoonist in Fargo), and by that time he had already composed and conducted four orchestral works, a great deal of chamber music and some songs. He studied composition with Roy Harris and Darius Milhaud, and at The Juilliard School of Music with Vincent Persichetti and William Bergsma. Then, under a Ford Foundation grant, he composed music for high schools in Los Angeles before returning to teach at Juilliard in 1961. In 1965 he gave up teaching to become the freelance composer/performer he has been ever since.
In the course of his career Schickele has also created music for four feature films, among them the prize-winning Silent Running, as well as for documentaries, television commercials, several Sesame Street segments and an underground movie that he has never seen in its finished state. He was also one of the composer/lyricists for Oh! Calcutta!, and has arranged for Joan Baez, Buffy Sainte-Marie and other folk singers.
| Heritage! Featured Composers | |
| 1993 - Morton Gould | 1994 - Dr. Ron Nelson |
| 1995 - Robert Jager | 1996 - Dr. Francis McBeth |
| 1997 - Roger Nixon | 1998 - David Holsinger |
| 1999 - Alfred Reed | 2000 - James Barnes |
| 2001 - James Curnow | 2002 - Robert W. Smith |
| 2003 - Dr. Frank Ticheli | 2004 - Norman Dello Joio |
| 2005 - Peter Schickele | 2006 - John Williams |