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==Biography== Burge was born in [[Evanston, Illinois]]. He studied at [[Northwestern University]] for his bachelor's and master's degrees. Later he attained the Doctor of Musical Arts degree and an artist's diploma from the [[Eastman School of Music]], and he studied at the [[Cherubini Conservatory]], [[Florence]] as a [[Fulbright]] scholar. While on the faculty at the University of Colorado in Boulder during the 1960s and 1970s, Burge founded and directed the Colorado Festival of Contemporary Music, and he was also Musical Director and Conductor of the [[Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra]].{{citation needed|date=February 2020}} During that period, [[George Crumb]] collaborated with Burge while writing ''[[Makrokosmos]]'', a series of four volumes of pieces for piano. ''Makrokosmos, Volume I'' was composed in 1972 for Burge, who had previously commissioned and premiered Crumb's Five Pieces for Piano (1962). The Nonesuch recording of ''Makrokosmos, Vol. I'' was nominated for a [[Grammy]]. Burge also worked with composers such as [[Ernst Krenek]], [[Luciano Berio]], and [[Karlheinz Stockhausen]], and singers including [[Cathy Berberian]] and [[Bethany Beardslee]].<ref name="Contemporary Music Review">[http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/routledg/gcmr/2002/00000021/00000001/art00004?crawler=true Contemporary Music Review abstract]</ref> After leaving the University of Colorado, he chaired the Piano Department at the Eastman School of Music for many years. Over his career, he gave more than 1,000 concerts in the United States, Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, composed more than 100 works, authored the book ''Twentieth-Century Piano Music'' (Shirmer Books, 1990), wrote prize-winning columns for ''Keyboard Magazine'', ''Clavier'' and ''The Piano Quarterly.'' In 1993, Burge moved to San Diego with his wife, Liliane Choney, and served as composer-in-residence for the San Diego Ballet. His ballet scores became increasingly well known outside the San Diego area, with over thirty performances in the United States and abroad.<ref name="SD Ballet">[http://sdballet.tripod.com/artists/burge-bio.htm San Diego Ballet]</ref> In early 2002, Burge and Crumb were appointed to a joint residency at [[Arizona State University]]. He accepted visiting professorships not only at many universities and conservatories in the United States but also in Denmark, Turkey, New Zealand, Canada, Australia, Sweden, and Korea. Burge died from a heart attack on April 1, 2013 in [[Warwick, Rhode Island]].<ref name=obit>[https://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/arts/music/david-burge-pianist-is-dead-at-83.html?_r=1& David Burge, Pianist, Is Dead at 83], The New York Times, April 14, 2013</ref>
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