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Amos Elkana

Amos Elkana (Hebrew: עמוס אלקנה; born 1967) is a composer, guitarist, and electronic musician. His works span chamber, orchestral, electroacoustic, and multimedia forms, often integrating algorithmic and fractal processes with narrative and philosophical elements.

Biography

Elkana studied composition at the New England Conservatory in Boston and Jazz guitar at the Berklee College of Music. He pursued graduate studies in computer music at Bard College, where he worked with Pauline Oliveros, George Lewis, and Larry Polansky.

His music has been performed by ensembles and orchestras worldwide, including Ensemble Meitar, the Israel Contemporary Players, Ensemble Reconsil (Vienna), UMZE (Budapest), the Tel Aviv Soloists, and the Israel Symphony Orchestra Rishon LeZion. His chamber and electronic works have been featured at international festivals such as the Venice Biennale, ISCM World Music Days, the Cervantino Festival (Mexico), and the MISE-EN Festival (New York).

In 2025, Elkana released Que sais-je? on New Focus Recordings, performed by Ensemble Meitar under Pierre-André Valade. The album was included on the 2026 First Round GRAMMY® Ballot. His next album, Gefunden, is scheduled for release in October 2025 on NEOS.

Style and aesthetic

Elkana’s compositional language merges classical, electronic, and improvisatory idioms, frequently employing mathematical and fractal models to generate structural symmetry between micro and macro levels. His works often explore philosophical and intercultural questions, drawing from literature, mysticism, and science.

In a 2022 interview with Haaretz, critic Hagai Hitron described Elkana’s music as “light and accessible despite its origin in complex mathematical processes,” noting that his use of fractals yields “music whose micro and macro structures mirror each other.”

Selected works

(Chronologically arranged, emphasizing performance frequency and international exposure)

Albums

Reception

Elkana’s music has been the subject of extensive critical discussion in Israel and abroad.

Critic Hagai Hitron of Haaretz described his quintet Tripp as “an attraction at the Israel Music Festival—light and accessible despite its origin in complex mathematical processes.”

Composer and critic Oded Zehavi wrote that Elkana’s Piano Concerto (“…with purity and light…”) as “one of the best I’ve heard… smart, complex and very communicative,” adding that it balances “deep thought with emotional clarity.”

Michael Ajzenstadt of the Jerusalem Post called Elkana’s Arabic Lessons “one of the most significant works composed in Israel for quite a while,” describing it as “a new musical language… a lieder for the 21st century.”

Noam Ben-Zeev of Haaretz characterized Casino Umbro as “pure and magnificent noise… a celebration of freedom that turns its back on convention,” noting its refusal to reference local idioms and its “conquering directness.”

Frank J. Oteri (NewMusicBox) noted that “Elkana’s compositional aesthetics are a clear by-product of his internationalism,” describing his style as “stylistically pluralistic, texturally clear, and globally resonant.”

The ACUM Golden Feather Award jury commended Elkana in 2003 for “his innovative fusion of acoustic and electronic media,” and later Israeli prize committees praised his “personal stamp, focused and expressive,” and “refined yet sophisticated counterpoint.”

Awards

  • ACUM Golden Feather Award for Outstanding Achievement in Composition (2003)
  • Prime Minister’s Prize for Music Composition (2011)
  • Rosenblum Prize for Performing Arts (2012)

External links

References