Aleksandra Vrebalov, the 2024 Grawemeyer Award winner in Music Composition, spoke at the School of Music on April 11.
Aleksandra Vrebalov, the 2024 Grawemeyer Award winner in Music Composition, spoke at the School of Music on April 11, 2024. UofL photo.

For Aleksandra Vrebalov, visiting Louisville to give a public talk on 鈥淢issa Supratext,鈥 her nontraditional choral work, was more than your typical lecture.

It was an opportunity for her to put her work in context for herself in a way she had never done before, Vrebalov, 53, told the audience at the University of Louisville on April 11.

Vrebalov, a Serbian-American composer who now resides in New York City, was awarded the 2024 for 鈥溾.鈥

The Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition, which was the first of the five , typically receives 150 to 200 entries each year from around the world.

The work鈥檚 Latin title translates to 鈥淢ass Above Words鈥 in English. The nontraditional work, which is performed by string quartets and girls鈥 chorus, features just two words in English.

鈥淲ords are not essential,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I will say again – words are not essential for us to understand, and have insight into the abstract concepts of creativity, truth, beauty and love. These concepts represent the mental aspects of human existence and transcend language.鈥

Kronos Quartet, a group long known for nurturing musical innovation, and San Francisco Girls鈥 Chorus, a Bay Area group for young women from diverse backgrounds, premiered the work in 2018 in San Francisco.

Following her presentation, the audience had the opportunity to fully take in 鈥淢issa Supratext鈥 by listening to the 22-minute work, which includes handbells, Tibetan bowls and musical saw.

Vrebalov said through her music, she hopes to bring people together.

鈥淚t’s about my own yearning for a world that’s filled with love and a world in which we can experience connection and belonging,鈥 she said.

聽That鈥檚 why 鈥淢issa Supratext鈥 deliberately has no recognizable language, she said.

鈥淲e have reached a point of realizing individual freedoms as never before in history, and at the same time, our communities are fragmenting into increasingly separate worlds that often exclude each other,鈥 Vrebalov said.

Her idea 鈥 to create a work that forces people to confront human existence 鈥 inspired her to 鈥渂ypass traditional language elements and focus on a nonverbal dramatic narrative.鈥

鈥淲ords move us, but music can move us in ways that are not always easy to explain because it doesn鈥檛 require language,鈥 Vrebalov said.

The $100,000 Grawemeyer prizes also honor seminal ideas in ,听,听听补苍诲听. Winners visit Louisville to accept their awards and give free talks on their winning ideas.

.听