Craig Hultgren is an American cellist and improvisor. Hultgren graduated from the
University of Iowa and at
Indiana University. He has taught at
Birmingham-Southern College, the
University of Alabama Birmingham and the
Alabama School of Fine Arts, as well as teaching privately.[1] Craig Hultgren is a cellist with the Alabama Symphony Orchestra[2] and has been a member of several chamber groups such as the Chagall Trio, the Luna Nova Ensemble,[3] and the Ensemble for contemporary chamber music Thamyris.[4] He is an active performer and performs regularly as a soloist on the cello and e-cello.[5][6][7][8][9] Hultgren also made a name for himself among improvisational musicians.[10][11]
"Hultgren, who is no stranger to avant grade music, considers himself an activist for new music"[12]
For more than 10 years, Craig Hultgren also organizes his Solo Cello Works Biennial presenting new works from composers around the world.[13][14][15][16] presenting the new works for the cello. "Craig Hultgren has become a magnet for composers seeking first hearings of their cello works."[17] For him, more than 100 works were composed by contemporary composers, including works for the electric cello and multi-media works by
Tiffany Benton, Kari Besharse,
Noah Creshevsky,
J. Nickitas Demos,[18]Brian Moon,
Veselin Nikolov, Philip Schuessler,
Robert Scott Thompson, and
Robert Voisey
In 2004, the Birmingham Sidewalk Film Festival 48-Hour Short Film Rush cited him for the best soundtrack creation for the film The Silent Treatment.
In 2013, Craig Hultgren participated in
Vox Novus's Fifteen Minutes of Fame founded by
Robert Voisey[20] "Few performers could, or would, take up such a gauntlet, and he came through admirably"[21] The Fifteen Minutes of Fame set of 15 composers was subtitled Occupy Cello -- Upsetting the Musical Status Quo and cellist Craig Hultgren's performance in Alabama was praised for his "herculean effort to shift styles and sensibilities at a moment's notice"
Hultgren performed at
Carnegie Hall for
Dorothy Hindman's Retrospective, "played with impressive poise and sensitivity by cellist Craig Hultgren, ... using bystander video from Gray’s arrest for both spoken words and pitch sources. Rough Ride is more abstract and more powerful, the cello line shining and abrading, like fiberglass threads, the fragmented text outlining a sense of tragedy."[22]