About
Daniel Ernest Forrest Jr. (born January 7, 1978) is a composer, pianist, educator, and music editor.
Dan Forrest was born in Elmira, New York. He displayed an early interest in and aptitude for music and began piano lessons with his elementary school music teacher at the age of eight. In high school he won numerous piano awards, accompanied honors choirs, and performed the Grieg Piano Concerto with the Elmira Symphony. He majored in piano at Bob Jones University, earning a B.Mus. and an M.Mus. in Piano Performance, while also studying advanced theory and composition with Joan Pinkston and Dwight Gustafson. After teaching piano for three years in South Carolina, he moved to Kansas where he earned a D.M.A. in composition from the University of Kansas, where he studied with wind band composer James Barnes. Forrest also studied with Alice Parker and counts her as one of his foremost influences. Forrest's compositions include choral, instrumental, orchestral, and wind band works. His music appears in the catalogs of numerous publishers, primarily Beckenhorst Press (church music) and Hinshaw Music (concert music). In 2018, he began self-publishing his concert music through his own business, The Music of Dan Forrest, which is distributed by Beckenhorst Press. His published works have sold millions of copies worldwide.
Forrest's choral works have received the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer’s Award, the ACDA Raymond Brock Award, a Meet The Composer grant, the University of Kansas Cius Award, the ALCM Raabe Prize, and several other awards and distinctions. Forrest's music is performed regularly in leading venues around the world including Carnegie Hall, the Lincoln Center, and on NPR’s Performance Today. A review in The Salt Lake Tribune referred to Forrest's "superb choral writing" and gave as an example his arrangement of "The First Noel," which it said was "full of spine-tingling moments."He is one of a small number of composers whose works have been included in both Teaching Music Through Performance in Choir and Teaching Music Through Performance In Band. Forrest's Requiem for the Living (2013) is perhaps his best known work, having received several hundred performances worldwide; his other major works, Jubilate Deo (2016) and LUX: The Dawn From On High (2018) are also becoming just as widely performed.
Forrest taught music theory and composition at The University of Kansas as a graduate assistant from 2004 to 2007, and at Bob Jones University from 2007 to 2012, where he served as chairman of the department of music theory and composition. He now serves as co-editor at Beckenhorst Press, regularly teaches composition lessons and masterclasses, and speaks about composing, music-making, aesthetics, music publishing, and the music business in guest-artist residencies with universities and choirs in the US and abroad. He also serves as Artist-in-Residence at Mitchell Road Presbyterian Church (PCA), Greenville, SC.