Theo Loevendie was born on September 17th, 1930 in Amsterdam.

Musical education and background
He studied composition and clarinet at the Amsterdam Conservatory. Up to 1968 he dedicated himself almost exclusively
to jazz and he performed with his own ensemble at the main European jazz festivals: Montreux, Juan-les-Pins, Nîmes,
Warsaw, Molde (Norway) and Laren (Holland). For one of his jazz records he received an Edison in 1969. He was awarded
the 1979 Wessel Ilcken Prize for all his jazz activities through the years.

Activities
From 1970 to 1988 Loevendie has been a professor of composition at the Rotterdam Conservatory of Music, from 1988 to
1997 at the Royal Conservatory of Music in The Hague and since 1995 at the Sweelinck Conservatory of Music in Amsterdam. He was central composer at many festivals and he has given master classes all over the world.

Compositions
As of 1968 Loevendie began to focus on the composing of concert music. His compositions are frequently performed both
at regular concerts and at festivals all over the world. Loevendie has composed four operas: Naima (1985), which was
premiered at the 1985 Holland Festival in Amsterdam, the chamber opera Gassir, the Hero (1990), premiered May 1991
in Boston (U.S.A.), Esmée, which was first performed in Amsterdam at the Holland Festival 1995 and in Berlin (1995)
and had a staging again in 1997 at Bielefeld, Germany, and the chamber opera Johnny & Jones, performed at the Holland Festival 2001 and in 2003 in Dresden.
Among his orchestral compositions are a Piano concerto (1996), a Violin concerto (1998), a Clarinet Concerto (2001) and Seyir (2002) for 25 western and non-western instruments (premiered in the Berliner Festspiele 2002). In 2003 Loevendie founded the ensemble Ziggurat, a combination of western and non-western instruments. Since then he wrote many compositions for this ensemble.

Prizes
The recording of De Nachtegaal (The Nightingale) was awarded an Edison in 1982; a year later followed the prize of the
RAI (Italian Television and Radio) for the television production of this work, which since then has been performed in many languages all over the world. In 1984 Loevendie shared with Pierre Boulez the American Koussevitzky International
Record Award; he received the prize for Flexio (1979), written on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the Concertgebouw Orchestra. The opera Naima (1985) was awarded with the Matthijs Vermeulen Prize 1986 of the City of Amsterdam.
In 1988 Loevendie was the first composer to receive the prestigious 3M Music Award for his entire output and his great
merits in musical life.