Pulitzer Prize and three-time Grammy winner Jennifer Higdon (born in Brooklyn, New York, on December 31, 1962) taught herself to play flute at the age of fifteen and began formal musical studies at eighteen, with an even later start in composition at the age of twenty-one. Despite these obstacles, Jennifer has become a major figure in contemporary classical music. Her works represent a wide range of genres, from orchestral to chamber, to wind ensemble, as well as vocal, choral and opera. Her music has been hailed by Fanfare Magazine as having “the distinction of being at once complex, sophisticated but readily accessible emotionally,” with the Times of London citing it as “…traditionally rooted, yet imbued with integrity and freshness.” The League of American Orchestras reports that she is one of America's most frequently performed composers.