George Crumb

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Crumb attends a performance at Alice Tully Hall in honor of his 90th birthday

George Henry Crumb[1][2] or George Henry Jr. Crumb[3] (born October 24, 1929) is an American composer of modern classical and avant-garde music.[4] He is known as an explorer of unusual timbres, alternative forms of notation, and extended instrumental and vocal techniques, which obtain vivid sonorities.[1] Examples include seagull effect for the cello (e.g. Vox Balaenae), metallic vibrato for the piano (e.g. Five Pieces for Piano), and using a mallet to play the strings of a double bass (e.g. Madrigals, Book I), among numerous others. Crumb's most renowned works include Ancient Voices of Children (1970), Black Angels (1971), and Makrokosmos III (1974).

Biography[]

Crumb was born in Charleston, West Virginia, and began to compose at an early age. In 1947 he studied at the National Music Camp in Interlochen, Michigan. He majored in music at the Mason College of Music and Fine Arts (subsequently subsumed into the University of Charleston), where he received his bachelor's degree in 1950. He obtained his M.Mus. at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1952 and then briefly studied as a Fulbright fellow at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin before returning to the United States to study at the University of Michigan, from which he received a D.M.A. in 1959.

Crumb has earned his living primarily from teaching. His first teaching job was at a college in Virginia, before he became professor of piano and composition at the University of Colorado in 1958. In 1965 he began a long association with the University of Pennsylvania, becoming Annenberg Professor of the Humanities in 1983.[5]

In 1995, Crumb was awarded the Edward MacDowell Medal.[6]

Crumb retired from teaching in 1997, though in early 2002 he was appointed with David Burge to a joint residency at Arizona State University.[7] He has continued to compose.

Crumb has been the recipient of a number of awards, including a 1968 Pulitzer Prize for Music for his orchestral work Echoes of Time and the River and a 2000 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Composition for his work Star-Child.[8]

Crumb's son, David Crumb, is a successful composer and, since 1997, assistant professor at the University of Oregon. George Crumb's daughter, Ann Crumb, was a successful actress and singer. She recorded his Three Early Songs for the CD George Crumb 70th Birthday Album (1999), and had also performed his Unto the Hills (2001). She died at her parents' home on October 31, 2019.[9]

Music[]

The first page of the score for Star-Child

After initially being influenced by Anton Webern, Crumb became interested in exploring unusual timbres. He often asks for instruments to be played in unusual ways and several of his pieces, although written for standard chamber music ensembles, such as Black Angels (string quartet) or Ancient Voices of Children (mixed ensemble), call for electronic amplification.[10] Crumb defines music as "a system of proportions in the service of spiritual impulse."[11]

In the 1960s and 1970s, Crumb's music filled a niche for more sophisticated though still conservative concertgoers. His music fell between neoclassicism, which was perceived as outmoded, and the more radical music of the avant garde. Although his music from this period exhibits some novel features, it owes more to traditional techniques than to the more experimental areas of the avant-garde.[12] In this period, Crumb shared with a number of other young composers regarded as being under the umbrella of "new accessibility" a desire to reach out to alienated audiences. In works like Ancient Voices of Children (1970), Crumb employed theatrical ritual, using evocative masks, costumes, and sonorities.[13] In other pieces he asks players to leave and enter the stage during the piece, and has also used unusual layouts of musical notation in a number of his scores. In several pieces, the music is symbolically laid out in a circular or spiral fashion.[14]

Several of Crumb's works, including the four books of madrigals he wrote in the late 1960s and Ancient Voices of Children, a song cycle of 1970 for two singers and small instrumental ensemble (which includes a toy piano), are settings of texts by Federico García Lorca. Many of his vocal works were written for the virtuoso mezzo-soprano singer Jan DeGaetani.[citation needed]

Black Angels (1970) is another piece which displays Crumb's interest in exploring a wide range of timbres. The piece is written for electric string quartet and its players are required to play various percussion instruments and to bow small goblets as well as to play their instruments in both conventional and unconventional ways. It is one of Crumb's best known pieces, and has been recorded by several groups, including the Kronos Quartet.[15]

Crumb's most ambitious work, and among his more famous, is the 24-piece collection Makrokosmos, published in four books.[16][17] The first two books (1972, 1973), for solo piano, make extensive use of string piano techniques and require amplification, as dynamics range from pppp to ffff; the third, known as Music for a Summer Evening (1974), is for two pianos and percussion; the fourth, Celestial Mechanics (1979), is for piano four-hands. The title Makrokosmos alludes to Mikrokosmos, the six books of piano pieces by Béla Bartók; like Bartók's work, Makrokosmos is a series of short character pieces. Apart from Bartók, Claude Debussy is another composer Crumb acknowledged as an influence here; Debussy's Préludes comprise 2 books of 12 character pieces. Crumb's first two books of Makrokosmos for solo piano contain 12 pieces, each bearing a dedication (a friend's initials, however he also wittily dedicates a piece to himself) at the end. On several occasions, the pianist is required to sing, shout, whistle, whisper, and moan, as well as play the instrument unconventionally. Makrokosmos was premiered by David Burge, who later recorded the work.[18]

During the 1990s, Crumb's musical output was less prolific, but since 2000 Crumb has written several works subtitled American Songbook. Each of these works is a set of arrangements of American hymns, spirituals, and popular tunes: Crumb originally planned to produce four such volumes,[19] but in fact he continued to produce additional sets after the fourth (The Winds of Destiny) was written, with the seventh volume of the series (Voices from the Heartland) being completed in 2010. Typically these settings preserve the familiar tunes more-or-less intact,[20] but the accompaniments for amplified piano and percussionists use a very wide range of musical techniques and exotic sounds. In his most recent compositions, which have the subtitle Spanish Songbook, Crumb returns to settings of Lorca.

Crumb's works are published by the C. F. Peters Corporation. Recordings of Crumb's music have appeared on many labels, including several LPs issued by Nonesuch Records in the 1970s. More recently, Bridge Records, Inc. has issued a series of CDs, the "Complete Crumb Edition".

Works[]

Orchestral[]

  • Gethsemane (1947), for small orchestra
  • Diptych (1955)
  • Variazioni (1959), for large orchestra
  • Echoes of Time and the River (Echoes II) (1967)
  • A Haunted Landscape (1984)

Vocal/choral orchestral[]

  • Star-Child (1977, revised 1979), for soprano, antiphonal children's voices, male speaking choir, bell ringers, and large orchestra

Chamber/instrumental[]

  • Two Duos (1944?), for flute and clarinet
  • Four Pieces (1945), for violin and piano
  • Violin Sonata (1949)
  • Three Pastoral Pieces (1952), for oboe and piano
  • Viola Sonata (1953)
  • String Quartet (1954)
  • Sonata for Solo Cello (1955)
  • Four Nocturnes (Night Music II) (1964), for violin and piano
  • Eleven Echoes of Autumn, 1965 (Echoes I) (1966), for violin, alto flute, clarinet, and piano
  • Black Angels (Images I) (1970), for electric string quartet
  • Vox Balaenae (Voice of the Whale) (1971), for electric flute, electric cello, and amplified piano
  • Music for a Summer Evening (Makrokosmos III) (1974), for two amplified pianos and percussion (two players).
  • Dream Sequence (Images II) (1976), for violin, cello, piano, percussion (one player), and off-stage glass harmonica (two players)
  • Pastoral Drone (1982), for organ
  • An Idyll for the Misbegotten (Images III) (1986), for amplified flute and percussion (three players).
  • Easter Dawning (1991), for carillon
  • Quest (1994), for guitar, soprano saxophone, harp, double bass, and percussion (two players)
  • Mundus Canis (A Dog's World) (1998), for guitar and percussion

Piano[]

  • Piano Sonata (1945)
  • Prelude and Toccata (1951)
  • Five Pieces (1962)
  • Makrokosmos, Volume I (1972), for amplified piano
  • Makrokosmos, Volume II (1973), for amplified piano
  • Celestial Mechanics (Makrokosmos IV) (1979), for amplified piano (four hands)
  • A Little Suite for Christmas, A.D. 1979 (1980)
  • Gnomic Variations (1981)
  • Processional (1983)
  • Zeitgeist (Tableaux Vivants) (1988), for two amplified pianos
  • Eine Kleine Mitternachtmusik (A Little Midnight Music) (2001)
  • Otherworldly Resonances (2003), for two pianos
  • Metamorphoses, Book I (2017)

Vocal[]

  • Four Songs (1945?), for voice, clarinet and piano
  • Seven Songs (1946), for voice and piano
  • Three Early Songs (1947), for voice and piano
  • A Cycle of Greek Lyrics (1950?), for voice and piano
  • Night Music I (1963, revised 1976), for soprano, piano/celeste, and two percussionists
  • Madrigals, Book I (1965), for soprano, vibraphone, and double bass
  • Madrigals, Book II (1965), for soprano, flute/alto flute/piccolo, and percussion
  • Songs, Drones, and Refrains of Death (1968), for baritone, electric guitar, electric double bass, amplified piano/electric harpsichord, and two percussionists
  • Night of the Four Moons (1969), for alto, alto flute/piccolo, banjo, electric cello, and percussion
  • Madrigals, Book III (1969), for soprano, harp, and percussion
  • Madrigals, Book IV (1969), for soprano, flute/alto flute/piccolo, harp, double bass, and percussion
  • Ancient Voices of Children (1970), for mezzo-soprano, boy soprano, oboe, mandolin, harp, amplified piano (and toy piano), and percussion (three players)
  • Lux Aeterna (1971) for soprano, bass flute/soprano recorder, sitar, and percussion (two players)
  • Apparition (1979), for soprano and amplified piano
  • The Sleeper (1984), for soprano and piano
  • Federico's Little Songs for Children (1986), for soprano, flute/piccolo/alto flute/bass flute, and harp
  • American Songbook I: The River of Life (2003), for soprano, percussion quartet and piano
  • American Songbook II: A Journey Beyond Time (2003), for soprano, percussion quartet and piano
  • American Songbook III: Unto the Hills (2001), for soprano, percussion quartet and piano
  • American Songbook IV: Winds of Destiny (2004), for soprano, percussion quartet and piano
  • Yesteryear (2005/13), for mezzo-soprano, amplified piano, and percussion (two players)
  • American Songbook V: Voices from a Forgotten World (2007), for soprano, baritone, percussion quartet and piano
  • American Songbook VI: Voices from the Morning of the Earth (2008), for soprano, baritone, percussion quartet and piano
  • Spanish Songbook I: The Ghosts of Alhambra (2008), for baritone, guitar and percussion
  • Spanish Songbook II: Sun and Shadow (2009), for female voice and amplified piano
  • American Songbook VII: Voices from the Heartland (2010), for soprano, baritone, percussion quartet and piano
  • Spanish Songbook III: The Yellow Moon of Andalusia (2012), for mezzo-soprano and amplified piano

Choral[]

  • Alleluja (1948), for unaccompanied chorus

Notable students[]

Among George Crumb's students are the composers Margaret Brouwer, Uri Caine, Christopher Rouse, Osvaldo Golijov, Jennifer Higdon, Cynthia Cozette Lee, Yen Lu, , Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon, Ofer Ben-Amots, , Robert Carl, , and Gerald Levinson.

Filmography[]

  • George Crumb: The Voice of the Whale (1976). Directed and produced by Robert Mugge. Interviewed by Richard Wernick. New York, New York: Rhapsody Films (released 1988).
  • Bad Dog!: A Portrait of George Crumb (2009). Directed by David Starobin. Interviews with the composer and performances of Apparition, Three Early Songs and Eine Kleine Mitternachtmusik. Released on DVD by Bridge Records (BRIDGE 9312).

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "George Crumb". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 4 April 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  2. ^ Richard Steinits, "Crumb, George (Henry)", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, secnd edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  3. ^ Nicolas Slonimsky, Laura Kuhn, and Dennis McIntire, "Crumb, George (Henry Jr.)", Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, edited by Nicolas Slonimsky and Laura Kuhn (New York, NY: Schirmer, 2001): 2:765–66.
  4. ^ Mayfield, Connie (2012). Theory Essentials; An Integrated Approach to Harmony, Ear Training and Keyboard Skills. Cengage Learning. p. 560. ISBN 978-1-133-30818-8.
  5. ^ Cope, David, Biography in Gillespie, op.cit., p.15
  6. ^ "MacDowell Medal winners 1960–2011". The Telegraph. 13 April 2011.
  7. ^ "Acclaimed composers take part in New Music Ensemble concerts at ASU". herbergerinstitute.asu.edu. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  8. ^ "2000 Grammy Award Winners". Grammy.com. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  9. ^ "Anncrumb.com". Archived from the original on 2019-05-11. Retrieved 2019-12-24.
  10. ^ For example, the score of Black Angels specifies that in places, amplification should reach 'the threshold of pain'.
  11. ^ Gillespie, Donald, ed. (1986) George Crumb: Profile of a Composer, C. F. Peters Corporation, 1986, p.77
  12. ^ James L. McHard, The Future of Modern Music: A Philosophical Exploration of Modernist Music in the 20th Century and Beyond, third edition (Livonia, MI: Iconic Press, 2008): 325. ISBN 978-0-9778195-2-2; Richard W. Bass, “The Case of the Silent G: Pitch Structure and Proportions in the Theme of George Crumb’s Gnomic Variations”, in George Crumb and the Alchemy of Sound: Essays on His Music, edited by Steven Bruns and Ofer Ben-Amots, general editor Michael D. Grace, 157–70 (Colorado College Music Press, 2005). ISBN 978-0-935052-07-7.
  13. ^ K. Robert Schwarz. 1988. "Classical". The Wilson Quarterly 12, no. 3 (Summer): 77–87. Citation on 84.
  14. ^ As shown in this image of 'Spiral Galaxy' from Makrokosmos 1
  15. ^ Elektra Nonesuch CD 7559-79242-2
  16. ^ Kennedy, Michael (2006), The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 985 pages, ISBN 0-19-861459-4
  17. ^ "Makrokosmos II, for amplified piano | Details | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  18. ^ Book 1: Nonesuch LP H-71293
  19. ^ Note by Eric Bruskin to CD BRIDGE 9335
  20. ^ "I determined to leave the beautiful melodies intact": quote from the composer in the note to CD set BRIDGE 9218
  • Bass, Richard. 1991. "Sets, Scales and Symmetrics: The Pitch-Structural Basis of George Crumb’s Makrokosmos I & II". Music Theory Spectrum 13, no. 1:1–20.
  • Kennedy, Michael (2006), The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 985 pages, ISBN 0-19-861459-4
  • Steinitz, Richard. 2001. "Crumb, George (Henry)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
  • Steenhuisen, Paul. "Interview with George Crumb". In Sonic Mosaics: Conversations with Composers. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-88864-474-9

External links[]

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