Name Halsey Stevens | ||
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Education University of California, Berkeley (1944), Syracuse University (1935–1937), Syracuse University (1926–1931) Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada Similar People Kent Kennan, Arnold Schoenberg, Ingolf Dahl, Eric Ewazen, Morten Lauridsen |
Halsey stevens 1908 1989 sonatina for bass trombone charles vernon
Halsey Stevens (December 3, 1908 – January 20, 1989) was a music professor, biographer, and composer of American music.
Contents
- Halsey stevens 1908 1989 sonatina for bass trombone charles vernon
- Go lovely rose halsey stevens
- Life
- Music
- Writings
- References
Go lovely rose halsey stevens
Life
Halsey Stevens was born in Scott, New York and educated at Syracuse University and the University of California, Berkeley. He studied with William Berwald at Syracuse and with the composer Ernest Bloch at Berkeley.
Stevens served as a faculty member at Syracuse University (1935–1937), Dakota Wesleyan University (1937–1941), Bradley University (1941–1946), the University of Redlands (1946), and then at the University of Southern California from 1946 until his retirement in 1976. His notable students there included Houston Bright, Benjamin Lees, and Morten Lauridsen.
He died in a Long Beach, California, medical facility on January 20, 1989, after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.
Music
His recorded music includes, in chronological order of composition:
along with many other works.
Among his chamber works, Stevens's 1956 trumpet sonata remains a particular favorite, having been commercially recorded by over a half-dozen trumpeters, including Giuseppe Galante, Jouko Harjanne, David Hickman, Wynton Marsalis, Anthony Plog, Scott Thornburg, and George Vosburgh.
A present-day music reviewer, Osvaldo Polatkan, sought in 2008 to convey something of the composer's models, influences, and mature style thus:
Stevens composed music that was essentially tonal but not without modern influences, particularly Stravinsky and Copland. Though undeniably "American" in his musical language, the European sway is tangible. Stevens himself has acknowledged the pivotal influence of Bela Bartók... He has also stated that Brahms, Hindemith, Prokofiev, Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach, and, to a lesser extent, Ravel and Schoenberg had served as important models for his music.
Writings
A Bartók scholar and musicologist, Stevens wrote a definitive study of the Hungarian composer, The Life and Music of Béla Bartók (Oxford University Press, 1953; revised edition, 1964). "Mr. Stevens' book... makes one want to rehear the Bartok works in the light of what the author has found in them," observed eminent fellow composer Aaron Copland. "That is praise indeed for any book on music."
Stevens also contributed scholarly articles to Musical Quarterly, The Journal of Music Theory, Music and Letters (London), Tempo (London), Énekszós (Budapest), Musikoloski Zborník (Ljubljana), among other journals.