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Leo Smit (American composer)

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Name
  
Leo Smit

Role
  
American composer




Died
  
December 12, 1999, Encinitas, California, United States

Albums
  
Copland: The Complete Music For Solo Piano

Similar People
  
Aaron Copland, Walter Hendl, Louisville Orchestra

Education
  
Curtis Institute of Music

Leo smit symphony no 1 1956


Leo Smit (January 12, 1921 – December 12, 1999) was an American composer and pianist.

Contents

Leo smit symphonie in c


Life

Leo Smit was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. As a child his mother took him to Russia where he studied with the composer Dmitri Kabalevsky. He later studied piano in New York with Isabella Vengerova and José Iturbi and composition with Nicolas Nabokov. While working as George Balanchine's rehearsal pianist, he met Igor Stravinsky.

He often gave thematic recitals – sometimes illustrated with his own slides – and performed a great deal of new music, especially works by Aaron Copland. His breakthrough as a composer came in 1957, when the Boston Symphony Orchestra played his First Symphony. In that year he moved to Los Angeles to teach at the University of California. From 1962 he taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He wrote two operas: The Alchemy of Love (1969), in collaboration with the British astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle, with whom he also worked on an oratorio about Copernicus; and Magic Water (1978). Later in his life, he composed nearly 100 songs to texts by Emily Dickinson.

He was also a talented photographer, taking many pictures of notable musicians. He died in Encinitas, California, at the age of 78, of congestive heart failure.

Awards

  • 1950 Guggenheim Fellowship
  • 1973 Rome Prize
  • References

    Leo Smit (American composer) Wikipedia