'Gardner Read' (born
January 2,
1913 in
Evanston,
Illinois; died
November 10,
2005 in
Manchester-by-the-Sea,
Massachusetts) was an American
composer and musical scholar.
His first musical studies were in
piano and
organ, and he also took lessons in
counterpoint and
composition at the School of Music at
Northwestern University. In
1932 he was awarded a four-year scholarship to the
Eastman School of Music, where he studied with
Bernard Rogers and
Howard Hanson. In the late
1930s he also studied briefly with
Ildebrando Pizzetti,
Jean Sibelius and
Aaron Copland.
After heading the composition departments of the
St. Louis Institute of Music, the
Kansas City Conservatory of Music and the
Cleveland Institute of Music, Read became Composer-in-Residence and Professor of Composition at the School of Music at
Boston University. He remained in this post until his retirement in
1978.
His ''Symphony No. 1'', op. 30 (
1937, premiered by
Sir John Barbirolli) won first prize at the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Society's American Composers' Contest, while his second symphony (op. 45,
1943) won first prize in the Paderewski Fund Competition. Another first prize came in the
1986 National Association of Teachers of Singing Art Song Competition, won by his ''Nocturnal Visions'', op. 145.
His book ''Music Notation: A Manual of Modern Practice'' is a standard text at most music schools and conservatories in the United States. It is considered by many to be a place of first (and last) authority when trying to determine the proper method of notating musical performance techniques, ideas and gestures.
Bibliography
★ Dodd, Mary Ann, and Jayson Rod Engquist (1996). ''Gardner Read: A Bio-Bibliography''. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-29384-8.
External links
★
Gardner Read official site