|
Arranger,
composer, conductor and pianist from Richmond
Hill, New York,
who was playing the piano by the age of five and was a published composer
when he was just six.
(Fittingly, the waltz was entitled “Just Six”.)
At eight years
of age, he enrolled at the Institute
of Musical Art, which
is now famously known as Julliard.
He completed his studies while still in his teens and began
performing in movie and vaudeville theaters.
In 1931, he
became the first staff arranger and pianist at Radio
City Music
Hall in New York. He worked in the radio in his
twenties, arranging music for and conducting an orchestra on WOR. Around this time, he penned “Pavanne”, the first of many compositions to
capture the public imagination.
On 2nd
January 1936, Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra premiered “Chorale
and Fugue in Jazz”. “Foster
Gallery”, a wild ride through the most famous Stephen Foster songs,
was written in 1939, and eventually immortalized on vinyl by Arthur Fiedler
and The Boston Pops.
Many of his
compositions in the early 1940s reflected the understandably patriotic mood
of the day: “American
Salute”, “Fanfare for Freedom”, “Lincoln Legend”,
and “A Song of Freedom”.
Interplay, a ballet choreographed by Jerome
Robbins, debuted on 1st June 1945 and ran for just under a
month, but music from it has continued to be a concert and recording favourite.
On 21st December 1945, Billion Dollar Baby, an original musical comedy with music by
Gould, hit the stage and ran for over six months. In 1947, Morton Gould Showcase was released by Columbia Masterworks, and
contained one of his more recognizable short works, “The Peanut
Vendor”. Arms and the Girl, another musical comedy,
enjoyed a run of about four months, from February to May 1950.
In 1952, “Tap
Dance for Orchestra” premiered at the Eastman Theatre, with Gould
conducting and its dedicatee, Danny Daniels, doing the fancy footwork. “Derivations for Solo Clarinet
and Band” was written for Benny Goodman in 1955.
Other
originals from the 1950s include: “Café Rio”; “Declaration: Suite”; “Dialogue (for
piano and orchestra)”; “Jekyll and Hyde Variations”; “Parade
(for Percussion)”; “Rhythm Gallery”; “Saint
Lawrence Suite for Band”; “Santa Fe Saga”; and, “Spirituals
for String Orchestra and Harp”.
In the early
1960s, he penned “Abby Variations (piano)”; “At the Piano”;
“Benny’s Gig”; “Calypso Souvenir”; “Come
Up From the Valley, Children”; “Festive Music”; “Formations”;
and, the soundtrack of World War I,
a documentary aired on CBS-TV in 1964.
He received a Grammy in 1966 for his recording of Charles Ives’
“First Symphony”, on which he conducted the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra.
In the late
1960s, he composed “Apple Waltzes (In Tribute to George Balanchine)
which incorporated seven movements from “Audubon (Birds of America)”;
“Columbia: Broadsides for
Orchestra”; “Dancing Days”; “Mini-Suite for Band”;
“Salutations”; “Soundings”; “Troubadour Music”;
“Two for Chorus”; “Venice for Double Orchestra and Brass
Choirs”; and, “Vivaldi Gallery for String Quartet and Divided
Orchestra”.
He was
commissioned to write three pieces for America’s bicentennial, and
obliged with “American Ballads, Settings of American Tunes for
Orchestra”, “Something to Do – Labor Cantata”, and “Symphony
of Sprituals. In 1978, he wrote the music for the
groundbreaking NBC miniseries, Holocaust,
starring Meryl Streep and James Woods.
He was very
prolific in the 1980s and some of the pieces he wrote include: “Celebration Strut for
Orchestra”; “Concerto Concertante
(for violin and orchestra)”; “Duo for Flute and Clarinet”;
“Housewarming”; and, “Suite (for Cello and Piano)”.
The American
Symphony Orchestra League bestowed their Gold Baton Award upon him in
1983. In 1986, he was awarded
membership in the American Academy and Institute of Arts
and Letters, and was elected president of ASCAP, a post in which he served
for eight years. He still
managed to make time for composing “A Capella”,
“Flares and Declamations”, “Notes of Remembrance”,
and “Two Pianos”.
In the 1990s,
some of his compositions and recordings appeared on CDs such as Aaron Copland: Billy the Kid and Rodeo Suite; Ferde Grofe: Grand Canyon Suite; Benny Goodman Collector’s Edition,
Copland: Appalachian Spring; The Tender Land
Suite; Morton Gould: Fall River
Legend, and Stars & Stripes
Forever & The Greatest Marches.
Proving
himself ever on the cutting edge of music, he composed “The Jogger
and the Dinosaur (for rapper and orchestra)” in 1992. The Van Cliburn International
Competition commissioned him to write “Ghost Waltzes” in
1993. In 1994, he was awarded
the Kennedy Center Honor and Composer of the Year by Musical America. His last orchestral piece, “Stringmusic”, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995.
He passed away
in Orlando, Florida, on 21st February
1996. He has since been given the
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and his own star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame.
The New York Pops recordings
Adeste
Fidelis (Frederick
Oakeley/John Francis Wade)
Arranger – Morton Gould
Music
Director – Skitch Henderson
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morton_Gould
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0332457/bio
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmfnKLQnXaA
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-7bu_yZKfE
- http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&field-artist=Morton%20Gould&rh=n%3A5174%2Cp_32%3AMorton%20Gould&page=1
- http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=11772
- http://www.schirmer.com/default.aspx?TabId=2419&State_2872=2&ComposerId_2872=565
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OT8nFoDjipc
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcLIWOk7AUQ
- http://www.kennedy-center.org/explorer/artists/?entity_id=3734&source_type=A
- http://www.spaceagepop.com/gould.htm
- http://www.classicalarchives.com/composer/2629.html#tvf=tracks&tv=about
|