Template:Short description Template:About Template:Distinguish Robert Erickson (March 7, 1917 – April 24, 1997) was an American modernist composer and influential music teacher. He was one of the first American composers to explore the twelve tone technique and to compose tape music.

EducationEdit

Erickson was born in Marquette, Michigan. He learned both piano and violin as a child, and studied composition with Ernst Krenek at Hamline University in Saint Paul, Minnesota, graduating in 1943. He returned to Hamline after three years in the US Army, and earned a Master of Arts in music in 1947.

CareerEdit

TeachingEdit

He taught at the College of St. Catherine in Saint Paul, Minnesota, San Francisco State College, the University of California, Berkeley, and chaired the composition department of the San Francisco Conservatory from 1957 to 1966. With composer Will Ogdon, he founded the music department at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) in 1967: "We decided we wanted a department where composers could feel at home, the way scholars feel at home in other schools."<ref name="Rich"/> While there he met faculty performers such as bassist Bertram Turetzky, trumpeter Edwin Harkins, flutist Bernhard Batschelet, and singer Carol Plantamura: "I could go to Bert, or Ed, with something I'd written down and ask 'Hey, can you do this?' And I'd get an immediate answer. It was a fabulous time for cross-feeding."<ref name="Rich"/>

His notable students are Morton Subotnick, Pauline Oliveros, Terry Riley, Louise Spizizen, Ramón Sender, Loren Rush, Betty Ann Wong, Terry Jennings, Allen Strange, and Paul Dresher. Many of these composers became interested in improvisation under Erickson’s influence.

Oliveros, among others, praises his teaching: Template:Quote

As a composerEdit

Erickson was one of the first American composers to compose twelve tone system music ("I had already studied—and abandoned—the twelve tone system before most other Americans had taken it up."<ref name="Rich"/>) and to create tape music: "If you get right down to the bottom of what composers do, I think that what composers do now and have always done is to compose their environment in some sense. So I get a special little lift about working with environmental sounds."<ref name="Rich"/> He also has used invented instruments such as stroking rods, used in Taffy Time, Cardinitas 68, and Roddy, tube drums, used in Cradle, Cradle II, and Tube Drum Studies, and the Percussion Loops Console designed with Ron George, used in Percussion Loops.

Many University of California San Diego faculty performers appear on his 1991 CRI release Robert Erickson: Sierra & Other Works (CD 616), playing works written for and with them:

  1. Kryl (1977), Harkins, named after the travelling cornet player Bohumir Kryl. The piece from time to time creates a hocket between the singing and playing.
  2. Ricercar À 3 (1967), Turetzky. For bass soloist live and on two tape tracks.
  3. Postcards (1981), Carol Plantamura and lutenist Jürgen Hübscher
  4. Dunbar's Delight (1985), timpanist Dan Dunbar. Virtuoso solo piece for timpani.
  5. Quoq (1978), flutist John Fonville. Named after Finnegans Wake.
  6. Sierra (1984), baritone Philip Larson, SONOR Ensemble conducted by Thomas Nee. Commissioned by Thomas Buckner.

He also has an album Pacific Sirens on New World Records.

He wrote Ricercar a 5 for Trombones for Stuart Dempster. The piece uses baroque imitation as well as singing, whistling, fanfares, slides, and other extended techniques.

His final work is Music for Trumpet, Strings, and Tympani (1990).

Other activitiesEdit

He is the author of the book The Structure of Music: A Listener's Guide, which he claimed helped him overcome a "contrapuntal obsession",<ref name="Rich">Erickson, Robert. Quoted in Robert Erickson: Sierra & Other Works (1991 CRI CD 616). Liner notes by Alan Rich, music critic, Los Angeles Daily News.</ref> and Sound Structure in Music (1975), an important early attempt to systematically study timbre in music.

Erickson also served as Music Director of KPFA radio in Berkeley from 1955 to 1957 and as a director of the Pacifica Foundation, KPFA's parent body, for several years thereafter.

Recognition and awardsEdit

He received several Yaddo fellowships in the fifties and sixties, a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1966, a Ford Foundation fellowship, was elected as a fellow of the Institute for Creative Arts of the University of California in 1968, and his string quartet Solstice won the 1985 Friedham Award for Chamber Music. He also received awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and the American Academy.

There are two books about Erickson's life and music: Thinking Sound Music: The Life and Work of Robert Erickson by Charles Shere and Music of Many Means: Sketches and Essays on the Music of Robert Erickson by Robert Erickson and John MacKay.

Illness and deathEdit

He suffered from a wasting muscle disease, polymyositis, and was bedridden and in pain for fifteen years before his death. He died in San Diego in 1997, California, aged 80.

RecordingsEdit

  • American Classics - A Continuum Portrait Vol 9 - Erickson: Recent Impressions, Songs, High Flyer, Summer Music. Naxos 8.559283
  • Robert Erickson: Pacific Sirens. New World Records 80603
  • Robert Erickson: Kryl, Ricercar, Postcards, Dunbars Delight. CRI 616
  • Robert Erickson: Auroras. New World Records 80682
  • Robert Erickson: Complete String Quartets. New World Records 80753
  • Robert Erickson: Duo, Fives, Quintet, Trio. New World Records 80808

BibliographyEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

ListeningEdit

  • Template:Webarchive two works by the composer: General Speech (1969) and East of the Beach (1980)

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