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Information About

Quincy Porter




He was born in New Haven, Connecticut on February 7 1897 . He went to Yale University where his teachers included Horatio Parker . He later studied with Ernest Bloch and Vincent D'Indy . He taught at Vassar during the 1930s, became dean (1938-42) and then director (1942-46) of the New England Conservatory of Music, and in 1946 returned to Yale, as professor, to teach until 1965. He died in Bethany, Connecticut on November 12 1966 .

He wrote a substantial amount in the "absolute (established) forms", including nine String Quartet s (1923–1953), several concertos (including one for Harpsichord , one for Viola , and one for two pianos, the latter work receiving the 1954 Pulitzer Prize For Music ), and two Symphonies . His later music while Tonal is Harmonically and Rhythm ically acerbic and Dissonant .


SELECTED WORKS

  • Symphonies

  • ---Symphony no. 1, 1934

  • ---Symphony no. 2, 1962

  • Other orchestral

  • ---Ukrainian suite, 1925

  • ---Dance in Three-Time, 1937

  • ---Music for Strings, 1941

  • ---New England Episodes, 1958


  • Concertos

  • ---Concerto concertante, for two pianos and orchestra begun 1953? ( {Link without Title} )

  • ---Harpsichord concerto, 1959? 1960?

  • ---Viola concerto, 1948

  • ---Fantasy on a Pastoral Theme for Organ and Strings, 1943

  • ---Concerto for Wind Orchestra, 1959

  • Chamber music

  • ---Nine string quartets (quartets according to the Gilmore Library collection from 1922-3 (no. 1 in E minor), 1925, 1930, 1931, 1935, 1937, no. 7 published in 1944, 1950, 1958)

  • ---Quintet for harpsichord and strings, 1961

  • ---Oboe quintet (''Elegiac''), 1966

  • ---Clarinet quintet, 1929

  • ---Two violin sonatas (1926, 1929; second recorded in the 1950s and more recently, 1st given its premiere recording in the late 1990s) (also an early sonata from 1919 has been recorded)

  • ---Suite for viola alone, 1930

  • ---Piano sonata (1930)

  • ---Sonata for horn and piano, 1946

  • ---Sextet on a Slavic folk-theme, 1947

  • ---Blues Lointains for flute and piano (1928)



BOOKS

  • Porter, Quincy. ''Study of sixteenth century counterpoint, based on the works of Orlando di Lasso.'' Boston: Loomis. 3rd ed. pub. around 1948.




EXTERNAL LINKS