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Deems Taylor

Joseph Deems Taylor (December 22, 1885 – July 3, 1966) was an American music critic, composer, and promoter of classical music. Nat Benchley, co-editor of The Lost Algonquin Roundtable, referred to him as "the dean of American music."[1] He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1934.[2]

Deems Taylor
Taylor in 1950
Born
Joseph Deems Taylor

(1885-12-22)December 22, 1885
DiedJuly 3, 1966(1966-07-03) (aged 80)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeKensico Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
OccupationMusic critic
Spouses
  • (m. 1910; div. 1918)
  • Mary Kennedy
    (m. 1921; div. 1934)
  • Lucille Watson-Little
    (m. 1945; div. 1954)
ChildrenJoan Kennedy Taylor

Early life and family edit

Deems Taylor was born in New York City to JoJo and Katherine Taylor.[3] He attended Ethical Culture Elementary School, followed by New York University.[4]

Taylor married three times. His first wife was Jane Anderson. They were married in 1910, but divorced in 1918.[5] In 1921, he married Mary Kennedy, who was an actress and a writer.[6] They had a daughter, Joan Kennedy Taylor, in 1926,[7] and divorced in 1934. He was involved romantically with soprano Colette D'Arville after his divorce.[8] Taylor married a third and last time in 1945, to costume designer Lucille Watson-Little. They were divorced eight years later.[9]

Taylor died on July 3, 1966, of leukemia at the age of 80. He is interred at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.[citation needed]

Career edit

Composer edit

 
A 1948 Shimer College performance of The King's Henchman.

Taylor initially planned to become an architect;[10] however, despite minimal musical training he soon took to music composition. The result was a series of works for orchestra and/or voices. In 1916 he wrote the cantata The Chambered Nautilus, followed by Through the Looking-Glass (for orchestra) in 1918, earning him public praise and recognition. He acquired several students, including composer Mary Watson Weaver.[11]

In 1919, Taylor gave a series of lectures on music history in Denver, Colorado.[12] In 1921 Taylor secured a job as music critic for the New York World, a post he held when approached by the Metropolitan Opera to suggest a composer to write a new opera. He put forth his own name, and was accepted, the result being The King's Henchman, with the libretto by Edna St. Vincent Millay. Peter Ibbetson followed in 1929. The Philadelphia Opera Company performed the world premiere of his third opera Ramuntcho, an adaptation of Pierre Loti's 1897 novel of the same name, at the Academy of Music on February 10, 1942, with Dorothy Sarnoff as Gracieuse and William Hess as Ramuntcho.[13][14]

Taylor's compositions were met with great initial enthusiasm. The number of Metropolitan Opera performances for The King’s Henchman and Peter Ibbetson is greater than any opera of any other American composer,[15] and he had as many large-scale works published as any of his American-born contemporaries. Taylor's music is often witty, always deftly formed, well-timed, and entertaining. The basic style of even his later works is academically post-Romantic, resisting any influence of progressive trends except perhaps in orchestration. This conservatism, lacking sharp individual profile or sense of deep conviction, may help to explain the initial enthusiastic acceptance of Taylor's work but may also explain the fact that his music was virtually forgotten soon afterward.[16]

Music commentator edit

Taylor was a promoter of classical music throughout his life. His journalism career included posts as music critic for the New York World beginning in 1921, and editor of Musical America from 1927 to 1929.

Taylor also worked extensively in broadcasting, and as intermission commentator for the New York Philharmonic. He appeared in Walt Disney's 1940 film Fantasia as the film's Master of Ceremonies, and was instrumental in selecting the musical pieces that were used in the film, including the then-controversial Sacre du Printemps. In the long-unseen roadshow version of Fantasia, issued on DVD in 2000, and re-released on the 2010 Fantasia/Fantasia 2000 Blu-ray release, all of Taylor's voice-over work was re-recorded by veteran voice artist Corey Burton. The complete film was originally 124 minutes long, due almost entirely to the fact that Taylor's commentaries were more detailed in the roadshow version. But the original audio elements for these longer commentaries had deteriorated to the point that they could no longer be used, so Corey Burton was selected to re-record all of the dialogue for consistency. The general release version of Fantasia, running 120 minutes, is the version most audiences are familiar with. In that version, Taylor's commentaries were severely abridged (bar the introduction to Toccata and Fugue in D Minor).[17]

The same year, 1940, he served the same role as Master of Ceremonies for the classical portion of a "Carousel of American Music", a famous concert series held in San Francisco on September 24. The concert had Irving Berlin, George M. Cohan, Jerome Kern, Hoagy Carmichael, WC Handy, Johnny Mercer – and many more of America's top songwriting talents performing their own compositions. (The original release was titled "Cavalcade of American Music" and includes a performance of Taylor's own work "Circus Day".) The recording was added to the National Recording Registry in 2016.[citation needed]

He provided the commentary of the technical story behind the recording of actual cannon fire and carillon for the famous 1954 Mercury Records album, by Antal Dorati and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture – still one of the most highly regarded recordings of that piece, and the best-selling classical LP of the 1950s.[citation needed] Taylor also recorded commentary for other Mercury recordings: Benjamin Britten's The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra; the 1958 stereophonic re-make of the 1812 Overture and Frederick Fennell's ground-breaking two-album "The Civil War," which featured original music played on period instruments and sound-montages, narrated by Taylor, of period weaponry and music.

In 1949, Taylor's program, Deems Taylor Concerts, was on more than 100 radio stations.[18] He was also a frequent guest on the radio quiz program Information Please.

Taylor's work as a broadcaster, critic, and commentator ultimately overshadowed his work as a composer.[16] He hosted and narrated several television music series and documentaries.[citation needed] In the early 1950s, he was also a repeat panelist on the NBC game show, Who Said That?, and he was a repeat panelist on What's My Line?.

Taylor was also a friend of the Algonquin Round Table, a group of writers, actors and critics that met almost daily from 1919 to 1929 at Manhattan's Algonquin Hotel. He briefly dated Dorothy Parker. In the 1994 film Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, Taylor was portrayed by the actor James LeGros.[citation needed] Taylor's other personal friendships ranged from composers George Gershwin, Vincent Youmans and Jerome Kern to novelists F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ayn Rand.[19]

Deems Taylor Award edit

Taylor was the third president of ASCAP, and held the post for six years. The ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards were established in 1967 to honor his memory. The Deems Taylor Award "recognizes books, articles, broadcasts and websites on the subject of music selected for their excellence."[20]

List of compositions edit

The Banks o' Doon, for voice and piano Vocal Music
Marco Takes a Walk Orchestral
Fair Yolanthe (La bele Yolans), for voice and piano Vocal Music Art Song
The Faithless Lover (L'abandonnée), for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement
Fanfare for Russia for brass ensemble Chamber Music Fanfare
Girometta, for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement
In the Country (La vie rustique), for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement
The King's Henchman, opera Opera Opera
A Lovely Light, for soprano, narrator and piano Vocal Music Song Cycle
May Day Carol, Op. 15 Miscellaneous (Classical)
Nay, My Years Are Tender (Je suis trop jeunette), for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement
Peter Ibbetson, opera, Op. 20 Opera Opera
La petite robe (The little dress), for voice and piano Vocal Music
Ramuntcho Opera Opera
Rantin' Rovin' Robin, for voice and piano Vocal Music Art Song
The Siesta (La sieste), for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement
Song to a Sleeping Child, for voice and piano Vocal Music Art Song
Three Century Suite, for orchestra Orchestral Suite
Through the Looking Glass, for orchestra, in five movements (after the novel by Lewis Carroll) Orchestral
Time Enough: A Man-Child's Lullaby, for voice and piano Vocal Music Art Song
Twenty, Eighteen, for voice and piano Vocal Music Art Song
The Ways of the World (Les belles maniéres), for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song Arrangement

Other compositions

  • Lucrece, Suite for Strings
  • Casanova, Ballet music
  • Circus Day – Eight Pictures from Memory, orchestral suite
  • Processional for Chorus and Orchestra

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hansen, Liane. "Algonquin Writers' Work No Longer Lost". NPR: Weekend Edition. September 20, 2009.
  2. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  3. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 7.
  4. ^ Howard 1927, p. 11.
  5. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 30.
  6. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 77.
  7. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 152.
  8. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 203–208, 239, 378
  9. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 292.
  10. ^ Pegolotti 2003, 333.
  11. ^ Heinrich, Adel (1991). Organ and harpsichord music by women composers : an annotated catalog. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-38790-6. OCLC 650307517.
  12. ^ Howard 1927, p. 12.
  13. ^ Eddy (February 11, 1942). "Concerts-Opera: Phila. Bow for Taylor Opera". Variety. Vol. 145, no. 10. p. 33.
  14. ^ Howard Taubman (11 February 1942). "Premiere is Given of Taylor Opera: 'Ramuntcho' Presented at the Philadelphia Academy of Music by Local Company Based on Novel by Loti: William Hess, Tenor, Sings Title Role – Dorothy Sarnoff is Heard as Gracieuse". The New York Times. p. 27.
  15. ^ Pegolotti 2003, p. 182.
  16. ^ a b Stevenson 2001
  17. ^ "I've Heard That Voice Before: Corey Burton". AllEars.Net. Retrieved 2021-01-26.
  18. ^ "Deems Taylor Sponsored On Over 100 Stations". Variety. January 26, 1949. p. 29. Retrieved January 14, 2023.
  19. ^ Pegolotti 2003, xxi.
  20. ^ About the ASCAP Foundation Deems Taylor/ Virgil Thomson Awards Competition

References edit

  • Pegolotti, James A (2003). Deems Taylor: A Biography. Boston: Northeastern University Press. ISBN 1-55553-587-9.
  • Stevenson, Robert (2001). "Taylor, (Joseph) Deems". In Stanley Sadie; John Tyrrell (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (second ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers.
  • Howard, John Tasker (1927). Studies of Contemporary American Composers: Deems Taylor. J. Fischer. ISBN 978-0-266-81350-7.

Further reading edit

  • Brody, Elaine. 1977. "The King's Henchman: Fifty Years Later". Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association 34, no. 2:319–322.
  • Levy, Newman (June 6, 1925). "Versatility personified". Profiles. The New Yorker. Vol. 1, no. 16. pp. 9–10.
  • Marshall, Jennifer. 1979. "The American Opera Libretto in the 20th Century". Miscellanea Musicologica: Adelaide Studies in Musicology 10:131–157.
  • Mehrens, Christopher Emile. 1998. "The Critical and Musical Work of Deems Taylor in Light of Contemporary Cultural Patterns". PhD diss. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. ISBN 0-591-99576-X.
  • Tawa, Nicholas E. 1994. Mainstream Music of Early Twentieth-century America: The Composers, Their Times, and Their Works. Contributions to the Study of Music and Dance 28. Westport, CT: Greenwood. ISBN 0-313-28563-2

External links edit

  • Algonquin Round Table online history
  • "Jurgen – Symphonic Poem and Ballet" (composed by Deems Taylor), James Branch Cabell: Literary Life and Legacy, Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries
  • Deems Taylor at usopera.com

deems, taylor, joseph, december, 1885, july, 1966, american, music, critic, composer, promoter, classical, music, benchley, editor, lost, algonquin, roundtable, referred, dean, american, music, elected, member, american, philosophical, society, 1934, taylor, 1. Joseph Deems Taylor December 22 1885 July 3 1966 was an American music critic composer and promoter of classical music Nat Benchley co editor of The Lost Algonquin Roundtable referred to him as the dean of American music 1 He was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1934 2 Deems TaylorTaylor in 1950BornJoseph Deems Taylor 1885 12 22 December 22 1885New York City U S DiedJuly 3 1966 1966 07 03 aged 80 New York City U S Resting placeKensico CemeteryNationalityAmericanOccupationMusic criticSpousesJane Anderson m 1910 div 1918 wbr Mary Kennedy m 1921 div 1934 wbr Lucille Watson Little m 1945 div 1954 wbr ChildrenJoan Kennedy Taylor Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Career 2 1 Composer 2 2 Music commentator 3 Deems Taylor Award 4 List of compositions 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and family editDeems Taylor was born in New York City to JoJo and Katherine Taylor 3 He attended Ethical Culture Elementary School followed by New York University 4 Taylor married three times His first wife was Jane Anderson They were married in 1910 but divorced in 1918 5 In 1921 he married Mary Kennedy who was an actress and a writer 6 They had a daughter Joan Kennedy Taylor in 1926 7 and divorced in 1934 He was involved romantically with soprano Colette D Arville after his divorce 8 Taylor married a third and last time in 1945 to costume designer Lucille Watson Little They were divorced eight years later 9 Taylor died on July 3 1966 of leukemia at the age of 80 He is interred at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla New York citation needed Career editComposer edit nbsp A 1948 Shimer College performance of The King s Henchman Taylor initially planned to become an architect 10 however despite minimal musical training he soon took to music composition The result was a series of works for orchestra and or voices In 1916 he wrote the cantata The Chambered Nautilus followed by Through the Looking Glass for orchestra in 1918 earning him public praise and recognition He acquired several students including composer Mary Watson Weaver 11 In 1919 Taylor gave a series of lectures on music history in Denver Colorado 12 In 1921 Taylor secured a job as music critic for the New York World a post he held when approached by the Metropolitan Opera to suggest a composer to write a new opera He put forth his own name and was accepted the result being The King s Henchman with the libretto by Edna St Vincent Millay Peter Ibbetson followed in 1929 The Philadelphia Opera Company performed the world premiere of his third opera Ramuntcho an adaptation of Pierre Loti s 1897 novel of the same name at the Academy of Music on February 10 1942 with Dorothy Sarnoff as Gracieuse and William Hess as Ramuntcho 13 14 Taylor s compositions were met with great initial enthusiasm The number of Metropolitan Opera performances for The King s Henchman and Peter Ibbetson is greater than any opera of any other American composer 15 and he had as many large scale works published as any of his American born contemporaries Taylor s music is often witty always deftly formed well timed and entertaining The basic style of even his later works is academically post Romantic resisting any influence of progressive trends except perhaps in orchestration This conservatism lacking sharp individual profile or sense of deep conviction may help to explain the initial enthusiastic acceptance of Taylor s work but may also explain the fact that his music was virtually forgotten soon afterward 16 Music commentator edit Taylor was a promoter of classical music throughout his life His journalism career included posts as music critic for the New York World beginning in 1921 and editor of Musical America from 1927 to 1929 Taylor also worked extensively in broadcasting and as intermission commentator for the New York Philharmonic He appeared in Walt Disney s 1940 film Fantasia as the film s Master of Ceremonies and was instrumental in selecting the musical pieces that were used in the film including the then controversial Sacre du Printemps In the long unseen roadshow version of Fantasia issued on DVD in 2000 and re released on the 2010 Fantasia Fantasia 2000 Blu ray release all of Taylor s voice over work was re recorded by veteran voice artist Corey Burton The complete film was originally 124 minutes long due almost entirely to the fact that Taylor s commentaries were more detailed in the roadshow version But the original audio elements for these longer commentaries had deteriorated to the point that they could no longer be used so Corey Burton was selected to re record all of the dialogue for consistency The general release version of Fantasia running 120 minutes is the version most audiences are familiar with In that version Taylor s commentaries were severely abridged bar the introduction to Toccata and Fugue in D Minor 17 The same year 1940 he served the same role as Master of Ceremonies for the classical portion of a Carousel of American Music a famous concert series held in San Francisco on September 24 The concert had Irving Berlin George M Cohan Jerome Kern Hoagy Carmichael WC Handy Johnny Mercer and many more of America s top songwriting talents performing their own compositions The original release was titled Cavalcade of American Music and includes a performance of Taylor s own work Circus Day The recording was added to the National Recording Registry in 2016 citation needed He provided the commentary of the technical story behind the recording of actual cannon fire and carillon for the famous 1954 Mercury Records album by Antal Dorati and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra of Tchaikovsky s 1812 Overture still one of the most highly regarded recordings of that piece and the best selling classical LP of the 1950s citation needed Taylor also recorded commentary for other Mercury recordings Benjamin Britten s The Young Person s Guide to the Orchestra the 1958 stereophonic re make of the 1812 Overture and Frederick Fennell s ground breaking two album The Civil War which featured original music played on period instruments and sound montages narrated by Taylor of period weaponry and music In 1949 Taylor s program Deems Taylor Concerts was on more than 100 radio stations 18 He was also a frequent guest on the radio quiz program Information Please Taylor s work as a broadcaster critic and commentator ultimately overshadowed his work as a composer 16 He hosted and narrated several television music series and documentaries citation needed In the early 1950s he was also a repeat panelist on the NBC game show Who Said That and he was a repeat panelist on What s My Line Taylor was also a friend of the Algonquin Round Table a group of writers actors and critics that met almost daily from 1919 to 1929 at Manhattan s Algonquin Hotel He briefly dated Dorothy Parker In the 1994 film Mrs Parker and the Vicious Circle Taylor was portrayed by the actor James LeGros citation needed Taylor s other personal friendships ranged from composers George Gershwin Vincent Youmans and Jerome Kern to novelists F Scott Fitzgerald and Ayn Rand 19 Deems Taylor Award editTaylor was the third president of ASCAP and held the post for six years The ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards were established in 1967 to honor his memory The Deems Taylor Award recognizes books articles broadcasts and websites on the subject of music selected for their excellence 20 List of compositions editThe Banks o Doon for voice and piano Vocal MusicMarco Takes a Walk OrchestralFair Yolanthe La bele Yolans for voice and piano Vocal Music Art SongThe Faithless Lover L abandonnee for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementFanfare for Russia for brass ensemble Chamber Music FanfareGirometta for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementIn the Country La vie rustique for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementThe King s Henchman opera Opera OperaA Lovely Light for soprano narrator and piano Vocal Music Song CycleMay Day Carol Op 15 Miscellaneous Classical Nay My Years Are Tender Je suis trop jeunette for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementPeter Ibbetson opera Op 20 Opera OperaLa petite robe The little dress for voice and piano Vocal MusicRamuntcho Opera OperaRantin Rovin Robin for voice and piano Vocal Music Art SongThe Siesta La sieste for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementSong to a Sleeping Child for voice and piano Vocal Music Art SongThree Century Suite for orchestra Orchestral SuiteThrough the Looking Glass for orchestra in five movements after the novel by Lewis Carroll OrchestralTime Enough A Man Child s Lullaby for voice and piano Vocal Music Art SongTwenty Eighteen for voice and piano Vocal Music Art SongThe Ways of the World Les belles manieres for voice and piano Vocal Music Folk Song ArrangementOther compositions Lucrece Suite for Strings Casanova Ballet music Circus Day Eight Pictures from Memory orchestral suite Processional for Chorus and OrchestraNotes edit Hansen Liane Algonquin Writers Work No Longer Lost NPR Weekend Edition September 20 2009 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2023 06 13 Pegolotti 2003 7 Howard 1927 p 11 Pegolotti 2003 30 Pegolotti 2003 77 Pegolotti 2003 152 Pegolotti 2003 203 208 239 378 Pegolotti 2003 292 Pegolotti 2003 333 Heinrich Adel 1991 Organ and harpsichord music by women composers an annotated catalog New York Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 38790 6 OCLC 650307517 Howard 1927 p 12 Eddy February 11 1942 Concerts Opera Phila Bow for Taylor Opera Variety Vol 145 no 10 p 33 Howard Taubman 11 February 1942 Premiere is Given of Taylor Opera Ramuntcho Presented at the Philadelphia Academy of Music by Local Company Based on Novel by Loti William Hess Tenor Sings Title Role Dorothy Sarnoff is Heard as Gracieuse The New York Times p 27 Pegolotti 2003 p 182 a b Stevenson 2001 I ve Heard That Voice Before Corey Burton AllEars Net Retrieved 2021 01 26 Deems Taylor Sponsored On Over 100 Stations Variety January 26 1949 p 29 Retrieved January 14 2023 Pegolotti 2003 xxi About the ASCAP Foundation Deems Taylor Virgil Thomson Awards CompetitionReferences editPegolotti James A 2003 Deems Taylor A Biography Boston Northeastern University Press ISBN 1 55553 587 9 Stevenson Robert 2001 Taylor Joseph Deems In Stanley Sadie John Tyrrell eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second ed London Macmillan Publishers Howard John Tasker 1927 Studies of Contemporary American Composers Deems Taylor J Fischer ISBN 978 0 266 81350 7 Further reading editBrody Elaine 1977 The King s Henchman Fifty Years Later Notes Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association 34 no 2 319 322 Levy Newman June 6 1925 Versatility personified Profiles The New Yorker Vol 1 no 16 pp 9 10 Marshall Jennifer 1979 The American Opera Libretto in the 20th Century Miscellanea Musicologica Adelaide Studies in Musicology 10 131 157 Mehrens Christopher Emile 1998 The Critical and Musical Work of Deems Taylor in Light of Contemporary Cultural Patterns PhD diss Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Chapel Hill ISBN 0 591 99576 X Tawa Nicholas E 1994 Mainstream Music of Early Twentieth century America The Composers Their Times and Their Works Contributions to the Study of Music and Dance 28 Westport CT Greenwood ISBN 0 313 28563 2External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deems Taylor Algonquin Round Table online history Jurgen Symphonic Poem and Ballet composed by Deems Taylor James Branch Cabell Literary Life and Legacy Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries Deems Taylor at usopera com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deems Taylor amp oldid 1167272301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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