In 1939, his Danse won 2nd prize in the Kansas state music club piano composition contest.[5] He joined NBC Radio as staff composer in New York in 1940. By the end of 1940 he was in Hollywood, where the army recruited him (with rank of Corporal) to be music director for the Motion Picture Bureau at the Office of War Information. During World War II, he composed and conducted the music scores of many of the OWI's films, including for their Overseas Film Unit, which took him to England in 1944.[6]
He was an editor for Mercury Music Corporation, editing their American Music for Piano series.[7]
In 1943, he was a board member of the Los Angeles-based Musicians' Congress Committee (along with Aaron Copland, Darius Milhaud, Lena Horne, William Grant Still and other musical luminaries). This committee was formed and sponsored by Max Silver with a goal of promoting American art music during the war, and was suspected of being a Communist front.[8][9]
In 1945 Kubik had successfully sued the membership organization American Composers' Alliance for licensing his music for profit without his consent.
Between his Pulitzer Prize, and the success of his score for UPA's Gerald McBoing-Boing, his reputation was such that in 1953 he signed a guaranteed publishing contract with ASCAP's Chappell Music. The musical trades positioned this deal as part of an ongoing competition between ASCAP and BMI for the prestige of signing contracts with respected composers.[10]
From 1963 to 1983 he lived in Venasque, France. From 1970 until his death, he was composer-in-residence at Scripps College in Claremont, California.
He was a National Patron of Delta Omicron, an international professional music fraternity.[11] He was on the national advisory board for the University of Missouri Kansas City's Institute for Studies in American Music founded in 1967.[12] He was a Guggenheim fellow in 1944 and 1965,[13] and was a permanent Fellow at MacDowell.[14] He was one of the composers interviewed for Irwin Bazelon's book Knowing the Score: Notes on Film Music.[15] He was the dedicatee of Ingolf Dahl's 1944 Music for Brass Instruments.[16]
Works
American Caprice for piano and orchestra (1933 ; orch. 1936)
Piano Trio (1934)
Violin Concerto, Op. 4 (1934/36, dedicated to Jascha Heifetz)
Danse for piano (1939)
Violin Concerto No. 2 (1940/41, dedicated to Ruggiero Ricci)
Suite for 3 recorders (1941)
Sonatina for Piano (dedicated to Walter Piston) (1941)
Sonatina for clarinet and piano (dedicated to Nadia Boulanger) (1959)
String Quartet (1960)
In Praise of Johnny Appleseed (for bass, chorus, and orchestra), based on the Vachel Lindsay poem, entered into the 1942 National Federation of Music Clubs' choral composition contest. (Kettering won this contest with a work based on a Vachel Lindsay Johnny Appleseed poem)[19]
Symphony for 2 pianos (reworked from Symphony No. 1) (1949–79)
Music for Cleveland, for piano, premiered July 25, 1968 by Jacob Maxin[20]
Prayer and Toccata for 2 pianos and organ (1969–79)
Opera
Boston Baked Beans (1952)
A Mirror for the Sky (a folk opera, first performed 1957)
C-Man (1949), including the song Do It Now, written with Larry Neill.[22]
Gerald McBoing-Boing (1950 cartoon based on a story by Dr. Seuss); Kubik composed also a longer version which is sometimes performed as a narrated concert piece with Dr. Seuss's text
The Miner's Daughter (1950)
Two Gals and a Guy (1951, aka Baby and Me) (incidental music, also served as musical director)