Walter E. AschaffenburgWalter E. Aschaffenburg (1927–2005) was a German-born American composer, who for most of his career taught composition at Oberlin Conservatory of Music. One commentator noted that he "employed the 12-tone system in some of his works, his scores are often embued with a meticulous expressivity." [1] He regarded his greatest work as Bartleby, an opera with a libretto by Jay Leyda, based on the Herman Melville story, Bartleby, and premiered by Oberlin Music Theatre in 1964. He was twice awarded John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowships for Music Composition first in 1955, then again in 1973.[2] He received the Cleveland Arts Prize, as well.[3] In 1987, he married the pianist and music performance professor Rayna Barroll (1930–2016).[4] Education and early careerAschaffenburg came to the United States with his family in 1938. and became a citizen in 1944. During the war he served in the United States Army. He began his formal study of music at the Hartford School of Music, taking his diploma in 1945. He then enrolled at Oberlin College, rather than Oberlin Conservatory, because he preferred a broad program. There he studied with Herbert Elwell. He graduated in 1951,[3] then went on to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., receiving his M.A. in 1952. In the fall of that year he joined the faculty at Oberlin. In 1956, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship to Florence, Italy, where he studied with Luigi Dallapiccola,[1] who was known for being the first Italian composer to adopt 12-note composing.[5][6] At Oberlin along with David Robertson, Richard Hoffmann, Joseph R. Wood initiated the conservatory major in composition in 1956. He became the head of the department of composition. He and his colleagues also established the Oberlin Contemporary Music Festival. Musical careerAschaffenburg's colleague at the Oberlin Conservatory, Randolph Coleman, wrote that "Walter was a traditionalist—as a person, a pedagogue, and a composer." Accordingly, he "favored the historic formal structures of part forms, sonatas, and fugatos, preferring to work his creative juices through the filters of historically tried-and-true parameters rather than to trust willy-nilly improvisation or more recent methodologies that had not yet undergone the imprimatur of time's considerations." [3] While some of his works used the 12-tone system, his music has been characterized as "often embued with a meticulous expressivity."[1] Over his career he wrote some two dozen works. [1] He wrote extensively in many forms, though his most frequently performed piece is a fanfare written for the Cleveland Orchestra to perform as the Blossom Music Center, its summer home.[7] Works for the orchestra ranged from early works such as "Oedipus Rex, overture" (1951) to his final "Oboe Concerto" (1985; 1987), but often wrote music for chamber instruments and piano.[1] The Philadelphia Orchestra principal oboist praised the oboe concerto as "the most impressive contemporary work for the oboe," and it was recorded several times.[7] He also wrote for voice and opera. His miniature opera, "Libertatem Apellant" (1976), which used correspondence between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, incorporated patriotic tunes and Stephen Foster songs. He regarded his greatest work as his 1964 opera based on the Herman Melville story, Bartleby.[7] The New York Times mentioned Aschaffenburg as taking up the challenge of writing American opera. It noted that "difficult as the form is, dubious as the possibility of production and rewards are, opera still continues to attract the American composer."[8] The libretto was written by Jay Leyda, and it was premiered by Oberlin Music Theatre in 1964.[7] Aschaffenburg's colleague, Randolph Coleman, wrote "he was a generous composition and music theory teacher for 40 years, one who gave unstintingly to those who would put forward a serious effort.[3] His students include more than a dozen recognized composers.[9] Selected worksIn order of publication, not necessarily date of composition.
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