Composer
William Schuman (1910-1992); USA
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William Schuman's 60-year career as a composer and an educator left an indelible mark on several generations of American musicians. Schuman began exploring jazz and popular music while attending public school, eventually forming an ensemble of his own (in which he played violin and banjo). Abandoning a career in commerce, Schuman enrolled in the Juilliard Summer School, and, in 1933, entered Columbia University's Teacher's College, eventually taking his bachelor's and master's degrees. After summer study at the Salzburg Mozarteum in 1935 and the completion of his First Symphony in 1936 (a work subsequently withdrawn by the composer) he received private instruction from well-known American composer Roy Harris.
Schuman found an ally in conductor Serge Koussevitsky, who, at Harris' prompting, premiered the Symphony No. 2 in 1938 (also subsequently withdrawn). Between 1938 and 1945 Schuman served as director of publications for G. Schirmer, Inc. as well as on the faculty of Sarah Lawrence College, leaving this post to take over as president of the Juilliard School (where he remained until 1961, initiating a wide range of new projects and policies, including the complete reorganization of the theory/composition program and the creation of the Juilliard String Quartet). Other administrative positions throughout his long career include serving as president of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (1962-1969), director of the Koussevitsky Music Foundation, director of the Chamber Music Society at Lincoln Center, and director of the Walter W. Naumberg Foundation. Late in life he was awarded the National Medal of the Arts (1987), and was among those premiere American artists honored at the Kennedy Center in 1989.
Already an established composer in the early 1940s, Schuman was thrust into the national and international limelight when the very first Pulitzer Prize in music was bestowed upon him in 1943 (for his cantata A Free Song). His Third Symphony, along with Harris' and Copland's Third Symphonies, is considered by many to be the pinnacle of American symphonic achievement, with lofty aesthetic aims and rigorous contrapuntal structure. The Violin Concerto of 1959 (first composed in 1947, but heavily revised during the following decade) is an important American contribution to the genre, although, like most of Schuman's work, it has fallen into disuse.
© Blair Johnston, All Music Guide
Schuman found an ally in conductor Serge Koussevitsky, who, at Harris' prompting, premiered the Symphony No. 2 in 1938 (also subsequently withdrawn). Between 1938 and 1945 Schuman served as director of publications for G. Schirmer, Inc. as well as on the faculty of Sarah Lawrence College, leaving this post to take over as president of the Juilliard School (where he remained until 1961, initiating a wide range of new projects and policies, including the complete reorganization of the theory/composition program and the creation of the Juilliard String Quartet). Other administrative positions throughout his long career include serving as president of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (1962-1969), director of the Koussevitsky Music Foundation, director of the Chamber Music Society at Lincoln Center, and director of the Walter W. Naumberg Foundation. Late in life he was awarded the National Medal of the Arts (1987), and was among those premiere American artists honored at the Kennedy Center in 1989.
Already an established composer in the early 1940s, Schuman was thrust into the national and international limelight when the very first Pulitzer Prize in music was bestowed upon him in 1943 (for his cantata A Free Song). His Third Symphony, along with Harris' and Copland's Third Symphonies, is considered by many to be the pinnacle of American symphonic achievement, with lofty aesthetic aims and rigorous contrapuntal structure. The Violin Concerto of 1959 (first composed in 1947, but heavily revised during the following decade) is an important American contribution to the genre, although, like most of Schuman's work, it has fallen into disuse.
© Blair Johnston, All Music Guide
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Orchestral Works
75 tracks
- New England Triptych, 3 pieces for orchestra or band
21 tracks
- American Hymn, variations for orchestra, concert band, or brass quintet
2 tracks
- American Festival Overture, for orchestra
1 track
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Symphonies
37 tracks
- Symphony No.3
8 tracks
- Symphony No.4
3 tracks
- Symphony No.5 ('Symphony for Strings')
9 tracks
- Symphony No.6
1 track
- Symphony No.7
4 tracks
- Symphony No.8
6 tracks
- Symphony No.9
3 tracks
- Symphony No.10 ('American Muse')
3 tracks
- Symphony No.3
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Concertos
5 tracks
- Violin Concerto
4 tracks
- A Song of Orpheus, fantasy for cello & orchestra
1 track
- Violin Concerto
- Variations on "America" (after Charles Ives)
5 tracks
- A Prayer in Time of War, for orchestra
1 track
- Circus Overture, for orchestra (also version for concert band arr. by D. Owen)
2 tracks
- The Orchestra Song, for orchestra
1 track
- New England Triptych, 3 pieces for orchestra or band
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Band
6 tracks
- Chester: Overture for Band
1 track
- George Washington Bridge, for concert band
3 tracks
- Chester -- Overture for Band
2 tracks
- Chester: Overture for Band
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Vocal Works
6 tracks
- Orpheus with His Lute, for voice & piano (also versions for chorus & piano; women's chorus & piano)
1 track
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Choral Works
5 tracks
- Carols of Death, pieces (3) for chorus
3 tracks
- A Free Song, Secular Cantata No.2
2 tracks
- Carols of Death, pieces (3) for chorus
- Orpheus with His Lute, for voice & piano (also versions for chorus & piano; women's chorus & piano)
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Stage Works
38 tracks
- A Question of Taste, opera in 1 act
13 tracks
- Judith ('choreographic poem')
1 track
- Night Journey, ballet
1 track
- The Mighty Casey, baseball opera in 3 scenes
23 tracks
- A Question of Taste, opera in 1 act
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Chamber Works
1 track
Below are works by W.Schuman that every music lover should explore:



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