- Mel Powell
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Mel Powell (born Mel Epstein) (February 12, 1923 – April 24, 1998) was a jazz pianist and composer of classical music.
Mel Epstein was born to Russian Jewish parents, Milton Epstein and Mildred Mark Epstein,[1] and began playing piano as a child. He performed jazz professionally in New York City as a teenager. As early as 1939, he was working with Bobby Hackett, George Brunies, and Zutty Singleton. He changed his last name to Powell in 1940.[2]
In 1941-42 he played, composed, and arranged for Benny Goodman. A member of Glenn Miller's Army Air Force Band in 1943-45, he played with Django Reinhardt in Paris at war's end. Powell briefly returned to Goodman's band, then worked in Hollywood after World War II and married actress Martha Scott. In 1948 he played himself in the movie A Song Is Born as the jazz pianist working with Benny Goodman. In this movie he worked along with many other famous jazz players including Louis Armstrong.
After studying at Yale with Paul Hindemith in 1948-1952, he all but gave up jazz for classical composition. He was a member of the composition faculty at Yale from 1958 to 1969, a founder of the Yale Electronic Music Studio and a founding editor of Perspectives of New Music. In 1969 he moved to California to serve as founding dean of the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, California. After serving as acting head of the Institute he was awarded the Roy O. Disney Professorship of music, and taught and composed at CalArts until his death. In 1990 he received the Pulitzer Prize in Music for his concerto for two pianos and orchestra,Duplicates.[3]
In 1987 he returned to jazz to play a jazz festival on the cruise ship SS Norway with Benny Carter, Howard Alden, Milt Hinton, and Louie Bellson. One performance has been documented on the CD release The Return of Mel Powell (Chiaroscuro Records). This CD includes twenty minutes of Powell discussing his life and his reasons for leaving jazz.
His notable students include Justin Connolly, Brian Fennelly, Robert Fruehwald, Walter Hekster, Sean Griffin, Arturo Marquez, Cesar Mateus, Lewis Spratlan, John Stewart, Lois V Vierk, John Ferritto, Sally Lamb and Steven Hoey.
His birth name was Melvin Epstein. He was born in the Bronx, New York City on February 12, 1923, and died in Sherman Oaks, California on April 24, 1998, at age 75.
Quotes
- "Serious new music, like serious old music, isn't made to be dribbled around in a basketball arena."
- "The musician's business is structure..."[4]
- "The musician...is...therefore drawn to a profound science of structure. Looking closely at music itself, he is likely to ask: What changes? When? By how much?...he is...able to feel at home where logicians exhibit techniques for isolating relevant structure."[5]
References
- ^ Balliett, Whitney (2005). American Musicians II: Seventy-One Portraits in Jazz, pp. 174-82. University Press of Mississippi.
- ^ Yanow, Scott (2000). Swing, p. 211. San Francisco: Miller Freeman Books.
- ^ 1990 Pulitzer Prizes
- ^ Mel Powell, "A Note on Rigor," Perspectives of New Music, Spring 1963, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1963), p. 121.
- ^ Mel Powell, "A Note on Rigor," Perspectives of New Music, Spring 1963, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1963), p. 121-122.
External links
- G. Schirmer: Mel Powell Composer profile and work list
- A Multifaceted Musical Personality
- Art of the States: Mel Powell Immobiles (1967)
- GreenManReview.com Review of Powell's The Best Things In Life (Vanguard Records, 1999) by Danny Cohen
- LA Times Obituary 4/25/98, p. 22 (Home edition).
- Solfege, ear training, rhythm, dictation, and music theory : a comprehensive course / Marta Árkossy Ghezzo ; preface by Mel Powell.
- Mel Powell:Remembered by his students
- Mel Powell NPR obituary
- The Mel Powell Papers at Irving S. Gilmore Music Library, Yale University
Pulitzer Prize for Music (1976–2000) - Ned Rorem (1976)
- Richard Wernick (1977)
- Michael Colgrass (1978)
- Joseph Schwantner (1979)
- David Del Tredici (1980)
- Roger Sessions (1982)
- Ellen Zwilich (1983)
- Bernard Rands (1984)
- Stephen Albert (1985)
- George Perle (1986)
- John Harbison (1987)
- William Bolcom (1988)
- Roger Reynolds (1989)
- Mel D. Powell (1990)
- Shulamit Ran (1991)
- Wayne Peterson (1992)
- Christopher Rouse (1993)
- Gunther Schuller (1994)
- Morton Gould (1995)
- George Walker (1996)
- Wynton Marsalis (1997)
- Aaron Jay Kernis (1998)
- Melinda Wagner (1999)
- Lewis Spratlan (2000)
- Complete list
- (1943–1950)
- (1951–1975)
- (1976–2000)
- (2001–2025)
Categories:- 1923 births
- 1998 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- American composers
- Pulitzer Prize for Music winners
- American jazz pianists
- Jewish composers and songwriters
- Yale University alumni
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