- Ulysses Kay
Ulysses KSimpson Kay (
January 7 ,1917 , Tucson,Arizona –May 20 ,1995 , Englewood,New Jersey ) was anAfrican-American composer . Hismusic is mostly neoclassical in style.Ulysses Kay, the nephew of the classic jazz musician
King Oliver , studied piano, violin and saxophone. Kay attended theUniversity of Arizona where he was encouraged by the African-American composerWilliam Grant Still . He went for graduate work to theEastman School of Music inRochester, New York , and there worked underHoward Hanson andBernard Rogers .Ulysses Kay met the eminent neoclassical composer
Paul Hindemith in the summer of 1941 at the Berkshire Music Center and followed Hindemith to Yale for a formative year of study from 1941 to 1942.After a stint as a musician in the Navy during the
World War II , Ulysses Kay studied atColumbia University under Otto Luening with the assistance of a grant from the Julius Rosenwald Fund. In addition to this prize, Kay received a series of five other significant awards in the year following his discharge from the Navy including the Alice M. Ditson Fellowship, a grant from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, an award from the American Composers and American Broadcasting Company, a $500 award from the third annual George Gershwin Memorial Contest for "A Short Overture," and a $700 award from the American Composers Alliance for his "Suite for Orchestra."Following this successful period, he lived and studied further in
Rome from 1949 to 1953 thanks to aFulbright Scholarship , thePrix de Rome and a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship.Kay worked for Broadcast Music, Inc., a performing arts organization, from 1953 to 1968. In 1968 he was appointed distinguished professor at
Lehman College of theCity University of New York . After two decades teaching there, he retired.ource
*Program notes by Dominique-René de Lerma for the African Heritage Symphonic Series Volume II (Cedille Records CDR 90000 061)
External links
* [http://www.cbmr.org/pubs/kay.htm Center for Black Music Research]
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