- Andrew Imbrie
Andrew Walsh Imbrie (April 6, 1921 – December 5, 2007) [http://www.sfcv.org/2007/12/04/in-memoriam-andrew-imbrie/ San Francisco Classical Voice: In memoriam Andrew Imbrie] was an American
composer of contemporary classical music.Career
In 1937, Imbrie went to Paris to study briefly with
Nadia Boulanger . He returned to the United States the next year to attendPrinceton University where he studied withRoger Sessions , receiving his undergraduate degree in 1942. His senior thesis there, astring quartet , was recorded by theJuilliard Quartet . He then went to theUniversity of California, Berkeley , where he received an M.A. in Music in 1947; there he continued to study with Sessions, who had taken a position at Berkeley. Imbrie taught composition, theory, and analysis at Berkeley from 1949 until his retirement in 1991. In addition to his principal teaching job at Berkeley, he served as a visiting professor at theUniversity of Chicago ,Brandeis University ,Northwestern University ,New York University , theUniversity of Alabama , andHarvard University , and had a regular teaching post at theSan Francisco Conservatory . His notable students includedLarry Austin andNeil Rolnick .tyle
Imbrie's style was influenced early by
Béla Bartók , and then by his undergraduate teacher,Roger Sessions : the influence of Sessions was to prove long-lasting. Imbrie prefers harmonies that are non-triadic, or if triadic, non-functional, and he wrote a tightly organized, often atonal contrapuntal texture with attention to careful motivic development; he avoided the serial techniques which dominated art music composition after the Second World War. Imbrie was also attentive to melodic line and shape, as one of the ways to make a free atonal language accessible.Imbrie wrote both vocal and instrumental music; he wrote two operas ("Three Against Christmas", 1960, and "Angle of Repose", 1976), as well as numerous orchestral, chamber, choral, and solo vocal compositions.
Partial Discography
"Andrew Imbrie". New York: Composers Recordings Inc., 1973. Rereleased, New World Records, 2007. [ [http://www.newworldrecords.org/album.cgi?rm=view&album_id=17415 New World Records: Album Details ] ]
*Symphony No. 3
*Serenade for flute, viola and piano
*Sonata for cello and piano "New Music for Virtuosos". New York: New World Records, 1977.
*"Three Sketches"Collage New Music". Boston: GM Recordings, 1989.
*"Pilgrimage"Andrew Imbrie". Boston: GM Recordings, 1993.
*"String Quartet Number 4 & 5"
*"Impromptu for Violin and Piano"Music of Andrew Imbrie". New York: CRI, 1994.
*"Symphony No. 3"
*"Serenade for Flute, Viola and Piano"
*"Sonata for Cello and Piano"Dream Sequence - Chamber Music of Andrew Imbrie". New York: New World Records, 1995.
*"Dream Sequence"
*"Roethke Songs"
*"Three Piece Suite"
*"Campion Songs"
*"To a Traveler"Andrew Imbrie, Requiem". New Rochelle, NY: Bridge Records, 2000.
*"Requiem"
*"Piano Concerto No. 3"Andrew Imbrie". Albany, NY: Albany Records, 2002.
*"Spring Fever"
*"Chicago Bells"
*"Songs of Then and Now"References and further reading
* Ann P. Basart, Martin Brody: "Andrew Imbrie", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed July 21, 2006), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
Notes
External links
* [http://www.sfcm.edu/faculty/imbrie.aspx Imbrie's San Francisco Conservatory Of Music faculty page]
* [http://www.collagenewmusic.org/imbrie.html Collage page about Andrew Imbrie and his music]
* [http://artofthestates.org/cgi-bin/composer.pl?comp=34 Art of the States: Andrew Imbrie] three works by the composer
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