- Francis Judd Cooke
Francis Judd Cooke (b.
Honolulu ,Hawaii ,December 28 ,1910 ; d. Lexington,Massachusetts , May 1995) was an American composer, organist, cellist, pianist, conductor, choir director, and professor.Cooke was born in Honolulu to a family of
New England missionaries turned cattle ranchers. (He was the great grandson ofGerrit P. Judd , the first doctor to reside in Hawaii). Cooke began composing at an early age and his first serious pieces date from age 14. He received a B.A. in music fromYale University in 1933, then studied for two years withCharles Martin Loeffler inMedfield, Massachusetts . In 1935 he went toScotland to study withDonald Francis Tovey at theUniversity of Edinburgh , receiving a Mus. Bac. (Bachelor of Music) degree with First Class Honours in 1938. While studying in Scotland he met and married violist May Ludwig. They settled inLexington, Massachusetts , where they raised six children.In 1939 Cooke began teaching at the
New England Conservatory of Music , at the request of the Conservatory's then-director,Quincy Porter . His notable students there included John Bavicchi,Sarah Caldwell ,Héctor Campos-Parsi , Stephen Casale, Robert Ceely,Robert Cogan , Lyle Davidson,Halim El-Dabh , David Epstein, Ercolino Ferretti, William Hibbard, Billy Jim Layton, Ruth Lomon,Kenneth Peacock , Richard Ronsheim, Albert Tepper, and Luise Vosgerchian. He retired in 1970.He also taught at
Yale University in 1959-1960 and atWellesley College from 1973 to 1979.A prolific composer, Cooke wrote a great number of choral and orchestral works, as well as chamber works. One CD of his music, entitled " [http://www.mmcrecordings.com/detail.asp?id=39 The Warsaw Recordings] " (which he did not live to hear), has been released.
In 1974 he completed a music textbook entitled "Sixteenth-Century Vocal Polyphony". In the same year he was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from the New England Conservatory.
Cooke suffered a stroke in 1981, hampering his organ playing and choir directing, and he turned to composing full-time during the last 14 years of his life. In May 1995, at the age of 84, he died in his sleep at his home in Lexington, Massachusetts, where he had lived for 51 years. He had, that very morning, completed a movement for wind quintet ("Dolce assai"), which was performed at his memorial service the following week at Lexington's First Parish Church (Unitarian), where he had served as organist and choirmaster from 1955 to 1981. [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:6TQmvyY0-SoJ:www.musicfortheloveofit.com//Archive/1995/Jun95.pdf+%22francis+judd+cooke%22+obituary&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1]
Cooke, who greatly enjoyed poetry, used to sum up his own life with a favorite couplet from the Indian poet
Rabindranath Tagore 's "Gitanjali "::"It was my part at the feast to play upon my instrument:And I have done all I could." [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:6TQmvyY0-SoJ:www.musicfortheloveofit.com//Archive/1995/Jun95.pdf+%22francis+judd+cooke%22+obituary&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1]
Published writings
*Review of "Modal Counterpoint in the Style of the Sixteenth Century" by
Ernst Krenek . "Journal of Music Theory", vol. 4, no. 1 (April 1960), pp. 112-116.External links
* [http://www.mmcrecordings.com/artist.asp?id=423 Francis Judd Cooke biography]
* [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:6TQmvyY0-SoJ:www.musicfortheloveofit.com//Archive/1995/Jun95.pdf+%22francis+judd+cooke%22+obituary&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1 Francis Judd Cooke obituary]
* [http://www.mmcrecordings.com/detail.asp?id=39 "The Warsaw Recordings" CD]
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