- David Wendel Guion
David Wendel Guion (
December 15 ,1892 ,Ballinger, Texas -October 17 ,1981 ), Texancomposer , was best known for his arrangements of cowboy tunes, African American spirituals, and original compositions often inspired by thesoundscape of west Texas.Early life
Guion was born in Texas on
December 15 ,1892 and began to play the piano at an early age. He was intrigued by the cowboys, former cattle drivers, who worked on his father's ranch, and also by the spirituals that he heard whenever a family servant brought him to the services of an African-American church. As a young boy, he was sent by train each Saturday toSan Angelo , where he took piano lessons withCharles Finger , who later became a prolific author and literary magazine editor. In the fall of 1907 he studied at the Whipple Academy inJacksonville, Illinois , after which he continued his studies inFort Worth at Polytechnic College (nowTexas Wesleyan University ) under Wilbur MacDonald. After MacDonald's death in 1912, Guion went toVienna , where he studied at the Imperial Academy of Music withLeopold Godowsky until the spring of 1914. Returning to Texas, Guion taught piano atDaniel Baker College (nowHoward Payne University ) in Brownwood, and also turned his attention to composition. One of his first big hits, a virtuosic arrangement of "Turkey in the Straw ", was performed by many famous pianists, most notablyPercy Grainger .From pianist to cowboy-composer
After Guion's father died in 1920, the family left Ballinger and moved to
Dallas . Guion's father, John Isaac Guion II, was the son of aMississippi governor (John I. Guion ), and served as President of the Board of Directors at A&M College (nowTexas A&M University ), where Guion Hall was built in his honor. In the following decade, David Guion taught atSouthern Methodist University , various private music schools in Dallas,Chicago Musical College , and in summer programs atEstes Park, Colorado . He won first prize in rodeos at Estes Park andCheyenne, Wyoming . Guion was married briefly to Marion Ayers, daughter of the owner of a Dallas department store.Fame on Broadway and on the radio
In 1930 at the
Roxy Theater in New York City, Guion starred in the cowboy show "Prairie Echoes", featuring several of his cowboy songs, including his own version of "Home on the Range". It was Guion's arrangement that transformed "Home on the Range" from a little-known cowboy tune to one of the most famous and popular of all western songs, proclaimed by PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt as his own favorite. Guion did two series of weekly radio shows featuring his own music exclusively: "Hearing America with Guion" (June-Sept. 1931) and "David Guion and Orchestra" (Jan.-Mar. 1932). These programs, which were carried across the country in a coast-to-coast hookup, began the vogue forsinging cowboy s that continued on radio and television through the 1940s and early 1950s. Guion's ballet "Shingandi", originally written for two pianos but later orchestrated byFerde Grofé and introduced byPaul Whiteman 's orchestra in November, 1931 both in a live concert and in a nationwide radio broadcast, is one of the most significant American dramatic works in the style ofprimitivism . Concluding his two-year stay in New York, Guion returned to Dallas in the summer of 1932.Theodore Kosloff choreographed "Shingandi" and gave the work its first performance as a ballet in 1933.Later career
Guion's "My Cowboy Love-Song" was the theme for the show "Cavalcade of Texas", which ran for six months as part of the
Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936. His mother died later that year, after which Guion largely retired from public life, moving to an estate that he called "Home on the Range" along Pohopoco Creek inthe Poconos in Pennsylvania. He lived here until 1965, when his property was condemned for a dam to be constructed along the creek to create Beltzville Lake.The first week of February 1950 was declared David Guion Week and was celebrated with numerous performances across Texas. Climaxing this celebration was a ceremony at
Howard Payne University in which Guion received an honorary doctorate. That same year he received a commission from theHouston Symphony Orchestra to write the fourteen-movement "Texas Suite", which contains several newly-composed pieces along with orchestrations of some of his previous works.Returning from Pennsylvania to Dallas, Guion lived the rest of his life in the same house that had belonged to his mother. He died on October 17, 1981.
Compositions
Among the approximately 200 works by David Guion (some of which are arrangements of folk songs and Black spirituals) are:
*Piano works
**"The Arkansas Traveler"
**"The Harmonica-Player"
**"Minuet"
**"Sheep and Goat"
**"Turkey in the Straw "
**"Valse Arabesque"
**"The Texas Fox Trot" (1915)
*Songs for voice and piano
**"At the Cry of the First Bird"
**"The Bold Vaquero"
**"Embers"
**"Home on the Range"
**"How Dy Do, Mis' Springtime"
**"I Talked to God Last Night"
**"Mary Alone"
**"My Cowboy Love-Song"
**"Nobody Knows de Trouble I Sees"
**"De Ol' ark's a-Moverin"'
**"Prayer"
**"Some o' These Days"
*Ballets
**"Mother Goose"
**"Shingandi"
*Orchestral works
**"Prairie Suite"
**"Texas Suite"References
*Dick, James, "Guion, David Wendel." The
Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.Primary sources
*David Guion Collection, Crouch Fine Arts Library,
Baylor University .
*David Guion Collection, International Festival-Institute,Round Top, Texas .
*David Guion, "My Memoirs" (unpublished), 1975. The Southwest Collection,Texas Tech University .External links
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgu16.html Dick, James. "Guion, David Wendel." The Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.]
* [http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/guion.html David Wendell Guion Collection] at theHarry Ransom Humanities Research Center at theUniversity of Texas at Austin
* [http://jremmers.org/Ragtime/txfoxtrt.mid Midi version of "The Texas Fox Trot"]
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