- Kenneth Schermerhorn
Kenneth Dewitt Schermerhorn (
November 20 ,1929 –April 18 ,2005 ) was an Americancomposer andorchestra conductor.Biography
Schermerhorn was born in
Schenectady, New York , where he studiedclarinet ,violin , andtrumpet in school. At age 14, he forged a baptismal certificate to appear older so he could play in a dance band that played in night clubs. He soon created his own five piece band called The Blue Moods. He sang the lead and played trumpet for the group.At 17, he was accepted into the
New England Conservatory of Music , from which he graduated in 1950 with honors. He went on to play trumpet with theBoston Symphony Orchestra and the Kansas City Philharmonic among several other orchestras.Schermerhorn was drafted into the
U.S. Army and in 1953, while serving inGermany , he was assigned to be the conductor of theU.S. Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra. This was his first conducting position and he proved to be quite successful, winning theElizabeth Sprague Coolidge Medal and theHarriet Cohen International Music Award for young conductors.After leaving the Army, Schermerhorn studied and played under
Leonard Bernstein atTanglewood . At Tanglewood Schermerhorn won theSerge Koussevitzky Memorial Conducting Award for two consecutive years. This was a very influential time in Schermerhorn's life. He was quoted as saying of Bernstein, "He was my first real and certainly my most important teacher."Fact|date=May 2008 Later in life, Schermerhorn would serve again under Bernstein as the assistant conductor of theNew York Philharmonic .In 1957, Schermerhorn was appointed to the position of music director of the
American Ballet Theatre . He served in this position until 1968, and then again from 1982–1984. Schermerhorn, however, conducted the 1977television production of "The Nutcracker ", starringMikhail Baryshnikov ,Gelsey Kirkland , and the American Ballet Theatre. He also conducted other ballets that Baryshnikov appeared in during the 1970s, such as "Baryshnikov Dances Sinatra".In 1968, Schermerhorn became the music director and conductor of the
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra . During his time there he was awarded the Sibelius Medal in 1979 from the Finnish government for his outstanding performance of works byJean Sibelius .In 1983 Schermerhorn joined the
Nashville Symphony Orchestra as music director and conductor. He is widely credited with raising the level of excellence of the arts in Nashville. TheSchermerhorn Symphony Center inNashville, Tennessee , is named in his honor. The name of the Symphony Center was announced before his death.Schermerhorn was also the music director of the
Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra between 1984 and 1988. He helped improve the orchestra's quality and made several recordings with the orchestra.Schermerhorn died on
April 18 2005 atVanderbilt University Medical Center after a brief battle withnon-Hodgkin lymphoma .References
* [http://www.nashvillesymphony.org/news/index.php?m=view_news&cID=8&nID=397 Nashville Symphony Obituary]
* [http://www.tennessean.com/obits/archives/05/03/68405583.shtml Tennessean article about Schermerhorn]
* [http://danmiller.typepad.com/dan_millers_notebook/2006/08/maestro.html Maestro!]
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