Albright, William

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William Hugh Albright was born in Gary, Indiana in 1944. He received his early training at Juilliard and Eastman School of Music, and he earned three degrees from the University of Michigan: Bachelor of Music (Composition) in 1966, Master of Music (Composition) in 1967, and Doctor of Musical Arts (Composition) in 1970. He studied composition with Ross Lee Finney and Leslie Bassett at Michigan, with George Rochberg while he was at the University of Pennsylvania, and with Olivier Messiaen at the Paris Conservatory in 1968-1969. He studied organ with Marilyn Mason at Michigan. He was married twice--to Sarah Ann (Kirk) Albright and Pamela Ann Decker--and had two children, John Kirk Albright and Elizabeth Mae Albright.

Albright is probably best known for his piano and organ performances. He was recognized as a premier organist, performing throughout Europe and North America. He helped to bring about a revival of ragtime, in the vein of Scott Joplin and James P. Johnson, and he sought the inclusion of ragtime and other types of popular music in many of his modernist compositions.

Albright was a prolific composer for many types of single instruments (especially the organ) and ensembles, and for orchestra. He also composed hymns, and was the music director for the First Unitarian-Universalist Church of Ann Arbor, Michigan.

A member of the composition department faculty of the School of Music at the University of Michigan, he participated in a number of innovative projects, such as the famous Once Festival held in Ann Arbor, and the Electronic Music Laboratory.

Albright composed Organbook I, Organbook II, and Organbook III for his principle instrument. They are some of his most popular works and were inspired by a work by one of his mentors, Olivier Messiaen, Livre d'Orgue.

He composed during the sixties and seventies a number of works containing features associated with modernism, such as graphic notation and atonality. (See, for example, Tic and Organbook I.) By the early 1990s, Albright had distanced himself from "New Music" far enough to be less interested in making new music for the sake of the new, beginning to allow more conventional elements back into his works. Rustles of Spring, 1994 is an example of the directions he was taking near the end of his life. After 1994, Albright listed "The Four Expressions" that were represented by his works: aggression, sensuality, humor and spirituality. Take That for four drummers with 16 large drums (1972) he classified as aggression, "Fantasy-Mazurka" from Five Chromatic Dances for piano solo (1976) as sensuality, Doo-dah for three alto saxophones (1974) and King of Instruments for narrator and organ solo (1978) as humor, and Chasm: Symphonic Fragment for orchestra (1985-89) and "Recessional" from Organbook I for solo organ (1967) as spirituality. (William Albright Papers, Box 1, series "Biographical Materials," folder "Miscellaneous").

The range of Albright's music is described in his entry in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians:

"Although his early organ works reflect the influence of Messiaen in their colourful registration and chromaticism, Albright's later works often combine a complex rhythmic and atonal style with elements of American popular music. Though his works are formally concise, he stresses the value of music as communication and the supremacy in music of intuition, imagination and beauty of sound." (1980 ed. s.v. "Albright, William Hugh," by Don C. Gillespie.)

Oct 22 2014 new policy via email, do nothing. William Albright Compositions: 1962 Eleven Short Piano Pieces (Set II) Nine Pieces for Piano 1963 Chorale-Partita in an Old Style on "Wer nur den lieben Gott lasst walten" For Organ Quintet, for flute, clarinet, violin, 'cello, harp Sonata for Oboe and Harpsichord Three Anonymous Lyrics, for soprano, piano, clarinet and cello 1964 Foils for Wind Ensemble Frescos: Four Movements for Woodwind Quartet Salvos: Music for Seven Players 1965 Pianoagogo (written for Russell Peck and Jean-Claude Pennetier), 1965-1966 Two Pieces for Nine Instruments 1966 Caroms for Eight Players Cul-de-sac, for solo dancer and any number of instruments (with tape) Juba, for organ Pneuma, for organ 1967 Amerithon: For solo dancer, any number of instruments, tape (optional), film, projections, and revolving masterworks of art Amerithon: Suggestions for interpretation of score (instrumental) Beulahland Rag (for David Bloch and the Portland Group for New Music), 1967-1969 Bolcom's Rag Imagind Quarter, an incentive for four percussionists (for the New Percussion Quartet of Buffalo, New York) Masculine-Feminine for orchestra Organbook: A set of pieces for pipe organ Three Original Rags: piano solo, 1967-1968 Tic: a spectacle for two groups of performers, soloist, films, and tape 1968 Grand Sonata in Rag Marginal Worlds, for 12 instruments (written for the Julliard Ensemble), 1968-1970 Pour Ceux Qui S'Aiment (words by Albright and E. Kurtz) Three Novelty Rags for piano, 1968-1969 1970 Alliance for Orchestra: A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts (Music: Composition) in the University of Michigan The Dream Rags, for piano Movement I 1971 Danse Macabre (commissioned by Bowdoin College for the Aeolian Chamber Players) Dirty Eloise (with William Bolcom) Mr. Cupid Machine (words and music by William Albright and Bill Bolcom) Organbook II(commissioned by Nonesuch Records and Marilyn Mason) 1972 The Earth is Home (words by Kenneth L. Patton, 1956) Night Procession, for chamber orchestra (commissioned by the St. Paul Philharmonic Society--St. Paul Chamber Orchestra) Take That, for 4 drummers with 16 drums (written for the Blackearth Percussion Group) 1973 An Alleluia Super-Round for Eight or more Singers (similar or mixed voices) and Instruments (optional) (written for the conference, "Music in the Church: A Long View," held by the Schola Contorum at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City) Father, We Thank Thee: A song of thanksgiving for unison choir, soloist or congregation, with piano or organ accompaniment and optional instruments (written for the conference, "Music in the Church;" see above) Gothic Suite for Organ, Strings and Percussion (commissioned by the Syracuse Chapter, American Guild of Organists (AGO)) Stipendium Peccati, for organ, piano and percussion (written for the Hart College of Music Contemporary Organ Workshop 1973, for performance by Catharine Crozier) 1974 Chichester Mass: mixed choir a cappella (commissioned for the ninth centenary of Chichester Cathedral, Sussex, England), revised 1979 Introduction, Passacaglia and Rondo Capriccioso: A concerto for tack piano, seven winds and percussion (commissioned by the University of Wisconsin--River Falls) Mass in D (commissioned by Trinity Church, New York City) Seven Deadly Sins, for flute, clarinet, string quartet, piano, and optional narrator(commissioned by Chamber Music Northwest 1974) Six New Hymns (commissioned by various sources, including the Association of Anglican Musicians in 1981), 1974-1983 1975 Cross of Gold: music-theater for actors, choir and musicians (commissioned by the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle Decennial Celebration) Daydream (written for the Blackearth Percussion Group) Doo-Dah, for 3 alto saxophones (commissioned by Saxophone Service/Dorn Productions) Dream and Dance, for organ and percussion (commissioned by the American Guild of Organists) [composition for Sports Illustrated film: Fun and Games and Deeper Passions] Sweet Sixteenths: a classy rag for piano Sweet Sixteenths: a concert rag for organ 1976 Five Chromatic Dances (commissioned by and dedicated to Thomas Warburton) Jericho: Battle music for organ and trumpet(written for the duo Trompeta Reale, with a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts) Peace Pipe, for two bassoons That Saxophone Rag (arrangement), by Sylvan Grosner and Rowland Fixel 1977 Heater: Saga for solo alto saxophone and band (commissioned by Wapinger Falls (New York) School System) Organbook III, 12 etudes for small organ, 1977-1978 Shadows, eight serenades for guitar (commissioned by the University Musical Society, Ann Arbor) 1978 Full Moon in March (play by W.B. Yeats) Halo, for large organ and metal instruments (commissioned by the American Guild of Organists National Convention Seattle 1978) The King of Instruments: A parade of music and verse for organ and narrator (commissioned by the Holtkamp Organ Company for the inauguration of the new organ at Sacred Heart Church, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana, April 20, 1978) 1979 The Birth of Jesus/Alleluia for treble voices (SA) and organ with optional mixed choir (SATB) and optional Bells (commissioned by Robert Bishop, dedicated to Dr. and Mrs. C.L. Bishop on their fiftieth anniversary) Four Fancies for harpsichord (composed for Douglas Reed with a grant from the Mesker Trust Fund, Evansville, Indiana) 1980 Birthday Canons De Spiritum, organ solo with 2 assistants (commissioned by Marilyn Mason) Sweet Sixteenths: a cakewalk for clarinet, trombone, violoncello, piano (commissioned by the Warsaw Music Workshop) 1981 Bacchanal for Organ Solo and Orchestra (commissioned by the University of Nebraska for their conference, "The Organ in the Concert Hall") Pax in Terra, mixed choir, a cappella with soprano and tenor soli (commissioned by the University of Michigan Law School for the dedication of their library addition, October 31, 1981) Romance, for french horn and organ(commissioned by John Holtz of the Hartt School of Music) 1982 David's Songs, for SATB (soloists or chorus) and organ (commissioned by Plymouth Congregational Church, Minneapolis) The Enigma Syncopations, for flute (piccolo), contrabass, percussion (1) and organ (commissioned by the Cathedral of St. John, Wilmington, Delaware) That Sinking Feeling (morceau de concours) (commissioned for the International Organ Performance Competition at the University of Michigan) 1983 Brass Tacks--Ragtime March (commissioned by the Spokane Falls Brass Band) In memoriam (commissioned for publication in Das neue Orgelalbum II, Universal Edition) A Song to David: for antiphonal choirs, soloists, organ, poem by Christopher Smart (commissioned by the Cathedral Church of St. Mark, Minneapolis) 1984 Canon in D (Berimbau!) (commissioned by the duo Gary Karr/Harmon Lewis) 1732: in memoriam Johannes Albrecht(commissioned by Robert Anderson, Southern Methodist University, for premiere at the St. Nikolai Church, Leipzig, during the Church Music Festival, Bach Tercentenary, 1985) Sonata for Alto Saxophone and Piano(commissioned through the National Endowment for the Arts by Saxophone/Piano duos: Sinta/Weckler, Wytko/Cosand, Hunter/Connely) 1985 Carillon-Bombarde for Organ (commissioned by Margaret Lee Crofts for the re-dedication of the historic Chapman tracker organ at St. Margaret's Church, Staatsburg-on-Hudson, New York) Chasm for pipe organ (with optional "echo" instrument) (commissioned by the Detroit and Ann Arbor Chapters of the American Guild of Organists for the National Convention, 1986) Sphaera, for piano and computer generated four-channel tape (commissioned by the Experimental Music Studio of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with funding from the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities) 1986 Symphony for Organ, with percussion (or pre-recorded tape) (commissioned by the University of Evansville and the UE Friends of Music with the support of the Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts) Take Up the Song, for mixed choir, soprano solo and piano (commissioned by the Unitarian Universalist Musicians Network for the Service of the Living Tradition at the General Assembly of the Unitarian-Universalist Church, June 25, 1986, Rochester, New York) Three New Chestnuts, for two harpsichords (commissioned by the Alienor foundation) 1987 Antigone's Reply (Sophocles) (commissioned by the University of Michigan Law School) Four Dance Tributes, for piano solo, 1987-1996 Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet (commissioned by a consortium of Chamber Music Northwest, Music Festival of Florida and the Toledo Symphony Chamber Music Series, supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts) Saints Preserve Us: Three "Etudes-prieres" for Solo Clarinet (commissioned by Father Robert Onofrey) Shepherd of All Who Inhabit the Earth(hymn; commissioned by Robert Anderson for Robert Baker) Stoptime for George's Birthday(commissioned by Gene Rochberg for George's 70th birthday celebration) 1988 Abiding Passions for Woodwind Quintet(for the Sierra Wind Quintet, Quintet-in-residence at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas) Deum de Deo: A trilogy of pieces for mixed chorus with organ or piano accompaniment (commissioned by Central United Methodist Church of Lansing, Michigan) The Machine Age: A set of short piano pieces for our time (commissioned by the Music Teachers Association of California) Sleight of Hand Rag arrangement (from Three Novelty Rags) 1989 Valley of Fire for sax quartet and organ Whistler Nocturnes (commissioned by the Howard Art Museum) 1990 Organ Improvisation Themes 1991 Concerto for Harpsichord and String Orchestra (Commissioned by the Cleveland Museum of Art for their 75th Anniversary. Second movement commissioned by the Cleveland Chamber Orchestra.) Flights of Fancy: Ballet for Organ (commissioned by the American Guild of Organists for the Biennial National Convention Atlanta, Georgia, June-July, 1992), 1991-1992 New Leaves, for piano solo, Volume One (commissioned for FJH Music by Faber and Faber) Odds and Ends, for piano solo A Ragtime Lullaby (written for Karen McFarlane's fiftieth birthday, January 2, 1992) 1992 Deo Gratias[from Deo de Deus]: arrangement for voice and 5 players Dona Nobis Pacem, for mixed chorus and piano (commissioned by the Ann Arbor Cantata Singers) The Eleventh Hour The Great Amen, for flute and piano (commissioned by Jill Felber, Penelope Fischer and Karen Johnson) 1993 Fantasy-Etudes for Saxophone Quartet (for the Prism Quartet, commissioned by Chamber Music America with funds from the Pew Charitable Trusts) Pit Band, for alto saxophone, bass clarinet and pianoforte (commissioned by Monmouth State College, Oregon, for the ensemble, Soundmoves) 1994 Rustles of Spring, 1994, for flute, alto saxophone, violin, violoncello, pianoforte (commissioned by the Meet the Composer/Reader's Digest Commissioning Program, and the national Endowment for the Arts and the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund) 1996 Bells in the Air for Carillon: A set of six pieces (Commissioned by former Engineering School Dean and Mrs. Peter Banks) Cod Piecefrom "Fish Music" (commissioned by Ron Ebrecht) Missa Brevis, for soprano or unison treble voices and organ (commissioned by Karen McFarlane and Chris Holtkamp in honor of Walter Holtkamp, Jr.'s forty years of organ building) Post Modern Fox Trot, for Glenn Watkins 1997 Chorale-Prelude for Advent: Nun komm der Heiden heiland (Savior of the nations, come!) (commissioned for A New Liturgical Year, Augsburg-Fortress Press, John Ferguson, editor) Flights of Fancy: Ballet for Band (commissioned by the University of Michigan Symphony Bands for their Centennial Celebration, 1997) Postcards from Kansas: Welcome to Interstate-70 1998 [Calgary Organ Concerto] (unfinished) Undated Bells in the Air: Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra Burnt-Fingers (a Characteristic Two-Step) Cortege Flourish [for percussion and vibraphone] Movement, for woodwind quintet Old Tom Turpin Paroxysms, for clarinet and piano Tower of Babel: Rag and Two-Step after Bruegel Vision, by Don West

From the guide to the William Albright Papers, 1962-1998, (Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn John Watts Papers, 1945-1982 Fales Library & Special Collections
creatorOf William Albright Papers, 1962-1998 Bentley Historical Library
referencedIn George Cacioppo papers, 1939-1985 Bentley Historical Library
referencedIn Arkansas History Commission. William P. Albright [graphic]. Arkansas History Commission
referencedIn Contemporary Dance Trust Archive, 1957-1998 V & A Department of Theatre and Performance
referencedIn Nicolas Slonimsky Collection, 1873-1997, (bulk 1920-1990) Library of Congress. Music Division
referencedIn Aaron Copland Collection, 1841-1991, (bulk 1911-1990) Library of Congress. Music Division
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Banfield, William C., 1961- person
associatedWith Bassett, Leslie, 1923- person
associatedWith Bolcom, William person
associatedWith Cacioppo, George. person
associatedWith Chambers, Evan K., 1963- person
associatedWith Contemporary Dance Trust corporateBody
associatedWith Copland, Aaron, 1900-1990 person
associatedWith Curtis-Smith, C. (Curtis) 1941- person
associatedWith Finney, Ross Lee, 1906- person
associatedWith First Unitarian Universalist Church (Ann Arbor, Mich.) corporateBody
associatedWith Hershey, Sharon. person
associatedWith Hodkinson, Sydney. person
associatedWith Messiaen, Olivier, 1908- person
associatedWith Morris, Robert, 1943- person
associatedWith Rouse, Steve person
associatedWith Schwartz, Elliott, 1936- person
associatedWith Slonimsky, Nicolas, 1894-1995 person
associatedWith University of Michigan. Contemporary Directions Ensemble. corporateBody
associatedWith University of Michigan. School of Music. corporateBody
associatedWith Watts, John, 1930-1982 person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Composition (Music)
Electronic music
Improvisation (Music)
Music
Music
Music
Orchestral music
Orchestral music
Organ music
Piano music
Ragtime music
Occupation
Composers
Activity

Person

Birth 1944-10-20

Death 1998-09-17

Americans

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