Sowerby, Leo
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Sowerby, Leo
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Sowerby, Leo
Sowerby, Leo, 1895-1968
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Sowerby, Leo, 1895-1968
Sowerby, Leo, 1933, 1964-66, n.d.
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Sowerby, Leo, 1933, 1964-66, n.d.
Sowerby, Leo, fl. 1956
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Sowerby, Leo, fl. 1956
Sowerby, Leo, composer
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Sowerby, Leo, composer
Sowerby, Leo, 1895-1968. no. 1.
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Sowerby, Leo, 1895-1968. no. 1.
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Biographical History
American composer and church musician.
Composed 1926-27. Chicago, 29 March 1929, Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Frederick Stock coductor.--Cf. Fleisher Collection.
Commissioned by the Louisville Orchestra. Composed 1954. First performance Louisville, 8 January 1955, Louisville Orchestra, Robert Whitney conductor.--Cf. Fleisher Collection.
Uncertain of the number of this symphony as there is no number or date on this manuscript.--Cf. Fleisher Collection.
Leo Sowerby was an American composer and church musician.
Composed 1921-22. First performance Rome, 8 April, 1923, Albert Coates conductor, the composer and Carlo Zecchi, soloists.--Cf. Fleisher Collection.
Leo Sowerby (1895-1968), the son of John and Gertrude Sowerby, was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He moved to Chicago at the age of fourteen, studied piano with Calvin Lampert and Percy Grainger, composition with Arthur Olaf Anderson, and later received his Master of Music degree in 1918 at the American Conservatory, Chicago.
He began his performing career as piano soloist at the Norfolk (Conn.) Festival in 1917 and was later to perform with many other American and European orchestras. In 1917, he enlisted in the U.S. Army. After serving in several ranks including that of bandmaster, with duty in the United States, England, and France, he was discharged in 1919. In 1921 Sowerby was appointed the first American composer to the Rome Prize (Prix de Rome) established in music by the American Academy in Rome. He returned to America three years later.
Sowerby held the position of instructor in theory and composition at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago from 1925-1962 and organist and choirmaster at the(Episcopal) Cathedral of St. James (1927-1962). He later became director of the College of Church Musicians, Washington Cathedral, Washington, D.C. in 1962, a position he held until his death.
Sowerby won a Pulitzer Prize for "distinguished musical composition" in 1945 and became a fellow of the Royal School of Church Music in London in 1957. His memberships include the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, the American Institute of Arts and Letters, and the Cliff Dwellers club of Chicago.
Sowerby's harmonic style of musical composition was modern though he remained within the limits of traditional tonality, employing a strict, formal design. Over his career he produced more than 500 works in every genre but opera, including chamber works, choral pieces, organ pieces, piano pieces, and songs. His outstanding compositions include Comes Autumn Time (1916), Set of Four "Suite of Ironics" (1918), ballad for two solo pianofortes (King Estmere, 1923), Suite "From the Northland" (1927), Symphonic poem "Prairie" (1929), and "Canticle of the Sun," for which he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1945.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/51955896
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q733341
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79095292
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79095292
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/K2MW-1S9
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Musicians
Band music, Arranged
Choruses, Sacred (Mixed voices, 4 parts) with organ
Composers
Jazz
Jews
Music
Music
Music
Music
Orchestral music
Orchestral music
Organ with orchestra
Overtures (Band), Arranged
Pianists
Pianos (2) with orchestra
Pianos (2) with orchestra
Piano with string orchestra
Piano with string orchestra
Sacred songs (High voice) with organ
Sonatas (Violin and piano)
Songs (Medium voice) with instrumental ensemble
Songs (Medium voice) with piano
Symphonic poems
Symphonies
Symphonies
Symphonies (Organ)
Synagogue music
Synagogue music
Toccata
Wind quintets (Bassoon, clarinet, flute, horn, oboe)
Wind quintets (Bassoon, clarinet, flute, horn, oboe)
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Americans
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United States
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