Seyfrit, Michael

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1947
Birth 1947
Death 1994

Biographical notes:

Biography

Michael Seyfrit, composer, instrumentalist, writer, and teacher, was born in Lawrence, Kansas, on December 16, 1947, and was raised in Pasco, Washington, and Piqua, Ohio. He earned a B.Mus. and an M.Mus at the University of Kansas, a second M.Mus. at The Julliard School (1972), and a D.M.A. at the University of Southern California (1974). Seyfrit did research and historical orchestrations for the Smithsonian Institution s Divisions of Musical Instruments and Performing Arts, and served as a curator of musical instruments at the Library of Congress for four years, during which time he compiled volume 1 of the catalogue of musical instruments in the Dayton C. Miller Flute Collection (1982). He also wrote the articles on woodwind instruments for the 1986 edition of The New Harvard Dictionary of Music . As a composer, Seyfrit received the Charles Ives Scholarship from the national Academy of Arts and Letters. Seyfrit was also active as an instrumentalist on recorder, baroque oboe, and baroque flute, and performed and recorded with the Smithsonian Chamber Players, as well as Hesperus, Wondrous Machine, the Berkeley Collegium Musicum, the Portland Baroque Orchestra, and the Early Music Guild of Oregon. He spent his final years working as a computer programmer. He died of AIDS in Portland, Oregon, on May 29, 1994, at the age of 46.

Source:

The Estate Project for Artists with Aids , http://www.artistswithaids.org/artforms/music/catalogue/seyfrit.html , accessed on December 19, 2006.

From the guide to the Leland Bard collection on Michael Seyfrit, 1970-1992, (ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives.)

Links to collections

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Information

Subjects:

  • AIDS (Disease)
  • Choruses, Secular (Men's voice) with instrumental ensemble
  • Flute music
  • Gay men and musicals
  • Instrumental ensembles
  • Music
  • Musicals
  • Oboe and violoncello with instrumental ensemble
  • Orchestral music
  • Quartets (Clarinet, flute, marimba, timpani)
  • Symphonies
  • Symphonies (Band)
  • Violin and piano music
  • Vocal duets with piano
  • Wind quartets (Bassoon, clarinet, English horn, oboe)

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

not available for this record