Lou Harrison
Lou Harrison was one of the most inventive and individual of American composers. His music is noted for its pervasive integration of Native American and Asian musical influences and its emphasis on melody and rhythm, often avoiding harmony altogether.
His family moved from Oregon when he was nine, and continued to move frequently around the San Francisco Bay area. The very diverse musical atmosphere of San Francisco was the primary formative force in his life. He could hear Cantonese opera; Gregorian chant; Spanish, Mexican, and Native-American music; and jazz and classical music. The San Francisco Public Library, with its strong music department, enabled him to take armloads of music home to study. He studied jazz piano, Gregorian chant, and conducting while in high school. He took Henry Cowell's course on "Music of the World's Peoples," further studying counterpoint and composition with Cowell.
He and John Cage both wrote percussion-dominated music and found new percussion instruments in automobile junkyards and import shops; one of their discoveries was the wonderful pitched ringing sound produced by brake drums. Harrison eventually went to the University of California at Los Angeles to work with its dance department. While there, he was a composition pupil of Arnold Schoenberg. Harrison had already developed a love of Renaissance and earlier music. He adopted the old dance form "estampie," a word he translates as "stampede" for his own stamping, highly rhythmic fast movements.
In 1943, he moved to New York where he worked as a musician and writer. It was the unhappiest period of his life; he did not like the place, and found it difficult to make a living, although he did write some 300 music reviews for the Herald Tribune from 1944 to 1947. He developed a stomach ulcer and finally had a nervous breakdown. During this period, he made the acquaintance of Charles Ives and assisted the aged composer by editing and preparing for performance Ives' Third Symphony, which Harrison conducted at its premiere. Ives assisted Harrison financially when needed and, when the Third Symphony won the Pulitzer Prize in Music, Ives gave Harrison half the money.
The 1947 nervous breakdown resulted in Harrison deciding to change his compositional style. He began to imitate the sounds of gamelan orchestra, which he had first heard at the 1939 Golden Gate Exposition. He studied Harry Partch's theoretical book Genesis of a Music (a gift from Virgil Thomson) and was convinced to adopt various forms of just-intonation rather than the standard 12-note scale. (He says he wishes musicians were numerically trained, so that he could say, for instance, "Cellos, you gave me a 10/9 there; please give me a 9/8 instead.")
Harrison subsequently resumed his high productivity, returned to the West coast in 1951 to settle for life in Aptos, California and continued to write music sounding primarily "Pan-Pacific" in style, often for unusual combinations of instruments. He first visited Asia in 1961 at a world music symposium, afterward, he became interested in establishing gamelan orchestras in North America, and devised an "American gamelan" made by his partner William Colvig from readily obtainable materials. He went on to write hundreds of compositions, and his works are often recorded. Harrison developed a system of musical organization based around melodic shapes he calls "melodicles" and analogous rhythmic patterns ("rhythmicals") and durations ("icti controls"). Lou Harrison died in 2003 en route to an Ohio festival dedicated to performances of his works.
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Discography
11 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller
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Lou Harrison: La Koro Sutro
Boston Modern Orchestra Project
Classical - Released by BMOP - sound on 8 Apr 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
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Lou Harrison: Suite for Symphonic Strings / Strict Songs I-IV
Classical - Released by First Edition Music on 9 Sep 2003
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
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Harrison: Suites from the Ballet "Solstice"; A Summerfield Set for Solo Piano; Ariadne; Canticle #3
Dennis Russell Davies, Leta Miller, Nohema Fernandez
Classical - Released by Musical Heritage Society on 18 Nov 2008
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Harrison: Third Symphony & Grand Duo For Violin & Piano
Cabrillo Music Festival Orchestra, Dennis Russell Davies, Romuald Tecco
Classical - Released by Musical Heritage Society on 18 Nov 2008
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Lou Harrison (Studio)
Classical - Released by Phoenix USA on 1 Apr 2007
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Harrison: Suite From The "Marriage At The Eiffel Tower" and Other Works
Brooklyn Philharmonic, Dennis Russell Davies
Classical - Released by Musical Heritage Society on 1 Jan 2000
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
American Music for Harpsichord
Classical - Released by Albany Records on 1 Aug 2001
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Lou Harrison: Four Strict Songs for Eight Baritones and Orchestra - Peter Jona Korn: Variations On a Tune From "The Beggar's Opera," Op. 26
The Louisville Orchestra, Robert Whitney
Classical - Released by First Edition on 23 Jan 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Music Of Lou Harrison (Produced)
Classical - Released by Phoenix USA on 1 Jan 1991
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo