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Henry Cowell
Born: March 11, 1897; Menlo Park, CA   Died: December 10, 1965; Shady, NY  
Of all the early twentieth century American musical revolutionaries, perhaps composer Henry Cowell wielded the most vivid and far-reaching influence. Born in 1897 to a rural California family, Cowell began to study the violin at age five, though his parents' hopes of creating a prodigy on the instrument remained unfulfilled when the lessons had to be stopped on account of the boy's poor health. After his parents' divorce in 1903, Cowell spent ...
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Works
...If He Please" (2)
26 Simultaneous Mosaics (1)
Aeolian Harp (10)
Air and Scherzo (1)
Air for Violin and Strings (1)
American melting pot (1)
Andante for Violin and Cello (1)
Anger Dance (1)
Angus Og (2)
Anti-Modernist Songs (3) (1)
April (1)
Atlantis (1)
Because the Cat (1)
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (1)
Concerto Piccolo (1)
Crane (1)
Dance of Sport (1)
Daybreak (1)
Deep Color (1)
Domnu, the Mother of Waters (1)
Duet for Our Anniversary (1)
Dynamic Motion (4)
Dynamic Motion: Encore no 1, What's This (4)
Dynamic Motion: Encore no 2, Amiable Conversation (3)
Dynamic Motion: Encore no 3, Advertisement (5)
Dynamic Motion: Encore no 4, Antinomy (3)
Dynamic Motion: Encore no 5, Time Table (2)
Elegie (1)
Ensemble: Adagio (2)
Episode (1)
Euphoria (1)
Exultation (6)
Fabric (3)
Fanfare for the Latin American Allies (1)
Firelight and Lamp (2)
For unaccompanied cello (1)
Four Declamations with Return (1)
Gravely and Vigorously "In Memory JFK" (1)
Grinnel Fanfare (1)
Harp of life (1)
Heroic Dance (1)
Homage to Iran (3)
How Old is Song? (2)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 10 for Oboe and Strings (2)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 12 for 3 Horns (1)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 13 for Trombone and Piano (1)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 14 for Organ (1)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 2 for Strings (1)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 2 for Strings - Hymn (2)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 3 (1)
Hymn and Fuguing Tune no 9 for Cello and Piano (2)
I heard in the night (2)
Ings (9) (1)
Invention (2)
Irish Legends (3) for Piano (2)
Irish Suite for String Piano and Chamber Orchestra (1)
Irish Tales (4) for Piano and Orchestra (1)
Jig (2)
Les mariés de la Tour Eiffel: Ritoirnelles (3) for Piano (1)
Manaunaun's Birthing (1)
Mice Lament (1)
Music 1957 (1)
Music I Heard (1)
Music, when Soft Voices Die (1)
Night Fliers (1)
Old American Country Set (1)
Ostinati (3) with Chorales (1)
Ostinato Pianissimo (1)
Paragraphs (7) for Strings Trio (1)
Persian Set (2)
Piano Trio in 9 Short Movements (2)
Pièce pour piano avec cordes (4)
Polyphonica (2)
Prelude for Violin and Harpsichord (1)
Pulse (3)
Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Cello and Harp (2)
Quartet for Strings "Euphometric" (2)
Quartet for Strings no 2 "Movement" (2)
Quartet for Strings no 3 "Mosaic" (2)
Quartet for Strings no 4 "United" (1)
Quartet Romantic (2)
Reel for Small Orchestra no 2 (1)
Return (2)
Rondo for Brass (1)
Scenario (1)
Set of 2 Movements for Piano (1)
Set of Five (3)
Set of Four (2)
Sinfonietta (1)
Sinister Resonance (1)
Six Casual Developments (2)
Six Ings Plus One (1)
Slow Jig (1)
Snows of Fujiyama (1)
Sonata for Cello and Piano in C minor (2)
Sonata for Violin and Piano no 1 (2)
Song of the Songless (1)
Songs (2) on Poems of Catherine Riegger (2)
Songs (3) on Poems of Langston Hughes (1)
Songs (6) on Mother Goose Rhymes: no 1, Curly Locks (1)
Songs (6) on Mother Goose Rhymes: no 3, Three Wise Men (1)
Songs (6) on Mother Goose Rhymes: no 4, Dr. Foster went to Gloucester (1)
Songs (6) on Mother Goose Rhymes: no 5, Goosey (1)
Songs (6) on Mother Goose Rhymes: no 6, Tommy Trot (1)
Sound Form no 1 (1)
Spring Pools (1)
St Agnes Morning (2)
Suite for Small Orchestra (1)
Suite for Violin and Piano (2)
Suite for Woodwind Quintet (2)
Sweet was the song the virgin sung (1)
Symphonic Set, Op. 17 (1)
Symphony no 16 "Icelandic" (2)
Symphony no 7 (2)
Synchrony (1)
Tall Tale (1)
The Banshee (11)
The Donkey (1)
The Dream Bridge (1)
The Fairy Answer (3)
The Hero Sun (1)
The Lilt of the Reel (6)
The Little Black Boy (1)
The Morning Pool (1)
The Pasture (1)
The Tides of Manaunaun (6)
The Universal Flute (2)
The Voice of Lir (2)
Tiger (3)
Triad (1)
Trio "Four Combinations" (4)
Trio for Piano and Strings (1)
Two Bits (2)
Variations for Orchestra (2)
Vestiges (2)
Vocalise for Soprano, Flute and Piano (1)
Wedding Anniversary Music (1)
Where she Lies (1)
Who wrote this fiendish Rite of Spring? (1)
Biography by Blair Johnston
Of all the early twentieth century American musical revolutionaries, perhaps composer Henry Cowell wielded the most vivid and far-reaching influence. Born in 1897 to a rural California family, Cowell began to study the violin at age five, though his parents' hopes of creating a prodigy on the instrument remained unfulfilled when the lessons had to be stopped on account of the boy's poor health. After his parents' divorce in 1903, Cowell spent several years traveling around the country visiting relatives with his mother. It was during one such journey in 1908 that he began to write his own music, his first known effort at composition being an unfinished setting of Longfellow's Golden Legend.

Until he began musical studies with Charles Seeger at the University of California at Berkeley in 1914, Cowell remained a basically self-taught musician, as well as a young man who had never spent so much as a day in school in his life. Seeger was impressed by the young Cowell's output -- over 100 compositions of varying quality by 1914 -- but was much more interested in the young composer's hyper-creative, open-minded musical personality. Free of the often confining attitudes which govern formal musical education, Cowell had come to view any sound as musical substance with which he could work, and his early music owes more to the influence of birdsong, machine noises and folk music than it does to any knowledge of earlier masterworks. In The Tides of Manaunaun, Cowell asks the pianist to use his or her fist, palm, and forearm on the keys of the instrument's bass register to evoke massive tidal waves; thus was born the tone cluster. Cowell used this and similar techniques in many later works, which proved to be highly influential for many of the "sound mass" composers of later decades, including Penderecki, Ligeti, and numerous electronic composers.

However, Seeger felt that without structure and guidelines Cowell would remain an unskilled, if impressively inventive, musician, and he encouraged the young composer to make a rigorous study of traditional harmony and counterpoint. In 1919, at Seeger's suggestion, Cowell finished a systematic treatise on his own music entitled New Musical Resources, in which he discusses new musical techniques, aesthetic directions, and possible alterations to the accepted system of musical notation. Concert appearances throughout North America and Europe during the 1920s earned Cowell countless friends and enemies throughout the musical establishment. Although he had earned the respect of such luminaries as Bartók and Schoenberg, his concerts frequently caused audience riots and invoked the wrath of critics who wondered if Cowell's headstrong independence disguised a lack of true musical craftsmanship. In the Aeolian Harp (1923), for piano, Cowell instructs the pianist to play "inside" the piano by sweeping, scraping, strumming, and muting the strings. The Banshee (1925) applies indeterminacy and graphic notation with instructions for the pianist to play exclusively inside the piano while an assistant holds down the damper pedal. Playing techniques include scraping the strings with a fingernail, and pizzicato effects, all performed in the lowest registers of the instrument, yielding resonant and primarily non-pitched waves of sound.

Later music, such as the Amerind Suite for piano (1939) and the 26 Simultaneous Mosaics (1964) incorporate generous helpings of indeterminacy, though from the 1930s onward, Cowell's compositional language grew increasingly tonal and rhythmically simplified. Cowell died after several years of serious illness.
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