Did you mean: Douglas Lilburn (Classical Musician), Lilburn (GA), US ZIP code 30047 (US ZIP code: Lilburn, GA), US ZIP code 30048 (US ZIP code: Lilburn, GA)

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Douglas Lilburn

  • Born 1915
  • Died 2001
  • Genres: Orchestral

Biography

Douglas Lilburn has for decades been considered to be New Zealand's premier composer. He studied at the University of Canterbury and at the Royal College of Music with Vaughan Williams. He taught for many years at the Victoria University at Wellington. In addition to a large body of instrumental works, he has also composed in the field of electronic music, an important work here being The Return, a sound image setting of a poem by Alistair Campbell.

His Aotearoa Overture is one of his most popular works. The word means "Land of the Long White Cloud" and was what New Zealanders called their country before the Dutch arrived and renamed it. A brief work of elegantly overlaid sustained chords, restrained and touching.

The Third Symphony of 1961 is a remarkable work for its refined style and intelligent working of limited materials; in one movement made up of five interrelated sections, Lilburn's post-Romanticism winds through many groups of variations and ends quite unexpectedly in a sort of broken coda. If his style might be compared to anyone's it might be Arthur Bliss with a touch of Havergal Brian.

The three symphonies have been recorded by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra on a Continuum CD #1069; His Diversions for Strings (1947) and Landfall in Unknown Seas for speaker and orchestra (1942) are available on a CD from Koch International #7260. ~ Philip Krumm, All Music Guide

 
 
Music Encyclopedia: Douglas (Gordon) Lilburn

( b Wanganui, 2 Nov 1915). New Zealand composer. He studied at the RCM (1937-40), where Vaughan Williams was a decisive influence, and in 1947 began teaching at Victoria University, Wellington; in the early 1960s he established the first electronic music studio in Australasia and he has trained a generation of young composers. His earlier works, including the overture Aotearoa (1940) and his first two symphonies (1948, 1951), are in a diatonic style sensitive to the New Zealand landscape. He then drew on Bartók, Stravinsky, contemporary Americans and the Second Viennese School in developing his style towards the Third Symphony (1961), after which he began to compose electronic music (Three Inscapes, 1972).



 
Wikipedia: Douglas Lilburn

Professor Douglas Gordon Lilburn ONZ FRCM (2 November 1915 - 6 June 2001) was a prolific and influential New Zealand composer.

He was born in Wanganui, New Zealand, in 1915. He attended Waitaki Boys' High School from 1930 to 1933, before moving to Christchurch to study at Canterbury University College (then part of the University of New Zealand) (1934–36). In 1937 he began studying at the Royal College of Music, London. He was tutored in composition by Ralph Vaughan Williams and remained at the College until 1939. The two men remained close: in later years Lilburn was known to send Vaughan Williams gifts of New Zealand honey, knowing that the older man was fond of it.

Lilburn returned to New Zealand in 1940 and served as guest conductor in Wellington for three months with the NBS String Orchestra. He shifted to Christchurch in 1941 and worked as a freelance composer and teacher until 1947. Between 1946 and 1949 and again in 1951, Lilburn was Composer-in-Residence at the Cambridge Summer Music Schools.

During these years he was heavily involved in New Zealand arts activity, and became friends with other artists such as Allen Curnow, Denis Glover, Rita Angus, and Alistair Campbell.

In 1947 Douglas Lilburn shifted to Wellington to take up a position at Victoria University as part-time tutor in music. He was appointed full-time Lecturer in 1949 and Senior Lecturer in 1955. In 1963 he was made Associate Professor of Music and was appointed Professor with a personal chair in Music in 1970. In 1966 Lilburn founded the Electronic Music Studio at the university and was its Director until 1979, a year before his retirement.

Lilburn was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Otago in 1969 and in 1978 was presented with the Citation for Services to New Zealand Music by the Composers' Association of New Zealand. In 1988 he was awarded the Order of New Zealand.

Prizes and Scholarships included:

  • the Percy Grainger Competition, 1936, for his tone poem Forest
  • the Cobbett Prize, Royal College of Music, 1939 for Phantasy for String Quartet
  • the Foli Scholarship and Hubert Parry Prize, Royal College of Music, 1939
  • three out of four of the prizes in the New Zealand National Centennial Music Celebrations Competitions, 1940
  • the Philip Neill Memorial Prize 1944.

Douglas Lilburn was founder of Waiteata Press Music Editions in 1967 and founder of the Lilburn Trust of the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, 1984. His writings include A Search for Tradition, a talk given at the first Cambridge Summer School of Music in January 1946 (Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington 1984) and A Search for Language, a University of Otago Open Lecture, March 1969 (Alexander Turnbull Library, 1985).

Douglas Lilburn, described as "the elder statesman of New Zealand music" and the "grandfather of New Zealand music," died peacefully at his home in Wellington on 6 June 2001.

Lilburn's former house, at 22 Ascot St, was purchased by the Lilburn Residence Trust, a charitable trust based in Wellington, on 5 August 2005. The Trust is currently offering use of the residence to the New Zealand School of Music/Creative New Zealand Composer-in-Residence.

Works

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Persondata
NAME Lilburn, Douglas Gordon
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Musical composer
DATE OF BIRTH November 2, 1915
PLACE OF BIRTH Wanganui, New Zealand
DATE OF DEATH June 6, 2001
PLACE OF DEATH Wellington, New Zealand

 
 

Did you mean: Douglas Lilburn (Classical Musician), Lilburn (GA), US ZIP code 30047 (US ZIP code: Lilburn, GA), US ZIP code 30048 (US ZIP code: Lilburn, GA)

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Douglas Lilburn" Read more

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