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Jerome Moross

 
Music Encyclopedia: Jerome Moross

(b Brooklyn, 1 Aug 1913; d Miami, 25 July 1983). American composer. He worked in Hollywood as an arranger (1940-48) and wrote him scores, stage pieces (many in hybrid or experimental forms), orchestral and chamber music; they combine spontaneous, popular appeal with strength of musical purpose.



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Actor: Jerome Moross
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  • Born: Aug 01, 1913 in Brooklyn, New York
  • Died: Jul 25, 1983 in Miami, Florida
  • Active: '50s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Rachel, Rachel, The Big Country, The Cardinal
  • First Major Screen Credit: Nobody Lives Forever (1946)

Biography

Jerome Moross spent just over 20 years writing music for movies in a career that encompassed music for the concert hall, the ballet stage, and the Broadway theater across 50 years. In the process, he composed one of the most beloved and popular Western movie scores of the '50s, the music for William Wyler's The Big Country. Jerome Moross was born in Brooklyn, NY in 1913, and showed a musical precocity at an early age, learning to play the piano by ear when he was four and composing at age eight.

Moross was so advanced academically that he ended up skipping four grades between elementary school and high school, and so was 14 years old when he finished high school. He attended New York University and also studied at the Juilliard School of Music, starting there while in his senior year at NYU as a conducting fellow. He was already composing in his own style at 17, a period in which he briefly embraced Serialism. By 19, Moross was working with blues and jazz as sources of inspiration and was aiming very high for the integration of music, song, and dance into a larger artistic whole. He achieved some modest success in the concert hall and on-stage, but it was in Hollywood that he had his most sustained career. Starting with the independently produced Close-Up (1948), he wrote the scores to a string of ever-bigger budgeted movies, culminating in 1958 with The Big Country, a multi-million dollar production with an all-star cast and a vast Western canvas for a setting. Moross rose to the occasion with the best score of his career and one of the finest soundtracks of its decade, getting an Academy Award nomination in the process. In 1959, Moross scored a movie called The Jayhawkers, which included a cue designated as "Two Brothers" -- it was a good score for a good movie but unexceptional. Several years after this, however, Moross was engaged to write a new theme for the hit series Wagon Train, for which he turned that cue from The Jayhawkers into the series' title theme -- his music became one of the series' most familiar attributes and totally swept aside the prior music and any memory of it. Moross continued to work on musical projects until the outset of the '60s and also wrote an opera, Sorry, Wrong Number, and a large body of chamber music, but it was his film and television work that kept him solvent and busy, on pictures such as The Cardinal, The War Lord, Rachel, Rachel, and The Valley of Gwangi. The latter, a fantasy-Western involving dinosaurs, recalled The Big Country, as did his title music for the CBS series Lancer. Moross' output slackened gradually during the '70s, and he passed away during the summer of 1983, of a heart seizure and complications from a stroke. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Jerome Moross
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Jerome Moross (August 1, 1913July 27, 1983) was an American-born composer for the stage, and a composer, conductor and orchestrator for motion pictures.

He was born in New York City in 1913. He became a talented piano player and composed music for the theater. In the 1940s he began to work in Hollywood, where he would compose music for 16 films from 1948 to 1969.

His best known film score is that for the 1958 movie The Big Country, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Original Music Score. According to Moross, he composed the main title after recalling a walk he took in the flat lands around Albuquerque shortly before he moved to Hollywood in the late 1930s.

Among his other works include the music for the films The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960), The Cardinal (1963), and Rachel, Rachel (1968). He also composed the main theme to the 3rd-8th seasons of the TV series Wagon Train and was a conductor on many other films.

Moross's concert works include a symphony, a sonata for two pianos and string quartet.

Moross died in 1983 of congestive heart failure following a stroke.

Part of his theme from The Big Country (as performed by the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra) was sampled, somewhat bizarrely, by MC Tunes versus 808 State in a top 10 UK chart hit, The Only Rhyme That Bites, in 1990. A decade later, girl-group Atomic Kitten used the same sample on their Top 20 hit I Want Your Love in 2000.

Work on Broadway

External links


 
 
Learn More
Frankie and Johnny (ballet)
The Cardinal (1963 Album by Jerome Moross)
Golden Apple [Original Cast] (1997 Album by Original Cast Recording)

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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jerome Moross" Read more

 

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