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(b Philadelphia, 10 May 1916). American composer. He studied at New York University with Marion Bauer and Philip James, and privately with Sessions, whom he followed to Princeton. There he taught intermittently from 1938 and permanently from 1948; he was largely responsible for the formation of a ‘Princeton school’ of 12-note composition, for in his lectures, essays and compositions he was able to combine extreme rigour with high enthusiasm. His own points of departure included Webern and, still more, the later serial music of Schoenberg, in which he detected a use of the 12-note set to create large forms dependent on the nature of the set, and particularly on the property of ‘combinatoriality’, by which different forms of the same set are related in having the same notes reordered within each of their two halves. It is symptomatic of his theoretical penetration and of his influence that much of the vocabulary of 12-note composition was introduced in his writings.
In his first published works he was most occupied with devising means by which rhythmic and timbral organization could be serial: solutions were offered in, respectively, the Three Compositions for piano (1947) and the Composition for Twelve Instruments (1948). But the creation of a systematic 12-note rhythmic principle came only in the early 1960s with the innovation of ‘time points’, and at the same time Babbitt found an ideal instrument for determined colour control in the RCA Synthesizer. His works composed on it include Ensembles for Synthesizer (1962-4) and Philomel (1964) for soprano and tape. Until the early 1970s his music seemed to be created in tandem with his theory, each new work sprouting from some technical advance. Latterly he has been much more prolific and perhaps more relaxed -though wit was always a characteristic of his musical expression.
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The American composer Milton Babbitt (born 1916) is a leading figure among the most abstract and intellectual group of contemporary composers and a pioneer in the use of electronic synthesizers.
Milton Babbitt was born in Philadelphia on May 10, 1916, and grew up in Jackson, Mississippi. He attended the University of North Carolina, the University of Pennsylvania, and New York University. At school Babbitt was equally interested in mathematics and music; it was not until after World War II and study with composer Roger Sessions that he decided to devote himself to music.
Expands Schoenberg's 12-Tone Concept
Babbitt was intensely interested in Arnold Schoenberg's 12-tone music (which was little known at this time) and published several analyses that revealed new aspects of the 12-tone method of composition. Expanding Schoenberg's concept to include other elements of composition, he wrote Three Compositions for Piano (1947), Composition for Four Instruments (1948), and Composition for Twelve Instruments (1948), in which not only the tones but the durations, timbres, and dynamics are used in a preconceived order. This concept, called total serialization, became one of the dominant musical styles among advanced composers in the 1950s.
Calculations such as these result, of course, in a highly abstract kind of music in which the sounds simply embody the complex organization plans. Babbitt freely admitted that his music had little appeal to the general public. "I believe in cerebral music," he wrote in his 1958 essay, "Who Cares If You Listen?", "and I never choose a note unless I know why I want it there." In this essay he argues that composers should have the same intellectual freedom that abstract scientists, mathematicians, and philosophers enjoy. "Pure" thinkers such as these create for a very small audience of experts; no one but a specialist can understand their thoughts. Babbitt maintained that a composer should not worry about reaching a wide audience but must accept his isolation as a fact of modern life.
Pioneers the Use of Synthesized Sounds
In 1948 Babbitt started teaching at Princeton University and shortly thereafter became interested in the Mark I, an electronic music synthesizer; he helped design and build later models. These early synthesizers produced sounds according to specifications that were fed into the machines on punched tape; the resulting sound was then recorded. The operation was very complex, but the composer gained more control over the sound than he had in conventional electronic music of the era.
In such later compositions as Vision and Prayer (1961) and, his most widely acclaimed piece, Philomel (1963), Babbitt combined the human voice with synthesizer-produced sounds. Additional works include Relata II (1968), Reflections for Piano and Synthesized Tape (1974) and A Solo Requiem (1977), for soprano and two pianos. Babbitt's Piano Quartet (1996) was premiered at a concert held at the Kennedy Center's Terrace Theater in honor of his 80th birthday in May 1996.
In 1959 Babbitt assumed the directorship of the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. An influential teacher, his pupils formed the so-called Princeton school. He has received numerous honors and awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, and was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1965. In 1982 Babbitt was awarded a special citation for electronic music by the Pulitzer Prize committee.
Further Reading
Babbitt's essay "Who Cares If You Listen?" is reprinted in Gilbert Chase, ed., The American Composer Speaks: A Historical Anthology, 1770-1965 (1966). Eric Salzman, Twentieth-Century Music: An Introduction (1967), contains a discussion of Babbitt and serialism. Sounds and Words: A Critical Celebration of Milton Babbitt at Sixty, comprises a special issue of Perspectives in New Music (1976).
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Milton Byron Babbitt (born May 10, 1916) is an American composer. He is particularly noted for his pioneering serial and electronic music.
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Babbitt was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was raised in Jackson, Mississippi. He studied violin and later clarinet and saxophone as a child. Early in his life he showed ability in jazz and popular music.[citation needed]
Babbitt's father was a mathematician, and it was mathematics that Babbitt intended to study when he entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1931. However, he soon left and went to New York University instead, where he studied music with Philip James and Marion Bauer. There he became interested in the music of the composers of the Second Viennese School, and went on to write a number of articles on twelve tone music including the first description of combinatoriality and a serial "time-point" technique. After receiving his bachelor of arts degree from New York University College of Arts and Science in 1935 with Phi Beta Kappa honors, he studied under Roger Sessions, first privately, later at Princeton University, where he joined the music faculty in 1938 and received one of Princeton's first Master of Fine Arts degrees in 1942 (Barkin & Brody 2001). During the Second World War Babbitt divided his time between mathematical research in Washington, DC, and Princeton, where he became a member of the mathematics faculty from 1943 to 1945 (Barkin & Brody 2001).
In 1947, Babbitt wrote his Three Compositions for Piano, which are the earliest examples of total serialization in music, pre-dating Olivier Messiaen's non-serial "Mode de valeurs et d'intensités" by two years, and Pierre Boulez's Polyphonie X by four. The Composition for Four Instruments of the following year was Babbitt's first use of total serialism for instrumental ensemble.[citation needed]
In 1948, Babbitt succeeded Bohuslav Martinů on Princeton University's music faculty[citation needed] and later also taught at the Juilliard School in New York.
In 1958, Babbitt achieved unsought notoriety through an article in the popular magazine High Fidelity (Babbitt 1958). His title for the article, "The Composer as Specialist", was changed, without his knowledge or consent, to "Who Cares if You Listen?" More than 30 years later, he commented that, because of that "offensively vulgar title", he was "still ... far more likely to be known as the author of 'Who Cares if You Listen?' than as the composer of music to which you may or may not care to listen" (Babbitt 1991, 17).
Babbitt later became interested in electronic music. He was hired by RCA as consultant composer to work with their RCA Mark II Synthesizer at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center (known since 1996 as the Columbia University Computer Music Center), and in 1961 produced his Composition for Synthesizer. Many other composers[who?] regarded electronic instruments as a way of producing new timbres. Babbitt was much more interested in the rhythmic precision he could achieve using the Mark II synthesizer, a degree of precision previously unobtainable in live performances (Barkin & Brody 2001).
Babbitt continued to write both electronic music and music for conventional musical instruments, often combining the two. Philomel (1964), for example, was written for soprano and a synthesized accompaniment (including the recorded and manipulated voice of Bethany Beardslee, for whom the piece was composed) stored on magnetic tape. This piece was written in collaboration with the poet John Hollander and was funded by the Ford Foundation.[citation needed]
Although it might appear that his usage of the Mark II Synthesizer put Babbitt in the habit of writing music of enormous rhythmic complexity, and that his subsequent pieces for conventional instruments with mortal performers became, as a result, so complex as to seem unplayable, in actuality his interest in these sorts of complexities preceded his time with the Mark II and has continued to the present day, well after the demise of the Mark II.[citation needed]
In 1973, Babbitt became a member of the faculty at the Juilliard School.
In 1982, the Pulitzer Prize board awarded a "special citation to Milton Babbitt for his life's work as a distinguished and seminal American composer" (Columbia University 1991, 70).
Since 1985 he has served as the Chairman of the BMI Student Composer Awards, the international competition for young classical composers.
In 1986, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.
In 1988, he received the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters Award for music composition.
He is also a member of the Academy of Arts and Letters.
Babbitt's notable students include Fred Lerdahl, Mario Davidovsky, Lera Auerbach, Andrew Mead, Benjamin Boretz, Michael Kassler, Paul Lansky, David Lewin, Donald Martino, John Rahn, J. K. Randall, Peter Westergaard, Godfrey Winham, Stephen Sondheim, Mario Pelusi, Kenneth Fuchs, Su Lian Tan, Gilbert Levine, Mete Sakpinar, and Eric Ewazen.
In 2005, Babbitt's wife Sylvia died, as did his brother Albert E. Babbitt, Jr., a mathematician.
Babbitt has one daughter, Betty Anne Duggan, and two grandchildren, Julie and Adam.
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