For more information on Paul Creston, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Paul Creston |
For more information on Paul Creston, visit Britannica.com.
| Music Encyclopedia: Paul Creston |
(b New York, 10 Oct 1906; d San Diego, 24 Aug 1985). American composer. Untrained in composition, he came to notice with his First Symphony (1940). It was followed by much orchestral, choral and instrumental music in a brash, vital style, with long florid melodies, impressionistic harmony and full orchestration.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Paul Creston |
| Artist: Paul Creston |
| Wikipedia: Paul Creston |
Paul Creston (born Giuseppe Guttoveggio (October 10, 1906 – August 24, 1985)) was an Italian American composer of classical music.
Born in New York City to Sicilian immigrants, Creston was self‐taught as a composer. He was an honorary member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music fraternity, initiated into the national honorary Alpha Alpha chapter. His work tends to be fairly conservative in style, with a strong rhythmic element. His pieces include six symphonies, a number of concertos, including two for violin[1], one for marimba[2], one for one piano, one for two pianos, one for accordion and one for alto saxophone (the latter dedicated to Cecil Leeson)[3], a fantasia for trombone and orchestra (composed for and premiered by Robert Marsteller), and a Rapsodie again for alto saxophone - written for famous virtuoso Jean-Marie Londeix. He also wrote a suite (1935) and a sonata (op. 19, 1939) for alto saxophone and piano (both dedicated to Cecil Leeson)[3][4], as well as a suite for organ, Op. 70.[5] Several of his works were inspired by the poetry of Walt Whitman. He died in Poway, CA, a suburb of San Diego.
Creston was one of the most performed American composers of the 1940s and 50s. Several of his works have become staples of the wind band repertoire. Zanoni, Prelude and Dance, and the Celebration Overture have been and still are on several state lists for contests across the USA.
Creston was also a notable teacher, with the composers Irwin Swack, John Corigliano, and Charles Roland Berry, accordionist/composer William Schimmel and the jazz musicians Rusty Dedrick and Charlie Queener among his pupils. He wrote the theoretical books Principles of Rhythm (1964) and Rational Metric Notation (1979).
In the year 2008 Marco Ciccone has done a version for saxophone and orchestra of the Sonata op.19 (© 2008 by Templeton Publishing, a div. of Schawnee Press, Inc.)
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