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Bain
Murray
Composer
1926–1993
Bain Murray followed the lead of his mentor, Herbert Elwell. Both
pursued careers as composers, teachers and critics. Both disregarded
trends of the time, preferring to write music in a romantic vein.
Although
Murray incorporated a few experimental techniques into his compositions,
he was basically a melodist, who loved the human voice and appreciated
English-language poetry. His finest songs are settings of words
by Emily Dickinson, Sara Teasdale and Robert Frost. During the Persian
Gulf War, he wrote an anti-war piece based on poems by Vietnam veterans.
Among
Cleveland singers who performed his music were sopranos Janet Alcorn,
Daisy Newman and Noriko Fujii and baritone Andrew White. Murray
also wrote choral, instrumental and solo piano works. He completed
two operas and started a third before his death in 1993.
Born
in Evanston, Illinois, in 1926, Murray studied with Elwell at Oberlin
College and with Walter Piston at Harvard University. After earning
a master's degree, he traveled to Europe on a Fulbright fellowship
and studied with Nadia Boulanger. He launched his teaching career
at the Oberlin Conservatory in 1955. Four years later, he began
teaching in Cleveland, first at the Cleveland Music School Settlement,
then at Cleveland State University, where he was a faculty member
for 23 years. He wrote reviews for The Plain Dealer, contributed
articles to numerous music journals and served as longtime music
critic for the Heights Sun Press.
In
1969, Murray received a faculty research grant that took him to
Poland, where he discovered a community of talented Soviet-era composers
whose works were unknown in the West. He subsequently returned as
a guest of the International Warsaw Autumn Festival, and he helped
bring composers Witold Lutoslawski, Augustyn Bloch, Zygmunt Krauze
and Marta Ptaszynska to Cleveland for lectures, performances
and residencies. The influence of the Polish avant-garde was reflected
in Murray's Let the Hills Hear Thy Voice, a choral piece
that integrates aleatoric techniques. He wrote an unpublished book
about the development of Polish music after World War II, and he
received the Medal of Honorary Distinction from the Union of Polish
Composers.
A
lifelong interest in Native American music stemmed from Murray's
student years when he worked on an undergraduate research project
with ethnomusicologist Willard Rhodes. The documenting of indigenous
songs provided themes for instrumental pieces and led to the development
of the composer's first opera, The Legend.
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Based
on a novel by Murray's distant relative Janet Lewis, the libretto
tells the true story of an Irish-American fur trader and his
marriage to an Ojibway maiden who helped stop a massacre of
her people during the War of 1812. Murray called the work
an opera-oratorio with some of the qualities of a pageant.
Although the musical style is predominantly lyrical, the score
incorporates tone clusters, indeterminacy and synthesized
sounds. Plain Dealer music critic Robert Finn described
it as a skillful mixture of seemingly unrelated
styles. The work was premiered in 1987 at Cleveland
State University. Conductor Edwin London led the Cleveland
Chamber Symphony and a large cast of singers and dancers in the
semi-staged production.
Murray's
second opera, Mary Stuart: A Queen Betrayed is
based on Antonia Fraser's biography of the complex Scottish
monarch and her relationship with Queen Elizabeth I. Cleveland
poet Leonard Trawick wrote the libretto in collaboration with
the composer, whose heritage was Scottish-English. Murray
completed the orchestration while recuperating from a life-threatening
illness and resting on park benches during restorative walks
around the Shaker Lakes with his wife Laurie.
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Scene from the premiere of Murray's Mary
Stuart: A Queen Betrayed (1991). Ironically, the volatile
queen of the Scots was delivered into the hands of Elizabeth
I by the man she herself had named regent during her exile.
. .the Earl of Murray |
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The work's premiere in 1991 was the first opera presented in Cleveland
State University's Music and Communications Building. London again
conducted the Cleveland Chamber Symphony and a large cast of soloists
and choral singers. The music flows through, underlines and
illuminates the action expertly, wrote Finn. There are
touches of local color (mainly Scottish) in the music, and at dramatic
climaxes it rises to real lyrical eloquence.
Murray was respected at home and abroad not only as a skillful composer
and supportive colleague, but also as an outstanding teacher. His
was highly melodic music, very straightforward, said Cleveland
composer Donald Erb. "As a teacher, he was a major force.
text by
Wilma Salisbury
Summer 2004
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