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James Waters
Composer
The
fact that James Waters was born in Kyoto, Japan, in 1930, the child
of Methodist ministers, may or may not explain the composer's lifelong
preoccupation with the heartbreaking toll of war on human beings.
When listening to his memorable settings of Stephen Crane's ironic
song cycle War is Kind and four poems of Walt Whitman's from
Drum-Taps for mezzo-soprano solo, chorus and wind ensemble,
it is easy to picture 15-year-old James glued to radio bulletins
about the desperate hand-to-hand fighting on Iwo Jima and the obliteration
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
His
family had moved to America when he was two and during his teenage
years lived in Arlington, Virginia, just across the Potomac from
Washington, D.C. James's father translated intercepted Japanese
communications for the FBI. Young James's world was already full
of music. Having started out on the piano, because his legs were
too short to reach the organ's pedals, he now occasionally accompanied
the church choir.
At
Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey, where he earned
both his bachelor's and master's degrees, Waters majored in organ
and conducting, but he was finding increasing satisfaction in composing
music. The Ph.D. dissertation composition he wrote under Bernard
Rogers at the Eastman School of Music in 1966, a setting of Three
Holy Sonnets of John Donne, won the Louis Lane Prize and was
conducted by Howard Hanson on the Festival of American Music. But
Waters soon found himself growing restless with the constrictions
of the 12-tone system, though, perhaps feeling the old church organist's
urge to connect with the secret hearts of his congregation, he had
managed to bring a distinctive lyricism to his composition. His
Lyric Piece for violin, clarinet and piano (1971), which
began as a 12-tone row but grew into something quite unexpected,
has been performed at least 10 times around the U.S.
Waters's
setting in the late 1970s of five anti-war poems by Stephen Crane,
author of the classic Civil War novel The Red Badge of Courage
(and also the son of a Methodist minister), was downright audience-friendly,
harmonically speaking. But if the composer, who now saw himself
as an exponent of German romanticism, confessed that he thought
of each of these songs as being in a certain key, his writing was
edgy and unpredictable. Fitful, restless chromatic configurations,
noted Plain Dealer critic Robert Finn, underlay Crane's quick
stream of men pouring ceaselessly, and a series of disjointed
thirds were used to evoke a man with a tongue of wood who
essayed to sing; but when the singer at last finds a sympathetic
listener, Finn observed, the same chords become lyrical, a
nice touch.
When
he came upon the heartbreaking verses Whitman had written about
tending wounded soldiers in an army hospital during the Civil War
(Who are you my sweet boy with cheeks yet blooming?)
in the mid-1980s, Waters felt compelled to set them to music. The
second movement of Four Visions of War, an impossible march
with five beats instead of the usual four (So strong you thump
O terrible drums), captures the all-trampling juggernaut of
war, while Waters' tender setting of the third poem evokes the yellow-ivory
features of a dying soldier that become for Whitman the face of
Christ (and here again he lies). The American Record
Guide called Four Visions a powerful and dramatic
work. . .dark and turbulent. This 21-minute work alone,
wrote Fanfare's Robert McColley, is worth the cost
of the disc.
Awarded
the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1993 for his excellence as a composer,
Waters was also a distinguished educator who taught theory and composition
at Westminster Choir College from 1957 to 1968 and from 1968 to
1996 at Kent State University, from which he retired as professor
emeritus. An accomplished pianist, he is a past president of the
Cleveland Composers Guild.
James
Waters's compositions for voice, keyboard, orchestra and various
chamber ensembles (published by G. Schirmer, Carl Fischer, Galaxy
Music Corporation and Ludwig Music Publishing Corporation) have
been widely performed by such forces as the Princeton Chamber Orchestra,
the Aeolian Chamber Players and the 20th Century Consort. Distinguished
interpreters such as Janet Alcorn, at Washington D.C's Kennedy Center,
Janice Harsanyi, Daune Mahy and Mary Sue Hyatt have performed his
songs, which include cycles on poems by Louise Bogan and Emily Dickson.
His viola concerto was given its world premiere by Marcia Ferritto
and the Cleveland Chamber Symphony under the baton of Edwin London
in 1988.
text
by
Dennis
J. Dooley
1986
Winner of
the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Spring
2004
For
more about James Waters, click on
http://my.en.com/~jaquick/jwbio.html
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