|
Raymond
Premru
Player/Composer
1934–1998
Raymond
Premru was an internationally renowned composer and brass player.
From 1988 until his death in 1998, he served as professor of trombone
at the Oberlin College Conservatory of Music.
Born
in 1934 in Elmira, New York, he graduated from the Eastman School
of Music in Rochester. Moving to England, he served for 30 years
as bass trombonist of the Philharmonia Orchestra of London, performing
under the world's leading conductors. His keen interest in jazz
led to his co-founding of the Bobby Lamb/Ray Premru Big Band, and
to a 26-year association with the celebrated Philip Jones Brass
Ensemble. He also recorded with the Beatles, the Rolling Stones,
Pink Floyd, and Frank Sinatra. His teaching engagements included
the Eastman School and the Guildhall School in London, and he conducted
widely.
Premru's
compositions include, in addition to much music for brass and jazz
groups, two symphonies-the second commissioned and premiered in
1988 by Vladimir Ashkenazy with the Cleveland Orchestra. The same
ensemble commissioned Premru's Concerto for Orchestra for
the 1976 U.S. Bicentennial, and premiered it under Lorin Maazel.
Other conductors who have led Premru's music are Riccardo Muti with
the Philadelphia Orchestra and André Previn with the Pittsburgh
Symphony and the London Symphony.
Raymond
Premru was always concerned with communication, with making direct
audience contact. He said that he hoped to have produced something
to make the listener's efforts worthwhile, and to have provided
music of value and inspiration for a wide range of hearers as well
as fellow performers.
text
by
Klaus G. Roy
Chair, 1998 Music Jury
1965 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Music
|