| In
Memoriam
Warren Benson
Composer Warren Benson died on Thursday, October 6, 2005 at age 81. A memorial
service will be held Saturday, October 29 at 10:00 a.m. at the First Unitarian
Church, 220 Winton Road, Rochester, NY. A spring concert is planned to celebrate
his life and music.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the Eastman School of Music, 26
Gibbs Street, Rochester, NY 14604, and earmarked for the Warren and Pat Benson
Forum on Creativity.
Born on January 26, 1924 in Michigan, Benson attended the Detroit Public Schools,
where he encountered the first two of four influential teachers in his life:
Gerry Gerard and Selwyn Alvey. Then, in late 1943 and early 1944, during his
freshman and sophomore years at the University of Michigan, he studied with Jack
Ledingham and Arthur Cooper.
During his high school years, Benson played in the High School All-City Orchestra
and did a few performances with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Upon graduation,
he enrolled at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where he was asked to
teach percussion. He also played third horn in the DSO. Benson was invited to
become Detroit Symphony Timpanist in 1946.
Following a 14-month recuperation from a surgery that ended his professional
playing career, Benson returned to the University of Michigan in 1947 to finish
a degree in music theory. He soon had his bachelor's and master's degrees and
headed to Europe on two Fulbright teaching fellowships.
In 1953, Benson returned to the U.S. and began a 14-year tenure at Ithaca College
in Ithaca, New York, where he taught percussion and composition.
While at Ithaca, Benson wrote several pieces for percussion, including "Three
Dances for Solo Snare Drum," "Streams" (a quiet ensemble for seven
players), and "Symphony for Drums and Wind Orchestra." By 1965, Benson
had stopped teaching percussion (while continuing to teach composition) to focus
on writing music.
One of his first published compositions was "Trio for Percussion" (1957),
which was also used for the ballet "Sky Chant," choreographed by Pearl
Lang, an associate of Martha Graham in New York City. "Three Pieces for
Percussion Quartet" was commissioned by Schirmer publishers.
In 1967, Benson was invited to become Professor of Composition at the Eastman
School of Music and moved to Rochester. His students included Bob Becker and
Bill Cahn (both founding members of Nexus) and marimbist Gordon Stout.
In 1994, Benson was appointed Professor Emeritus at Eastman, to complete a 50-year
teaching career that began in 1943 at the University of Michigan. On July 12,
1997, Southern Methodist University’s Meadows Wind Ensemble, under the
direction of Jack Delaney, premiered and recorded Benson’s "The Drums
of Summer" for wind ensemble, chamber choir, and six percussionists.
Benson was elected to the PAS Hall of Fame in 2003.
Warren
Benson’s PAS Hall of Fame profile
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