Raymond Wilding-White
Raymond Wilding-White ; was an American composer of contemporary classical music and electronic music, and a photographer/digital artist.
Biography
Wilding-White was born in Caterham, Tandridge, Surrey, England, and spent the first five years of his life in England before moving to Saint-Germain-en-Laye, outside Paris, France, where he had his first formal instruction in music at the Conservatoire Camille Saint-Saëns. In 1932 the family moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina, his mother's family home. By 1940 he had moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States.Family
Wilding-White's father, Charles Dunning White was an American diplomat. Raymond Wilding-White had a number of brothers including Henry, Charles, and Alexander. His wife Glennie was also an accomplished musician, composer and playwright, as was his son Charles.Education & Work
In 1940, Wilding-White enrolled in the chemical engineering program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but dropped out to assist in the war effort as a civilian. After the war he was accepted at the Juilliard School in New York City, earning his bachelor's degree in piano performance.Wilding-White earned his master's degree in composition from the New England Conservatory of Music. During this period he also sang in the Chorus pro Musica under Alfred Nash Patterson, and as a countertenor in the choir at Church of the Advent in Boston.
While in Boston he worked at the radio station WGBH. He and Nancy Harper won a Peabody Award for their work on The Children's Circle.
Wilding-White left WGBH to pursue his doctorate in composition from Boston University. He was a student of Aaron Copland and Luigi Dallapiccola.
In 1956, Wilding-White married Glennie. By 1962 he had completed his doctorate and was appointed to the Kulas Chair at Case Institute of Technology. He taught in the humanities program and was director of the Case Glee Club as part of his academic duties and was instrumental in promoting contemporary music concerts and multi-media events in Cleveland, Ohio.
In 1967 Case Institute merged with Western Reserve University, and Wilding-White accepted an invitation from DePaul University to design and install an electronic music studio there. Also in 1967, he was awarded the Cleveland Arts Prize in Music.
Wilding-White continued to teach humanities courses at DePaul until retiring in the mid-1980s.
In Chicago he founded the contemporary performing arts ensemble The Loop Group.
Wilding-White created new radio programming at WFMT in Chicago, Illinois. During the Bicentennial year 1976 he recorded the daily series Our American Music. He also recorded a history of music in Chicago, entitled Music Chicago Style, as a complement to the Chicago Historical Society's exhibit, and wrote and presented programming on composers Charles Ives, John Cage, and Arnold Schoenberg.
Wilding-White's creativity was not limited to music and the performing arts, he was also an avid photographer and visual artist, with exhibitions in the gallery of Darkroom Aids, Chicago and the Brown County Museum.
Wilding-White composed over 100 works. He was influenced by the work of John Cage. His scores are archived at the Newberry Library in Chicago, and his photographic work will also be kept there.
Death
Wilding-White died at his home in Kewaunee, Wisconsin, of liver failure at the age of 78 in 2001, leaving a huge body of musical and photographic work. His wife Glennie died thirteen years later, January 31, 2014, at the age of 81.Compositions
Orchestral
- Even Now: variations for Baritone and Orchestra
- Even Now: Chamber Orchestra version
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra
- Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
- Concertante for Horn, Violin and Strings
- Bandmusic for concert Band
- Haiku for solo voices and various Instrumental Combinations
- Whatzit No 4 for Orchestra
- The Southern Harmony for Orchestra and Amateur Chorus
- Symphony for Swing Orchestra
- De Profundis: The 8 Virtues and 7 Vices as seen by Peter Breughel
- Quodlibet for Chorus, Solo Voices and Orchestra. 4 Mov.
- A Symphony of Symphonies
- Symphony No 1 Old Postcards: String Orchestra
- Symphony No 2 Thomas Cole's "The Voyage of Life": Full Orchestra
- Symphony No 3 Boccioni's "States of Mind": Wind and Percussion Orch.
Choral
- The Psalms
- Advent Choruses
- Penitential Mass
- Latin Mass SATB
- Jazz Mass SATB
- Magnificat S Violin and Viola
- Magnificat for Jazz Vocal Group SATB Soli and SATB
- Easter Music for St Agnes A Solo & Harpsichord
- Space Madrigals
- A Book of Madrigals
- Wedding Motet: SATB
- Bennington Epitaphs SATB
- The Ship of Death: Mezzo-Soprano, SATB and Wind Ensemble
- Three Christmas Carols
- Three Songs by Sir Thomas Wyatt SSAA
- Restoration Lyrics TTBB
- Mexico City Blues : Male Chorus and Jazz Combo
- Laudamus Viros Gloriosos: Male Chorus
- In Memoriam A.N.R SATB
- The Enrolment Management Rag: Mixed Chorus
- Whatzit No 5 for Chorus
- Nursery Birds for Mixed Chorus
- Tang Poems: 20 settings for various combinations of voice and Instruments
- Requiescat
- McGuffey's Eclectic Reader. SATB &
- A Song for Christmas Eve, words by Glennie Wilding-White
Songs
- Three Housman Poems: S and Piano
- Six Poems from the Tang Dynasty: S and Flute
- Twelve Songs: S and Piano
- Three Poems by Robert Graves: Bar and Piano
- Novalis songs: Bar and Piano
- Trionfo di Bacco e Arianne: Two Sopranos and Piano
- The Ballad of Psychoanalysis: Contralto and Piano
- Cummings Songs Soprano or Mezzo and Piano
- Cinco Poemas de Gil Vicente: Soprano and Piano
- Eight Songs: Two sopranos and Instrumental Ensemble
- Twenty Dickinson Poems: Soprano and Alto
- Four Poems by St John of the Cross: Mezzo. Two Flutes and Two Trumpets
- Quatre Poemes and Quatre Poemes: Soprano, Flute/Recorder and Piano
- For Mrs Crofts: Soprano and flute
- For Robert Michaud: Baritone and flute
- The Arkansas Traveler: Tenor and Piano
- Death Songs: Soprano and Instrumental Ensemble
- Millay Poems
- Three Poems by Sid Corman for Alto. Violin and Viola
- Le Bestiaire ou le Cortege d'Orphee for soprano, flute, cello, harp
- Two Iwi Songs:
- Short Mass for Soprano and Organ
- Two German Songs for Soprano and Piano
Instrumental
- Sonata for Two Pianos
- Piano sonata
- Three organ Preludes
- 14 Chorale Preludes for Organ
- Duos for Violin and Piano
- String Quartet No 1
- String Quartet No 2
- String Quartet No 3 Tenor and String Quartet
- String Quartet No 4
- String Quartet No 5
- String Quartet No 6 Soprano and String Quartet
- String Quartet No 7
- Variations for Chamber Organ and String Trio
- Character Sketches for Piano
- For Mallets
- Sonatina for Trumpet and Piano
- Counterpoints for Two Clarinets
- Fragments for Jazz Ensemble
- Encores for Stu: Solo Trombone
- Fifty Eight Traditional Variations on a Traditional Theme: Piano Brass duets
- Brass duets
- Whatzit No 1 for Perc and Piano
- Whatzit No 2 for Piano
- Whatzit No 3 for Piano
- Whatzit No 6 for Solo Trombone
- The Rape of Spring
- Algorhythms for Piano
- Eight Fish Creek Autographs
- Monte Carlo Suite No 3
- Serenata for Brass Quintet
- Whatzit No 12-Short Things for Violin and Piano
- Three Short Rags and The Monotony Rag
- Fanfare for Mark Rothko. Tape and Brass Quintet
- Lines from the Twelve Moons: Narrator. Piano and Four Basses
- Les Fourberies: Suite for Hammered Dulcimer, Guitar and Harpsichord
- Variations on Stabat Mater for Organ
- My Album: Assorted Inventions
- Concerto for Organ and Piano
- Suite for Flute and Marimba
- 14 Romantic Preludes from Old Maritime Postcards for Piano Solo
Stage works
- The Tub
- The Lonesome Valley
- The Selfish Giant
- The Trees
- Yerma
- The Music of Eric Zann -- A Gothic Tale after H.P. Lovecraft
- Liturgy
- Trio
- Gifts
- Gifts II
- The Ghost of a Flea
Books
- Wilding-White, Raymond. Music Chicago Style. Kewaunee, Wisconsin: Raymond Wilding-White. OCLC: 47815153.