Robert Owens (composer)


Robert Lee Owens III was an American composer, pianist, and actor.

Biography

Owens was born in Denison, Texas, but grew up in Berkeley, California. Owens began playing piano at age 4, composing at age 8, and performing at age 10.
After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, Owens used the G.I. Bill to pursue musical education in Europe. He studied under Jules Gentil and Alfred Cortot at the École Normale de Musique de Paris in Paris between 1946-1950. In 1952, he debuted as a concert pianist in Copenhagen. He continued his studies under Grete Hinterhofer at the Vienna Academy of Music between 1953-1957.
Owens returned to the United States in 1957 to teach music at Albany State College in Georgia. During this time, he began setting the poems of Langston Hughes to music. In 1959, he relocated to Hamburg, Germany; in 1964, he moved to Munich. In Germany, he got a job as a film actor, and was soon in demand as a film and stage actor, composer, and pianist.
Owens's only completed opera, Kultur! Kultur!, was premiered in Ulm, Germany, in 1970; an English translation was premiered at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln on August 7, 2015.
Owens died January 5, 2017 in Munich.

Works

Owens wrote and performed his First Piano Concerto with Berkeley’s Young Peoples’ Symphony at the age of 15. He wrote many songs throughout his long career, using the poetry of Paul Laurence Dunbar, Waring Cuney, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Countee Cullen, and Langston Hughes. In 2006, he wrote the Idomeneo Quartet for oboe and strings, based on Mozart's opera of the same name.
A collection of Owens's published works, concert programs and reviews, photographs and other memorabilia resides at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Recognition and awards