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May 23, 2012
Table of Contents

1 Introduction
Ruth Crawford-Seeger

Wikipedia

 

Ruth Crawford-Seeger (July 3, 1901 in East Liverpool, Ohio - November 18, 1953 in Chevy Chase, Maryland), born Ruth Porter Crawford, was a modernist composer. Initially influenced by Alexander Scriabin, in the twenties and early thirties Crawford-Seeger wrote atonal works based on the music of Arnold Schoenberg|Schoenberg, her teacher-then-husband Charles Seeger's dissonant counterpoint, and methods of her own devising .

She studied piano with her mother and Djane Lavoie Herz, composition with Adolf Weidig and, beginning in 1929, with Charles Seeger. She also studied in Berlin in 1930 through the first Guggenheim Fellowship in composition given to a woman. (Hisama 2001, p.3).

She married Charles Seeger in 1932. After embracing leftist communist-like politics during the great depression she turned her attentions to ethnomusicology and transcribing folk songs for John and Alan Lomax, and raising her children, including Mike Seeger|Michael Seeger, Peggy Seeger Barbara, and stepson Pete Seeger, while writing works inspired by or harmonizing folk music|folk songs and teaching piano lessons and at Barbara's school. Her family moved to Washington, D.C. in 1936 and she began work for the Library of Congress, transcribing for Our Singing Country and Folk Song USA by John Lomax|John and Alan Lomax. Her own book, American Folk Songs for Children, was published in 1948.

She briefly returned to her modernist roots in early 1952 with Suite for Wind Quintet, shortly before her death caused by cancer.

Her compositions include her String Quartet (Crawford-Seeger)|String Quartet (1931), part of which was later orchestrated as Andante (Crawford-Seeger)|Andante, for string orchestra, Two Ricercari with text by H. T. Tsiang ("Sacco, Vanzetti" and "Chindaman, Laundryman"), and settings of poems by Carl Sandburg, who originally introduced her to folk songs.





Early
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano (1926)

  • Nine Preludes for Piano (1928)

  • Five Sandburg Songs (1929)


Middle
  • A Piano Study in Mixed Accents (1930)

  • Diaphonic Suites (1930)

  • String Quartet (Crawford-Seeger)|String Quartet (1931)

  • Rat Riddles (1932)


Late
  • Suite for Wind Quintet (1952)






  • Hisama, Ellie M. (2001). Gendering Musical Modernism: The Music of Ruth Crawford, Marion Bauer, and Miriam Gideon. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 052164030X.






  • http://www.pegseeger.com/html/rcsindex.html Ruth Crawford Seeger Index to Information on this website, including

  • *http://www.pegseeger.com/html/dio.html Ruth Crawford Seeger Biography in 600 words by David Lewis with a note by Peggy Seeger

  • http://depthome.brooklyn.cuny.edu/isam/rcstraus.html Institute for Studies in American Music (ISAM) Newsletter: Ruth Crawford Seeger's Contributions to Musical Modernism by Joseph N. Straus, Fall 2001 Volume XXXI, No. 1


Category:1901 births|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
Category:1953 deaths|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
Category:20th century classical composers|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
Category:Modernist composers|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
Category:American composers|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
Category:Women composers|Crawford-Seeger, Ruth
de:Ruth Crawford Seeger


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ruth Crawford-Seeger".


Last Modified:   2005-12-19


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