Harry Benjamin Jepson Explained

Harry Benjamin Jepson
Birth Date:August 16, 1870
Birth Place:New Haven, Connecticut
Death Place:Noank, Connecticut
Education:
Occupation:Organist and composer
Spouse:Isabella James

Harry Benjamin Jepson (August 16, 1870  - August 23, 1952) was an American organist and composer and (starting in 1906) the first University Organist of Yale University.[1]

Jepson was born August 16, 1870, in New Haven, Connecticut.[2] He attended Hillhouse High School. Jepson studied at Yale under Horatio Parker and Gustave Stoeckel, earning a B.A. in 1893 and a B.M. in 1894. While at Yale he was the organist for New Haven's Christ Church (in 1889) and Old Center Church (from 1890 to 1894 where he was succeeded by Charles Ives).[3] [4] He then studied in Paris under Charles Marie Widor and Louis Vierne.

He was appointed instructor at Yale in 1895, eventually rising to a full professorship in 1907. He also directed the Battell Chapel choir.[5] He retired in 1939; Charles Kullman was among the performers at the musical service in held for his retirement.[6]

Among his students were Edward Shippen Barnes (who dedicated his 2nd Organ Symphony to Jepson), Seth Bingham (who dedicated his Counter-Theme from 6 Pieces Op. 9 to Jepson, and who Jepson hired briefly at Yale[7]), Edwin Arthur Kraft, Virginia Carrington-Thomas, and Frederick Kinsley.[8] [9]

Jepson died August 23, 1952, in Noank, Connecticut. He was succeeded by Luther Noss as University Organist.[10]

Yale's Harry B. Jepson Memorial Scholarship is named after him, and he oversaw the design and construction of the renowned Newberry Memorial Organ in Yale's Woolsey Hall, as well as its 1915-1917 and 1929 renovations.

Selected compositions

Notes and References

  1. "A New Endowment to Secure the Future of The Newberry Memorial Organ / Woolsey Hall " Accessed June 21, 2012.
  2. Web site: . Selected Compositions of Harry Benjamin Jepson; Misc. Ms. 216 . Yale University Library.
  3. Book: Perlis, Vivian . Charles Ives remembered: an oral history . 1975 . Yale Univ. Press . 978-0-300-01758-8 . 2. print . New Haven . 19.
  4. Book: Benjamin, W. H. . Biographies of Celebrated Organists of America . Benjamin Publishing Company . 1908 . Albany, New York . 77.
  5. Web site: Collection: Selected Compositions of Harry Benjamin Jepson ; Archives at Yale . 2022-11-18 . archives.yale.edu.
  6. June 1, 1939 . Musical Service at Yale in Honor of Dr. H. B. Jepson . . 30 . 7 . 1.
  7. Web site: Raven Pipe Organ CDs, DVDs, and Choral CDs - Organ Works of Seth Bingham, Vol. 3 “Cathedral Strains”Christopher Marks, Organist - [OAR-992] ]. 2024-01-17 . ravencd.com.
  8. February 1, 1943 . Edwin Arthur Kraft of Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland . . 34 . 3 . 1 . October 31, 2022 . October 31, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221031193931/https://www.thediapason.com/sites/thediapason/files/194302TheDiapason.pdf . dead .
  9. Web site: Category:Jepson, Harry Benjamin - IMSLP . 2024-01-17 . imslp.org.
  10. Murray . Thomas . June 2013 . The Newberry Memorial Organ, Yale . Organists' Review . 99 . 2 . 6-11 . Academic Search Complete.
  11. Web site: [Ballade] Ballade for organ / [New York] : G. Schirmer, c1907. Archives at Yale ]. 2022-11-18 . archives.yale.edu.
  12. Web site: e-yearbook.com (tm) . Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT), Class of 1900, Pages 126 - 143 * . 2022-11-18 . e-yearbook.com . en-US.
  13. November 22, 1923 . New Compositions for the Organ . . 87 . 21 . 52.
  14. Book: Jepson, Harry Benjamin . Four Organ Pieces by Harry Benjamin Jepson: I. Pastel, II. Toccata, III Pantomime, IV. L'Heure Exquise . G. Schirmer . 1917 . New York.
  15. Book: Jepson, Harry Benjamin . Sonata in G minor . H. W. Gray Co . 1913 . New York.
  16. Book: University Hymns . Yale University Press . 1924 . Jepson . Harry B. . New Haven . 326-327 . Brown . Charles R..