Raymond Luedeke Explained

Raymond Luedeke (born 1944) is an American[1] / Canadian[2] composer of contemporary classical music. Praised for his idiosyncratic instrumental writing and for his orchestration,[3] Luedeke[4] has more recently concentrated on works for music theatre. Although born in New York City, he spent 29 years as Associate Principal Clarinet with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, a position he left in 2010. A dual citizen of the United States and Canada, Ray Luedeke is artistic director of Voice Afire Opera-Cabaret in New York City.[5]

Biography

Son of Otto Luedeke, an officer in the US Army[6] and a competitor in the 1932 Los Angeles Summer Olympic Games,[7] Raymond Luedeke had a peripatetic childhood.[8] Between the ages of 5 and 8, he lived in Japan. He alludes that his first concert of classical music was heard in Tokyo and that the music was Japanese classical music. He began piano lessons in Japan but did not continue this until the family was living in Massachusetts, where he took up the clarinet at the age of nine. He was soon composing his first pieces, something he continued when the family moved to New Jersey.

In 1966 Luedeke received his bachelor's degree from the Eastman School of Music, majoring in Music History. The following year he attended the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna, on a Fulbright Grant, studying composition and clarinet. From 1967 to 1971 Ray Luedeke was a member of the United States Air Force Band, these being the years of the Vietnam War and the draft. While in Washington, D.C., he studied orchestration with Lawrence T. Odom[9] (arranger and harpist with the USAF Band), wrote and arranged music for the Band, and received his M. Music in composition from The Catholic University of America. Later, he would study with George Crumb at Dartmouth and receive his Doctor of Musical Arts degree in composition from Northwestern University, where he studied with Alan Stout.[10] [11]

From 1971 to19 74, Luedeke taught at The University of Wisconsin / Stevens Point, from 1974 to 1976 at Northwestern University, and from 1976 to 1981 at University of Missouri-Kansas City. While at Northwestern he was co-founder of The Twittering Machine,[12] a contemporary music ensemble based at the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art. In Kansas City he was conductor of The Kansas City Civic Orchestra and of the UMKC student orchestra and director of The Kansas City Contemporary Players[13] [14] [15]

From 1981 until 2010 Raymond Luedeke was Associate Principal Clarinet of the Toronto Symphony.[16] [17] While in that position, he won a Canada wide contest to compose an orchestral fanfare that would open Roy Thomson Hall,[18] since 1982 the home of the TSO. He would later receive numerous grants from Canadian Arts Coumcils, (Canada Council for the Arts, Laidlaw Foundation, Ontario Arts Council, Toronto Arts Council)

The Music

The music of Ray Luedeke, along with traditional elements, incorporates a variety of the techniques of 20th and 21st Century music, including metric modulation, extended or ambiguous tonality, spatial notation, and the harmonic use of pitch sets. A good deal of his music is inspired by poetry, particularly that of Pablo Neruda and of William Carlos Williams. Some of his music includes references to the music of non-Western cultures, to Japanese classical music, to African drumming, and to the Indonesian gamelan.

In Kevin Vigil's doctoral thesis[19] on the guitar music of Raymond Luedeke, the composer is asked if he has had style periods, given the variety of forms found in his music: He replies that his style is to be found in his musical line and in his personal concept of counterpoint, rather than in his musical vocabulary, which may vary. He compares his music to poetry, in which metaphors may be interpreted in various ways. He does not accept the concept of absolute music, of music that only refers to itself. Without being programmatic, his music has a narrative that can suggest a variety of interpretations.

Partial list of compositions

External links

Further Reference

Notes and References

  1. Raymond Luedeke papers . Special Collections and University Archives . University of Maryland . https://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/33425.
  2. Web site: Canadian Who's Who – Raymond Luedeke.
  3. Hambleton, Ronald. "Symphony Transports audience to Arctic". The Toronto Star, 23 February 1989. Retrieved on 7 August 2018.
  4. Web site: Raymond Luedeke.
  5. Web site: Voice Afire Pocket Opera-Cabaret.
  6. Web site: Grave Locator . Arlington National Cemetery . July 6, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150418081700/http://public.mapper.army.mil/ANC/ANCWeb/PublicWMV/ancWeb.html . April 18, 2015 .
  7. Web site: Otto Luedeke Olympic Results . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418062748/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/lu/otto-luedeke-1.html . April 18, 2020 . July 6, 2018 . sports-reference.com.
  8. Book: Vigil, Kevin. Compositional background, performance analysis, and composer portrait of Raymond Luedeke's Five Preludes for Guitar and In the Eye of the Cat. 2004. Shenandoah University Lecture Recital Doctoral Dissertation.
  9. Web site: French Impressions arrangements by Lawrence Odom. Amazon.
  10. Web site: Raymond Luedeke.
  11. Web site: Raymond Luedeke.
  12. Monson, Karen. "Ensemble pleasing to see, hear". Chicago Daily News. 12 April 1976. Retrieved on 10 July 2018.
  13. Haskell, Hary. "Chamber Players Work Tonal Magic". Kansas City Star, Kansas City, Missouri. 4 April 1980. page 10C. Retrieved on 14 July 2018.
  14. Katzenstein, Larry. "Contemporary Chamber Players at UMSL"St Louis Post Dispatch. 28 March 1978. page 4F. Retrieved on 13 July 2018.
  15. Kreisman, James. "New Music Circle presents concert of 20th century works"". St. Louis Globe-Democrat. 29 March 1978. Retrieved on 29 July 2018.
  16. Kaptainis, Arthur. "Verve gives Concert pop flavour". The Globe and Mail, Toronto. 16 December 1986. page C13. Retrieved on 14 July 2018.
  17. Kaptainis, Arthur. "Uninspired evening with TS". The Globe and Mail, Toronto. 21 July 1984. Retrieved on 14 July 2018.
  18. [Schonberg, Harold C.]
  19. Book: Vigil, Kevin. Compositional background, performance analysis, and composer portrait of Raymond Luedeke's Five Preludes for Guitar and In the Eye of the Cat. 2004. Shenandoah University Lecture Recital Doctoral Dissertation .
  20. Web site: Voice Afire presents Viva Pablo Neruda.
  21. Web site: Butterfly's Trouble.
  22. Web site: The Art of Love – Women Around Town.
  23. Hume, Christopher. "Tasty helping of music served up with ham". The Toronto Star, 30 January 1990. Retrieved on 15 July 2018.
  24. Encyclopedia: Literature Set to Music – Garbage Delight. The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  25. Trotter, Hermann. "Amherst Sax Quartet saunters into whimsy".The Buffalo News, 23 October 21989. Retrieved on 21 July 2018.
  26. Web site: Tritone Press and Tenuto – Raymond Luedeke.
  27. Adler, Andrew. "Music Review". The Courier-Journal, St. Louis. 24 October 1985. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  28. Hume, Christopher. "And this bass stands alone" The Toronto Star, 10 November 1997. Retrieved on 10 July 2018.
  29. Krawchyk, Ed. "Orchestra warms to Scott St. John". The London Free Press, London, Ontario. 30 October 1992. Retrieved on 11 July 2018.
  30. Scott, Michael. "Violinist's sweet appearance belies the power of her technique" The Vancouver Sun, 26 October 1991. Retrieved on 2 September 2018.
  31. Baruch, Garth-Wolfgang. "Verschworene Gesellschaft – das Toronto Symphony Orchestra in der Liederhalle"Augarter Zeitung, Stuttgart, Germany, 15 May 1991. retrieved 7 November 2018
  32. Hambleton, Ronald. "Symphony Transports audience to Arctic". The Toronto Star, 23 February 1989. Retrieved on 7 August 2018.
  33. Book: Shadow Music – Louisville Orchestra First Edition Records. 19883132.
  34. Chapman, Geoff. 'Two choirs, two world premiers". The Toronto Star .Toronto, 4 June 2002. Retrieved on 5 July 2018.
  35. Littler, William. "A Bit of New Age for Iseler Singers". The Toronto Star .Toronto, 7 November 2000. Retrieved on 6 July 2018.
  36. Hambleton, Ronald. 'Brass polishes novel rhythms". The Toronto Star .Toronto, 8 April 1991. Retrieved on 20 July 2018.
  37. Terauds, John. "Ballet's Briskin kicks some brass". The Toronto Star .Toronto, 21 May 2009. Retrieved on 5 August 2018.
  38. Bernstein, Tamara. "Lots of brass found on Hannaford Street" The Globe and Mail. Toronto. 9 April 1991. Retrieved on 2 March 2018.
  39. Kilpatrick. "Hannaford Street Silver Band". The American Record Guide .Cincinnati. January / February 1995. Retrieved on 18 July 2018.
  40. Web site: The Book of Questions. YouTube.
  41. Web site: Words, Wine, and Music – Voice Afire.
  42. Web site: Illuminations. AllMusic.
  43. Creditor, Bruce M. "Quintessence The Wind Quintet Informant No. 13 Pictures from Breughel and Nocturnal Variations" "The Clarinet – International Clarinet Association". February / March 1993. Retrieved on 6 September 2018.
  44. Web site: Crystal Records New Mexico Brass Quintet.
  45. Web site: Raymond Luedeke.
  46. Hambleton, Ronald. "Faculty recital strikes". The Toronto Star .Toronto, 25 September 1989. Retrieved on 16 September 2018.
  47. Moor, D. "Hammer and Bow". The American Record Guide, Cincinnati. November / December 2006. Retrieved on 17 July 2018.
  48. Carl, Robert. "Hammer and Bow". ArkivMusic.com. 25 July 2006. Retrieved on 17 July 2018.
  49. Book: Vigil, Kevin. Compositional background, performance analysis, and composer portrait of Raymond Luedeke's Five Preludes for Guitar and In the Eye of the Cat. 2004. Shenandoah University Lecture Recital Doctoral Dissertation .
  50. Web site: Subito Music Raymond Luedeke.
  51. Web site: Tritone Press and Tenuto – Raymond Luedeke.
  52. Book: Vigil, Kevin. Compositional background, performance analysis, and composer portrait of Raymond Luedeke's Five Preludes for Guitar and In the Eye of the Cat. 2004. Shenandoah University Lecture Recital Doctoral Dissertation .
  53. Allaire, Geoff. '"Tango Cabaret an entertaining embrace" Elliot Lake Standard .Elliot Lake, Ontario. 5 May 2010. Retrieved on 10 July 2018.