William Carragan | |
Birth Date: | 18 July 1937 |
Birth Place: | Troy, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Troy, New York, U.S. |
Occupation: | Musicologist |
Years Active: | 1977–2024 |
Known For: | Editions of Bruckner symphonies |
William Carragan (July 18, 1937 – June 9, 2024) was an American musicologist particularly known for his research into the music of Anton Bruckner. He spent many years producing a completion of Bruckner's Ninth Symphony.
Born in Troy, New York, Carragan learned physics from his father George Howard Carragan (1896–1982, a physics professor) and music from his mother Martha Beck (1900–1997, a pianist and composer of educational pieces for children who knew Sergei Rachmaninoff).[1] He also took piano lessons with Albany pianist Stanley Hummel (1908–2005), and later further piano lessons with Gilbert Kalish, also studying harpsichord with Louis Bagger.
But following his father he became a physicist and professor at Hudson Valley Community College for 35 years, from 1965 until 2001. While there he published a comprehensive four-volume textbook of introductory university physics.
As a musicologist, Carragan's primary concerns were analytical aspects of the music, and history, of the performances of Bruckner's symphonies. He was a contributing editor of the Bruckner Collected Edition in Vienna, sponsored by the International Bruckner Society. For the Collected Edition, at the request of Leopold Nowak, Carragan prepared a new edition of Bruckner's Second Symphony[2] in two versions (1872 and 1877).
Carragan reconstructed for the first time the first version of Bruckner's First (1866),[3] [4] the previously unheard versions of the Third from 1874 and 1876, and of the Fourth from 1878, as well as the 1888 intermediate versions of the Eighth. He also devoted himself to completing Bruckner's Ninth symphony.[5] That completion has been widely performed and recorded,[6] the most recently in a revised version from 2017.
Carragan published Anton Bruckner: Eleven Symphonies – a "Red Book" on the different versions of Bruckner's Symphonies issued by the Bruckner Society of America.[7] He served as consultant in many performances of Bruckner symphonies.[8] In 1991 he was accorded the Gold-Plakette of the Brucknerbund Oberösterreich, and in 2010 he was awarded the Kilenyi Medal of Honor of the Bruckner Society of America.
For the Franz Schubert anniversary of 1978, Carragan completed and performed several of Schubert's unfinished piano sonatas, and ten years later he prepared a four-movement version of the Schubert's Eighth symphony which was recorded in Germany with the Philharmonie Festiva.[9]
With respect to the baroque era, Carragan made arrangements of a concerto for four violins by Antonio Vivaldi, Op. 3, no. 1, for four harpsichords, as well as a concerto for two violins, Op. 3, no. 8, arranged after J.S. Bach for two harpsichords.[10]
Carragan married Julia Weston Faunce in April 1966.[11] She was a teacher and medieval historian who also taught at Hudson Valley College for 34 years. He retired in 2000 to care for his wife, who died of cancer in 2001. For the last two decades of his life he lived in the Brunswick home of his childhood. He was also a cantor at Saint George Antiochian Orthodox Church in Albany, NY.
Carragan died following a stroke on June 9, 2024, at the age of 86.[12]