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Leroy Burrill Phillips (November 9, 1907 – June 22, 1988)[1] was an American composer, teacher, and pianist.

Burrill Phillips
Born9 November 1907 
Omaha 
Died22 June 1988  (aged 80)
Berkeley 
Alma mater
  • Eastman School of Music 
OccupationComposer 
Awards
  • Guggenheim Fellowship (1942, 1961)
  • Arts and Letters Award in Music (1944) 

Biography


Phillips was born in Omaha, Nebraska. He studied at the College of Music at the University of Denver with Edwin Stringham and at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, with Howard Hanson and Bernard Rogers.[1] On September 17, 1928, he married Alberta Corinne Mayfield (1907–1979) who wrote many of his librettos.[1] In 1931 the couple had a daughter who, under the stage name Ann Todd, became a child actress in films. She continued acting into her early twenties, but left the entertainment industry in 1954 and died in 2020. A second child, son Stephen, was born in 1937. He died in 1986, two years before his father.

Phillips's first important work was Selections from McGuffey's Reader, for orchestra, based on poems by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.[2] Immediately successful, the work established his reputation as a composer with a "consciously American style".[2] By the 1940s he had turned to a more astringent and expressive idiom.[2]

In 1960, his String Quartet No. 2 was premiered at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. by the Paganini Quartet, with the composer present, and broadcast on live FM radio. In the early 1960s he turned to free serial techniques, less sharply accented rhythms, and increasing fantasy.[2]

Phillips taught composition and theory at Eastman School of Music (1933–49), the University of Illinois (1949–64), the Juilliard School of Music (1968–69), and Cornell University (1972–73).[1] His students include Jack Beeson, William Flanagan, Kenneth Gaburo, Ben Johnston, H. Owen Reed, Daria Semegen, Mary McCarty Snow,[3] Steven Stucky, David Ward-Steinman, and Charles Whittenberg,[4] as well as Jerry Amaldev. He was a Fulbright Lecturer in Barcelona in 1960–61, and received Guggenheim fellowships in 1942–43 and 1961–62.[5]


Death


He died in Berkeley, California, in 1988, aged 80, of complications after a heart attack.[6] His scores and sketches are housed in the Burrill Phillips archive, Special Collections, Sibley Music Library, Eastman School of Music, Rochester, New York.[7]


Selected works


His major works include:


References


  1. Anon. 2019, 5.
  2. Basart 2001.
  3. Cohen, Aaron I. (1987). International Encyclopedia of Women Composers. Books & Music (USA). ISBN 978-0-9617485-1-7.
  4. Butterworth 2005, 34, 149, 163, 365, 406, 440, 495, 515.
  5. Butterworth 2005, 350.
  6. Commanday 1988.
  7. Anon. 2019.

Sources


Further reading





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[de] Burrill Phillips

Burrill Phillips (* 9. November 1907 in Omaha/Nebraska; † 22. Juni 1988 in Berkeley/Kalifornien) war ein US-amerikanischer Komponist.
- [en] Burrill Phillips



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