Robert "Bob" Luther Gauldin (born 1931) is an American composer and Professor Emeritus of Music Theory at the Eastman School of Music.
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Gauldin's compositions include works for wind ensemble, chamber orchestra, and chorus. He also received a Ford Foundation Grant for the Contemporary Music Project pilot program at Eastman from 1966 to 1968. As a theorist, Gauldin has published a number of articles and three widely used textbooks, and has presented numerous papers at conventions and universities in both the United States and England. He has served as reviewer and adviser for several publishers, including the Yale University Press and Prentice-Hall, and has served on various boards and committees for music theory societies, including a federal committee chosen to select summer seminars in music for the National Endowment for the Humanities (1981–1982). He was a charter member of the Society for Music Theory and served as its vice president and president (1988–1992). Gauldin retired in 1997 after 34 years of service to the School but continues to be an active member of the Eastman community. In recognition of his accomplishments and contributions, the theory department established the Gauldin Acquisition Fund for Rare Books in Music Theory for the Sibley Music Library, with an initial focus on counterpoint treatises and Wagnerian studies.
Gauldin’s is the author of Harmonic Practice in Tonal Music and has authored many articles in publications that include Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy, Music Theory Spectrum, Journal of the American Liszt Society, and Sonus.
Parents married November 9, 1929, Frederick, OK
Bobby Gauldin graduated 1949 from Vernon High School (in Vernon, TX). During his senior year, Gauldin was Vice President of the Honor Society and, as clarinetist, he was President of the Band. In the 1949 Vernon High School Yearbook, he was labeled "the BEBOP man."[4]
Movement for wind quintet (©1953)
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