Raymond Premru
Raymond Premru | |
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Raymond Premru at the Oberlin Conservatory | |
Background information | |
Born |
Elmira, New York, U.S. | June 6, 1934
Died | May 8, 1998 63) | (aged
Genres | Classical, Jazz |
Occupation(s) |
Trombonist Composer Pedagogue |
Instruments | Trombone |
Labels | (numerous) |
Associated acts |
Philharmonia Orchestra Philip Jones Brass Ens. Oberlin Conservatory |
Raymond Eugene ("Ray") Premru (June 6, 1934 – May 8, 1998) was an American trombonist, composer, and music teacher, who was based for most of his career in London, England. His work on the bass trombone was widely admired, and is preserved on innumerable recordings in diverse genres; his teaching influenced many leading trombonists; and his compositions were performed by leading orchestras and ensembles throughout the United States and Great Britain, contributing significantly, in particular, to the repertoire for brass instruments.
Life and career
The son of a Methodist minister, Premru was born in Elmira in western New York State and grew up in the Finger Lakes region south of Rochester. As a teenager he took up the trombone, and began studying with Dale Clark at the Eastman School of Music’s preparatory department. After high school he enrolled at Eastman to study trombone with Emory Remington, and composition with Louis Mennini and Bernard Rogers.
Soon after graduating in 1956, he travelled to England for further composition study with Peter Racine Fricker, intending to stay a few months. He began freelancing on trombone and bass trumpet, becoming a regular in the London jazz scene with groups like the Kenny Baker’s Dozen. In 1958, he won the bass trombone position in the Philharmonia Orchestra, where he would serve for the next 30 years. Also in 1958, he married Susan Talbot, with whom he would have two daughters.
In addition to performances and regular recording with the Philharmonia, Premru continued to freelance. As a session musician, he would play and record with, among others, Frank Sinatra, Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald, the Rolling Stones, and the Beatles (most notably on Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band). In 1964 he joined the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, for which he would write several pieces; he remained a member until Jones’ own retirement in 1987. He also co-directed, and composed for, the Bobby Lamb/Ray Premru Big Band.
Over time his interest in teaching grew, and after a term as a sabbatical replacement at Eastman, he decided in 1988 to retire from the Philharmonia and return to the US to accept a professorship at the Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio. Premru’s pedagogy rested largely on the legacy of Remington. He displayed a flexibility on technical matters, emphasizing relaxation, the development of a warm “singing” tone and a smooth legato, and musicianship: all qualities that characterized his own playing.
While at Oberlin he continued to perform occasionally, and to compose. In 1990 he remarried, to Janet Jacobs. In 1997 he was awarded the Cleveland Arts Prize for music. That same year he was diagnosed with esophageal cancer, and he died at the Cleveland Clinic the following May, at the age of 63.
Music
Premru’s compositional output runs from jazz arrangements to choral works, and includes pieces commissioned by numerous leading orchestras, festivals and organizations.
In 1962, he did work on the feature film Reach for Glory in the capacity as music conductor.[1]
In a 1981 interview with Capital Radio, he cited as influences the music of Berg, Prokofiev, Bartók and Ives, in addition to jazz and early Bach studies. Throughout his career his language remained one of relatively conservative mid-century modernism, with a bent toward gentle lyricism; though he wrote some works in a lighter vein, and jazz idioms and techniques pop up in even his most “serious” scores.
His large-scale works include concertos for Trombone (1956), Trumpet (1983), and Tuba (1992); Music for Three Trombones, Tuba and Orchestra (1985); a Concerto for Orchestra (1976); and two symphonies (1981 and 1988). Most were commissioned and premiered by major ensembles (the symphonies by the Philharmonia and Cleveland orchestras, with conductors Lorin Maazel and Vladimir Ashkenazy, respectively); however none have been commercially recorded as of 2007 and only the Trumpet and Tuba concertos remain in print (also as of 2007).
Perhaps his most lasting legacy is in his chamber works for brass, several of which remain available in print and on recordings, including: the Concertino for trombone and woodwind quartet (1954); Music from Harter Fell (1973) and the nine-movement Divertimento (1976), both for the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble; the Brass Quartet of 1960; Two Pieces for three trombones (1951); and In Memoriam (1956) and the Tissington Variations (1970), both for trombone quartet.
References
Online sources
- Anderson, Martin. Obituary: Raymond Premru. The Independent (London), 1998-06-17. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
- Bassano, Peter (Autumn 1988). Ray Premru: An Appreciation. British Trombone Society. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
- Raymond E. Premru, Professor of Trombone and Esteemed Colleague, Dead at Age 63. Conservatory News (Fall 1998). Oberlin Conservatory. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
- Tomkins, Les (1971). Bobby Lamb and Ray Premru...(interview). JazzProfessional.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
- Roy, Klaus G. (1997). Raymond Premru: Player/Composer. ClevelandArtsPrize.org. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
- Paine, Anne C. Summertime Surprise: Premru Wins Cleveland Arts Prize. Around the Square (September 1997). Oberlin College. Retrieved on 2007-03-16
Printed sources
- Slonimsky, Nicolas, rev. Laura Kuhn. (2001): Baker’s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians—Centennial Edition, Vol. 5, p. 2858. New York: G. Schirmer. ISBN 0-02-865525-7
- Anderson, Ruth, ed. (1982): Contemporary American Composeers: a Biographical Dictionary, p. 414. Boston: GK Hall. ISBN 0-8161-8223-X
- Press, ed. (1985): Who’s Who in American Music: Classical 2nd Edition, p. 470. New York: RR Bowker ISBN 0-8352-2074-5
- Driscoll, Anne: “The Art of Trombone Playing: A Conversation with Raymond Premru and Ralph Sauer” The Instrumentalist vol 40 no. 10 (May 1986), pp. 18–24.
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