John Beckwith (composer)

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John Beckwith
Born(1927-03-09)March 9, 1927
DiedDecember 5, 2022(2022-12-05) (aged 95)
Occupation(s)Composer, writer, pianist, teacher, and administrator

John Beckwith CM (March 9, 1927 – December 5, 2022) was a Canadian composer, writer, pianist, teacher, and administrator.[1][2]

Born in Victoria, British Columbia, he studied piano with Alberto Guerrero at the Toronto Conservatory of Music in 1945. Beckwith received a Bachelor of Music (Mus.B.) in 1947 and a Master of Music (Mus.M.) in 1961 from the University of Toronto.[3] In 1950-51, he studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris.[1] He began teaching at University of Toronto's Faculty of Music in 1952. From 1970-77, he was the dean of the faculty.[1] He was founding director of the Institute for Canadian Music at the University of Toronto. In 1987, he was made a member of the Order of Canada.[3] He retired from the university in 1990.

Beckwith wrote over 160 compositions covering stage, orchestral, chamber, solo and choral genres. He also wrote 17 books, the last of which - Music Annals: Research and Critical Writings by a Canadian Composer - was published shortly before his death in 2022.[3]

Education[edit]

In 1945, after several years of studying piano at the Royal Conservatory of Music, Beckwith received a Conservatory scholarship that allowed him to study piano with Alberto Guerrero at the University of Toronto where he obtained his Mus.B.[1] His other teachers included Leo Smith and John Weinzweig. In 1950 he was awarded a second scholarship, this time from the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. The scholarship allowed him to travel to Paris, where he studied composition under Nadia Boulanger. Under Weinzweig's supervision, Beckwith earned his Mus.M. from the University of Toronto in 1961.

Over the course of his life, Beckwith also received honorary doctorates from McGill University, Mount Allison University, Queen's University, University of Victoria, and University of Guelph.[1]

Career[edit]

After studying in Paris, Beckwith returned to Toronto to pursue further studies and became active as a performing musician, actor, critic, radio commentator, writer, lecturer and broadcaster. In 1952, he returned to the University of Toronto, but this time as a part-time lecturer at the Faculty of Music. He was appointed full-time lecturer in 1955. He remained in this position for several years, and eventually became dean of the faculty from 1970-77. Beckwith was the first Jean A. Chalmers Professor of Canadian Music and the first director of the Institute for Canadian Music at the University of Toronto.[3] He retired in 1990 with plans to devote more time to composing. Among his notable pupils were Brian Cherney, Gustav Ciamaga, Omar Daniel, John Fodi, Clifford Ford, Ben McPeek, James Rolfe, Clark Ross, Matthew Davidson, and Timothy Sullivan.

While teaching, Beckwith remained active in several areas of the musical community. He wrote for the Toronto Star from 1959-65 as an arts critic and columnist, and was a writer and associate producer of a number of documentaries and music series for CBC Radio.[4] Beginning in 1981, he worked as a director for the Canadian Musical Heritage Society, which he had co-founded that same year. He prepared two of the society's 25-volume series of pre-1950 Canadian-composed music.[1] In 1986, a five-record set of his music was included in the Anthology of Canadian Music series.[5]

A collection of 25 of his music articles and talks was published by Golden Dog Press in 1997 under the title Music Papers.[6] The Canadian Conference of the Arts awarded Beckwith its Diplôme d'honneur in 1996 and he was made an honorary member of the Canadian University Music Society in 1999. In 2006, his biography In Search of Alberto Guerrero was published by Wilfrid Laurier Press (issued in Spanish translation in 2021). With Brian Cherney, he co-edited Weinzweig: Essays on His Life and Music in 2011. Beckwith's autobiography, Unheard Of: Memoirs of a Canadian Composer, was published by Wilfrid Laurier Press in 2012. With Robin Elliott, he co-edited Mapping Canada's Music: Selected Writings of Helmut Kallmann in 2013.

The festschrift, Taking a Stand: Essays in Honour of John Beckwith, was published in 1995.[7]

Compositional style[edit]

Beckwith composed over 160 large works. While the majority of his works are settings of Canadian texts for voice, he also wrote for orchestral and chamber groups as well as solo instrumental pieces and choral music.

Beckwith was a modernist[8] whose eclectic compositional vocabulary was sustained "by a broad palette of idioms, colours, and by the availability of a rich variety of forming procedures."[1] Most of his compositions have themes that connect to historical or regional Canada.[9] Beckwith was deeply interested in Canadian folk song and set around 200 of these songs, including Four Love Songs (1969) and Five Songs (1969–70). Most of the arrangements were written in 1981-91 during his involvement with Music at Sharon, a summer concert series.[10] He often collaborated with Canadian writers when setting text for voice including James Reaney, Jay Macpherson, Margaret Atwood,[11] bpNichol, Georges Sioui, and Dennis Lee;.[12] his most extensive collaboration was with Reaney, with whom he wrote a number of works for the stage.[9] Beckwith also set texts of e.e. cummings, John Millington Synge, Samuel Beckett, and poems of the Tang dynasty translated by Witter Bynner.[13]

List of works[edit]

As recorded in the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada at [1] and at the University of Toronto.[14] Unpublished works are at the Canadian Music Centre. The CMC Music Library also has Beckwith's works.

Stage[edit]

  • Night Blooming Cereus (Reaney). 1953-58 (1959 Toronto). 8 singers, 14 instruments. Ms[15]
  • The Killdeer, incidental music (Reaney). 1960, rescored 1961. Prepared piano (5 instruments). Ms
  • The Hector, documentary cantata (various). 1990 (1990 Toronto). Soprano, early-instrument ensemble. Ms
  • The Shivaree (Reaney). 1964-65, 1977-78. Revisions with prologue added, 1982. (1982 Toronto; 1982 Banff (revised version with prologue)). 12 singers, 20 instr. Ms[16]
  • Crazy to Kill (Reaney, after Ann Caldwell). 1987-88 ( 1989 Guelph). 3 singers, 2 speakers, 2 instruments, tape. Ms[17]
  • Taptoo! (Reaney). 1993-95 (Montreal, 1999). 18 singers, 18 instruments. Ms[18]

Orchestra and band[edit]

  • Music for Dancing (orchestra from piano, 4 hands). 1948 (piano), orch 1959 (1959 Ottawa). BMI Canada 1961. CBC SM-47/5-ACM 26 (*CBC Van orch)
  • Montage. 1953, rescored 1955 (1953 Toronto). Orchestra. Ms
  • Fall Scene and Fair Dance. 1956 (1956 Toronto). Violin, clarinet, strings. BMI Canada 1957. 1977. Lethbridge Symphony Assn LSA-101 (Lethbridge SO)
  • Concerto Fantasy. 1959 (1962 Montreal). Piano, orchestra. Berandol (rental)
  • Flower Variations and Wheels. 1962 (1963 Victoria). Rev. 1979. Orchestra. Berandol (rental)
  • Concertino. 1963 (1964 Toronto). Horn, orchestra. Berandol (rental)
  • Jonah, cantata (various). 1963 (1963 Toronto). BMI Canada 1969
  • Place of Meeting (Dennis Lee). 1967 (1967 Toronto ). Speaker, tenor, blues singer, SATB, orchestra. Ms
  • Elastic Band Studies. 1969, rev. 1975 (1976 Toronto). Concert band. Ms
  • All the Bees and All the Keys (Reaney). 1973 (1973 Toronto). Narrator, orchestra. Orchestra Berandol (rental), (piano score) Press Porcépic 1976
  • A Concert of Myths. 1983 (1984 Calgary). Flute, orchestra. Ms
  • Peregrine. 1989 (1990 Toronto). Viola, percussion, small orchestra. Ms
  • Round and Round. 1991-92 (1992 Winnipeg). Orchestra. Ms
  • Fifteen Figural Chorales from J.S. Bach's Das Orgelbüchlein (transcription), 1991 (1993 Halifax). Orchestra. Ms
  • Fourteen Figural Chorales from J.S. Bach's Das Orgelbüchlein (transcription), 1993 (1996 Halifax). Orchestra. Ms
  • Sixteen Figural Chorales from J.S. Bach's Das Orgelbüchlein (transcription), 1997. Orchestra. Ms
  • Madness. 2003 (2003, Toronto) 2 oboes, bassoon, strings. Ms
  • Three Brass Rings. 2007 (1984, Toronto; 2009 Toronto all) 11 brasses. Ms
  • Variations. 2011 (2012, Ottawa). String orchestra. Ms

Chamber[edit]

  • The Great Lakes Suite (Reaney). 1949 (1950 Toronto). Soprano, baritone, clarinet, cello, piano.
  • Five Pieces for Flute Duet. 1951 (1951 Paris). BMI Canada 1962
  • Four Pieces for Bassoon Duet. 1951. Ms
  • Quartet for Woodwind Instruments. 1951 ( 1953 Toronto). Ms
  • Three Studies for String Trio. 1956 (1957 Toronto). Ms
  • Circle, with Tangents. 1967 (1967 Vancouver). Harpsichord, 13 solo strings. BMI Canada 1968
  • Taking a Stand. 1972 (1972 Stratford). 5 players, 8 brass instruments, 14 music stands. Berandol 1975
  • Musical Chairs. 1973 (1974 Toronto). String quintet, contrabassoon. Berandol 1980
  • Quartet. 1977 (1978 Montreal). String quartet. Ms. Melbourne SMLP-4038/5-ACM 26 (*Orford String Quartet)
  • Case Study: a multi-purpose quintet. 1980 (1980 Toronto). Any 5 instruments. Ms
  • Eight Miniatures: arranged from the Alan Ash manuscript. 1981. Violin, piano. Ms
  • Sonatina in Two Movements. 1981 (1982 Toronto). Trumpet, piano. Ms
  • Tunes of the Sharon Band (arr). 1982 (1982 Sharon). Brass quintet. Sonante 1984
  • Arctic Dances. 1984 (1984 Kingston). Oboe, piano. Ms. McGill U Records 85026 (L. *Cherney)
  • For Starters G.E.C. [George Edward Connell].1984 (Toronto 1984). 11 brass instr. Ms
  • College Airs. 1990 (1990 Toronto). String quartet. Ms
  • Echoes of Quesnel. 1995 (1997 Toronto). Violin, viola, cor anglais, organ. Ms
  • Echoes of Thiele. 1995 (1996 Kitchener). Chamber orchestra (oboe, 2 trumpets, trombone, percussion, viola, cello, contrabass). Ms
  • Eureka. 1996 (1996 Toronto). 9 wind instruments. Ms
  • Lines Overlapping. 1996-97 (Toronto). Banjo, harpsichord. Ms
  • Blurred Lines (duo in quartertones). 1997 (1997 Toronto). Violin, harpsichord. Ms
  • Ringaround. 1998 (1999 Toronto). Celtic harp, harpsichord. Ms
  • A Game of Bowls. 1999 (2000 Toronto). 3 percussion. Ms
  • Workout. 2001 (2001 Toronto). 4 percussion. Ms
  • A New Pibroch. 2002 (2003 Toronto). Highland pipes, percussion, 7 strings. Ms
  • Back to Bolivia. 2006 (2010 Toronto). Clarinet quartet. Ms
  • Fractions. 2006 (2007 Toronto). 16th-tone piano, string quartet. Ms
  • Animals with Horns. 2007 (2010 Toronto). Trumpet, euphonium. Ms
  • Play and Sing. 2008. cello, soprano (1 performer). Ms
  • After Simpson. 2010 (2013 Toronto). 2 recorders, 2 viola da gamba. Ms
  • Breaking Silence. 2013 (2013 St. John's). Cello. Ms
  • Sonatina on "Mairi's Wedding." 2013 (2013 Toronto). Flute, piano. Ms
  • Follow me. 2013. Clarinet, piano. Ms. Centrediscs CMC-1774 (*Stoll/Zukiewicz)
  • Ut re me fa sol la. 2013. Guitar. Ms
  • Quintet. 2015 (2017 Toronto). Flute, trumpet, bassoon, viola, double bass. Ms
  • Calling. 2016 (2017 Toronto). Flugelhorn, euphonium, 2 tenor trombones, bass trombone, double bass. Ms. Centrediscs CMC-1774 (*New Music Concerts Ensemble)
  • Meanwhile. 2018 (2018 Ottawa). Marimba, piano. Ms. Analekta 29129 (*SHHH! Ensemble)

Keyboard(s)[edit]

  • Four Conceits. 1945, rev. 1948. Piano. Ms. RCI 228/RCA CCS-1022 (*Troup)
  • Music for Dancing. 1948 (1948 Toronto). Piano, 4 hands. Ms. RCI 113 (P. *Beaudet, G. *Bourassa)
  • The Music Room. 1951. Piano. Frederick Harris 1955. RCI 134 (*Newmark)
  • Novelette. 1951 (1951 Paris). Piano. BMI Canada 1954. Centrediscs CMC-1684/5-ACM 26 (*Foreman)
  • Six Mobiles. 1959. Piano. BMI Canada 1960. CCM-2 (*Cavalho)
  • Interval Studies. 1962. Piano. BMI Canada 1962
  • Suite on Old Tunes (arrangement). 1967. Piano. BMI Canada 1967. CCM-2 (*Cavalho)
  • Variation piquant sur la `Toronto Opera House Waltz.' 1967. 2 piano. Ms
  • New Mobiles. 1971. Piano. Waterloo 1972[19]
  • Upper Canadian Hymn Preludes. 1976-77 (1977 Ottawa). Organ, prepared tape. Ms. Centrediscs CMC-1784/5-ACM 26 (*Wedd)
  • Keyboard Practice. 1979 (1979 Toronto). 4 players, 10 keyboard. (1986). 5-ACM 24 (*Aide)
  • Etudes. 1983 (1984 Vancouver). Piano. Ms. Counterpoint. 5-ACM 26 (*Coop)
  • On the Other Hand. 1997 (1997 Toronto). Harpsichord. Ms
  • March, March! 2001 (2001 Montreal). Piano. Ms
  • The Cheese Stands Still. 2004. Piano. Ms
  • Light Work. 2007 (2009 Montreal). 16th-tone piano, 4 hands. Ms
  • Yesteryear. 2010 (2013 St John's). Piano, 4 hands. Ms
  • Pages. 2016 (2016 Halifax). Piano. Ms

Choir[edit]

  • The Trumpets of Summer (Atwood). 1964. Soloists, SATB, narrator, chamber ensemble Berandol (rental). CBC SM 81/RCI 340/ Cap ST-6323/5-ACM 26 (*Festival Singers)
  • Sharon Fragments (Willson). 1966. SATB. Waterloo1966. Capitol ST-6258/Seraphim S-60085 (*Festival Singers)
  • The Sun Dance (various). 1968. SATB, speaker, organ, percussion. Priv publ 1968
  • Three Blessings (Fisher, Burns, Wesley). 1968. SATB, instruments (optional in No. 2). BMI Canada 1968. CBC SM-81/RCI 340/Capitol ST-6323 (*Festival Singers)
  • Gas! (Beckwith). 1969. 20 speaking voices. Berandol 1978
  • 1838 (Lee). 1970. SATB. Novello 1970
  • Papineau (2 Lower Canada folk songs). 1977. 2 equal voices. Gordon V. Thompson 1978. Centrediscs CMC-2285 (*Toronto Children's Chor)
  • Three Motets on Swan's 'China' (various).'1981. SATB. Waterloo1983. Melbourne SMLP-4041/5-ACM 26 (*Elmer Iseler Singers)
  • A Little Organ Concert (vocables). 1982. SATB, organ, brass quintet. Ms
  • A Canadian Christmas Carol (J. P. Clarke)(arrangement). 1984. SATB, harmonium (piano or organ). Gordon V. Thompson 1989. CBC SM-5055 (*Elmer Iseler Singers)
  • Mating Time (bp Nichol). 1982. SATB (20 solo voices), percussion, electric keyboard. Ms
  • Harp of David (Book of Common Prayer). 1985. SATB. Ms. Centrediscs CMC-CD-3790 (Van Chamb Choir)[20]
  • The Banks of Newfoundland (arrangement).1985. Baritone, SATB (oboe, string quartet) Gordon V. Thompson 1987
  • Three Burns Songs (R. Burns) (arrangement).1986. SATB. Gordon V. Thompson 1987
  • Farewell To Nova Scotia (arrangement).1985. Baritone, SATB, piano, percussion 2 trumpet, viola, cello, double bass. Gordon V. Thompson 1987
  • The Gowans Are Gay (arrangement). 1986. SATB, percussion. Gordon V. Thompson 1987 69
  • Basic Music. 1998. Children's Choir (SA), Youth Choir (SSA) and orchestra. Ms
  • Lady Music. 2000. SATB
  • Snow is Falling. 2002. Children's choir, flute, guitar.
  • Alternative Greeting (Happy Birthday). 2003. Flute, clarinet, percussion, piano, voices.
  • Derailed: A Sound Documentary. 2007 (2007 Mississauga). Double choir (SSAATTBB), percussion. Ms
  • Wendake/Huronia, 2015. Alto, narrator, chamber choir, instruments, drums. Ms

Voice[edit]

  • Five Lyrics of the T'ang Dynasty (various). 1947 (1948 Toronto). High voice, piano. BMI Canada 1949. RCI 148/5-ACM 26 (*Alarie)/Centrediscs CMC-2185 (*Vickers)/(No. 3,4,5) 1988. Phillips 6514-157 (B. Fei soprano, N. Loo piano)
  • Serenade (Thibaudeau). 1949. Med voice, piano. Ms. RCI 36 (C. *Jordan)
  • The Formal Garden of the Heart (Thibaudeau). 1950. Med voice, piano. Ms
  • Four Songs to Poems by e.e. cummings. 1950 (1950 Toronto). Soprano, piano. Waterloo1975
  • Four Songs from Ben Jonson's Volpone. 1961. Baritone, guitar. BMI Canada 1967
  • A Chaucer Suite. 1962 (1963 Montreal). Alto, tenor, baritone. Ms
  • Ten English Rhymes (anonymous). 1963 (1963 Montreal). Young voices, piano. BMI Canada 1964
  • Four Love Songs (Canadian folk songs). 1969. Baritone, piano. Berandol 1970. (No. 1, 3, 4) CBC SM-111 (*Bell)/(1986). 5-ACM 26 (Pepper, Beckwith)
  • Five Songs (arrangement). 1970. Alto, piano. Waterloo 19701. CBC SM-77/Select CC-15073/5-ACM 26 (*Forrester)
  • Six Songs to Poems by e.e. cummings. 1980–1982 (1983 Toronto). Baritone, piano. Ms
  • Earlier Voices (arrangement). 1984. Soprano, baritone, SATB, piano. Ms
  • Avowals (bp Nichol). 1985 (1985 Toronto). Tenor, 1 keyboard player on piano, celesta, harpsichord. Ms
  • Les Premiers hivernements (S. Champlain, M. Lescarbot). 1986 (1986 Toronto). Soprano, tenor, 2 recorder, lute, viol, percussion. Ms[21]
  • Synthetic Trios (vocables). 1987 (1989 Quebec City). Soprano, clarinet, piano. Ms
  • The Harp that Once thro' Tara's Halls (T. Moore) (arrangement). 1986. Mezzo soprano, piano. Gordon V. Thompson 1987
  • beep (bp Nichol). 1990 (1990 Elora). Soprano, baritone, SATB, percussion. Ms
  • Stacey (Margaret Laurence), 1997 (1998 Toronto). Soprano, piano. Ms
  • A Man and His Flute (Miriam Waddington), 2000; 2003 (two poems added) (Toronto 2003). Soprano, piano. Ms
  • Merton Duets. 2005 (2006 Toronto). Soprano, mezzo soprano, violin. Ms
  • Beckett Songs. 2008 (2008 Sackville). Baritone, guitar. Ms
  • Singing Synge. 2011 (2012 Toronto). Baritone, piano. Ms
  • Tanu. 2013 (2014 Montreal). Soprano, flute, cello. Ms
  • Four Short Songs. 2016 (2016 London). Medium voice, piano. Ms

Collage[edit]

  • A Message to Winnipeg (Reaney). 1960 (1960 Toronto). 4 speakers, violin, clarinet, piano, percussion. Ms
  • Twelve Letters to a Small Town (Reaney). 1961 (1961 Toronto). 4 speakers, flute, oboe, guitar, piano-harmonium. Ms
  • Wednesday's Child (Reaney). 1962 (1962 Toronto). 3 speakers, soprano, tenor, flute, viola, piano, percussion. Ms
  • Canada Dash – Canada Dot (Reaney). 1965-67 (1965-67 Toronto). In 3 parts. Voices, speakers, Chamber ensemble. Ms
  • The Journals of Susanna Moodie, incidental (Atwood). 1972, revised 1990 (1973 Toronto). 2 keyboard players, percussion. Ms
  • "In the middle of ordinary noise...": An Auditory Masque (Reaney). 1992 (1992 Toronto). Speaker, 2 soli, 3 instruments, tape. Ms

Writings[edit]

  • 'Composers in Toronto and Montreal,' U of Toronto Quarterly, vol 26, Oct 1956
  • Beckwith, John (1957). "Music". In Park, Julian (ed.). The Culture of Contemporary Canada. Cornell University Press. pp. 143–162.
  • Beckwith, John (1958). "Music". In Ross, Malcolm (ed.). The Arts in Canada. Macmillan. pp. 44–51.
  • 'Young composers' performances in Toronto,' CMJ, vol 2, Summer 1958
  • 'Jean Papineau-Couture,' CMJ, vol 3, Winter 1959
  • 'Recent orchestral works by Champagne, Morel and Anhalt,' CMJ, vol 4, Summer 1960
  • Beckwith, John; Kasemets, Udo, eds. (1961). The Modern Composer and His World: A Report from the International Conference of Composers. University of Toronto Press.
  • 'Notes on a recording career, (the work of Glenn Gould),' Canadian Forum, vol 40, Jan 1961
  • Review of A History of Music in Canada 1534–1914 by Helmut Kallmann, U of Toronto Quarterly, vol 30, Jul 1961
  • 'Schoenberg ten years after,' Canadian Forum, vol 41, Nov 1961
  • 'Stravinsky triptych,' CMJ, vol 6, Summer 1962
  • 'The Bernstein experiment,' Canadian Forum, vol 43, Apr 1964
  • 'Notes on Jonah,' Alphabet, 8 Jun 1964
  • Review of British Composers in Interview, ed R. Murray Schafer, U of Toronto Quarterly, vol 33, Jul 1964
  • 'A "Complete" Schoenberg,' Canadian Forum, vol 46, Jan 1967
  • 'About Canadian music: The P.R. failure,' Mcan, 21, Jul-Aug 1969; reprinted with postscript, AGO/RCCO Music, vol 5, Mar 1971
  • 'What every U.S. musician should know about contemporary Canadian music,' Mcan, 29, final issue 1970
  • 'Music in Canada,' MT, vol 111, Dec 1970
  • 'Trying to define music,' ConsB, Christmas 1970
  • 'Aims and methods for a music-theory program,' CAUSM J, vol 1, Spring 1971
  • 'Healey Willan,' Canadian Forum, vol 52, Dec 1972
  • 'Teaching new music: What? How? Why?' Music Scene, 270, Mar-Apr 1973
  • Beckwith, John (1974). "Canada". In Vinton, John (ed.). Dictionary of Contemporary Music. New York, NY: Dutton. pp. 119–124.
  • Beckwith, John (1974). "Harry Somers". In Vinton, John (ed.). Dictionary of Contemporary Music. New York, NY: Dutton. pp. 689–90.
  • Beckwith, John; MacMillan, Keith, eds. (1975). Contemporary Canadian Composers. Toronto: Oxford University Press.
  • 'István Anhalt,' MSc, 281, Jan-Feb 1975
  • 'A big song-and-dance,' CME, vol 18, Spring 1977
  • Beckwith, John (1977). "Reflections on Ives". In Hitchcock, H. Wiley; Perlis, Vivian (eds.). An Ives Celebration. University of Illinois Press. pp. 230–32.
  • 'A festival of Canadian music,' Musicanada: A Presentation of Canadian Contemporary Music (Ottawa 1977)
  • Music In Canada (Ottawa 1979)
  • - and Pincoe, Ruth, eds. Canadian Music in the 1960s and 1970s: A Chronicle (Toronto 1979)
  • 'Kolinski: an appreciation and list of works,' Cross-cultural Perspectives on Music, ed R. Falck and T. Rice (Toronto 1982)
  • Beckwith, John, ed. (1983). John Weinzweig at Seventy. Toronto: New Music Concerts.
  • Beckwith, John (1983). "Shattering a Few Myths". In McGreevy, John (ed.). Glenn Gould: By Himself and His Friends. Gage Publishing. pp. 63–74.
  • 'Choral confessions,' Anacrusis, vol 6, Fall 1986
  • Beckwith, John (1987). "On Compiling an Anthology of Canadian Hymn Tunes". In Beckwith, John (ed.). Sing Out the Glad News: Hymn Tunes in Canada: Proceedings of the Conference (University of Toronto, 1986). CanMus Documents. Vol. 1. Toronto: Institute for Canadian Music. pp. 3–32.
  • 'Canadian tunebooks and hymnals, 1801–1939,' American Music, vol 6, Summer 1988
  • Beckwith, John (1988). "'A "Failure" Revisited: New Canadian Music in Recent Studies and Reference Works". In Beckwith, John; Cooper, Dorith (eds.). Hello Out There! Canada's New Music in the World, 1950-85. CanMus Documents. Vol. 2. Institute for Canadian Music. pp. 114–125.
  • - et al. 'From composer to audience: the production of serious music in Canada,' CUMR, vol 9, no. 2, 1989
  • Review of The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, America's Music, and Music in the United States: A Historical Introduction, CUMR, vol 9, no. 2, 1989
  • 'Canadiana realizations for "Music at Sharon," 1981–90,' News from CMHS, vol 1, Spring 1991
  • 'Letter from Canada,' Sonneck Society Bulletin, vol 17, no. 2, 1991
  • 'Music at Toronto: A Personal Account' (Toronto 1995)
  • - and Kallmann, Helmut. 'Musical instrument building,' Encyclopedia Canadiana
  • - and Hall, Frederick A., eds. Musical Canada
  • 'Recordings,' Music in Canada

Bibliography[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Nygaard King, Betty; Anhalt, István; Winters, Kenneth; McIntosh, Andrew (2022-12-07). "John Beckwith". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
  2. ^ Elliott, Robin (2022-12-16). "Vital and prolific composer John Beckwith was an authority on Canadian music". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2023-01-08.
  3. ^ a b c d Hisama, Ellie. "John Beckwith (1927–2022)". music.utoronto.ca. University of Toronto Faculty of Music. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  4. ^ "John Beckwith, prominent Canadian composer, dead at 95". CBC. 2022-12-06. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  5. ^ Potvin, Gilles (2006-02-07). "Anthology of Canadian Music / Anthologie de la musique canadienne". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-30.
  6. ^ Beckwith, John (1997). Music Papers: Articles and Talks by a Canadian Composer, 1961-1994. Golden Dog Press. ISBN 978-0-919614-72-7.
  7. ^ McGee, Timothy J., ed. (1995). Taking a Stand: Essays in Honour of John Beckwith. Heritage. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-0583-0. Retrieved 2024-05-21.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  8. ^ Wolters, Benita (1999). The Early Years of the Canadian League of Composers (M.A., Music). University of British Columbia. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  9. ^ a b Clark, Katy Aileen (2022). Regionalism in the Operas of John Beckwith and James Reaney (DMA). University of Toronto. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  10. ^ Ross, Clark W. (2013-12-15). "Music at Sharon". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-26.
  11. ^ Elliott, Robin (2006). "Margaret Atwood and Music" (PDF). University of Toronto Quarterly. 75 (3): 826–28.
  12. ^ Elliott, Robin (2021-03-09). "The John Beckwith Songbook". Institute for Music in Canada. Retrieved 2024-05-30.
  13. ^ Christensen, Bradley (2023). The Repertoire of John Beckwith for Solo Voice and Piano: An Interpretive and Pedagogical Guide (DMA). University of Toronto. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  14. ^ "John Beckwith: Composer". University of Toronto. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  15. ^ Winters, Kenneth (2006-02-07). "Night Blooming Cereus". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
  16. ^ Ross, Clark W. (2006-02-07). "The Shivaree". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
  17. ^ Elliott, Robin (2006-02-07). "Crazy to Kill". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
  18. ^ Domville, Eric (2003). A Different Drummer: The Birth of a Province. Taptoo! Conference. University of Toronto. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  19. ^ Hahn, Christopher Charles (2005). Canadian Pedagogical Piano Repertoire since 1970: A Survey of Contemporary Compositional Styles and Techniques (DMA). University of Oklahoma. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  20. ^ Beckwith, John (1991). "Notes on Harp of David" (PDF). Canadian University Music Review. 11 (2): 122–135 – via Erudit.
  21. ^ Kallmann, Helmut; Potvin, Gilles (2006-02-07). "History of Canada in Music". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-31.

External links[edit]