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Ingram Douglass Marshall (May 10, 1942May 31, 2022) was an American composer

(1991). 9780253206435, Indiana University Press. .
and a onetime student of Vladimir Ussachevsky and .


Early life and education
Marshall was born in Mount Vernon, New York. He was the son of Bernice Douglass and Harry Reinhard Marshall, Sr. Marshall's early interest in music was the result of encouragement provided by his mother, herself an accomplished pianist and vocalist. As a youth, he performed as a soprano in the Boy's Choir at the Mt. Vernon Community Church, and during his high school years was influenced early by noted music instructor Victor Laslo. After graduating from the Fox Lane High School in 1960, he pursued musical studies at Lake Forest College and Columbia University, becoming affiliated with the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. In 1970 he became a graduate assistant to Morton Subotnick at Cal Arts, staying on to teach for several years after receiving his MFA in 1971.


Career
Though the composer used the term "expressivist" to describe his music, Marshall's music is often associated with . His music often reflects an interest in world music, particularly Balinese tradition, as well as influence from the American trends of the 1960s (the composer often acknowledged the work of , , and John Adams).

He first gained recognition for his electroacoustic pieces, often performed by the composer himself on , tape looping, (a traditional Balinese flute), and voice ("Fragility Cycles" 1978 is one of his best known works using this method of solo performance). His acoustic music frequently incorporated tape delay, and later, (such as "Soe Pa", for solo classical guitar, and "Hymnodic Delays" for the Theatre of Voices). Many of the tape parts of his pieces include the composer's own keening falsetto and playing (such as "Fog Tropes" and "Gradual Requiem" (1980)). Some of his works were produced in coordination with the assistance of noted Norwegian photographer, James Bengston of Studio Nord in Oslo.

Marshall wrote for the : Voces Resonae (1984) and Fog Tropes II (1982), featured in the 2010 film Shutter Island, and for the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra: Orphic Memories (2006).

He taught at the California Institute of the Arts in the early 1970s, joined the music faculty at The Evergreen State College in the late 1980s, and later moved to New Haven, Connecticut. He taught at the Yale School of Music and the , and also held visiting teaching positions at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and . Among his notable students are , , Christopher Cerrone, , , Adrian Knight, Matt Sargent, and .

Marshall was the recipient of a Fulbright Scholarship and studied music in . In 1990 he was awarded a doctorate of philosophy in music by Lake Forest College, largely in recognition of his Fulbright award and gamelan studies in Bali. In addition to his Fulbright award, he received awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, Rockefeller Foundation, , Guggenheim Foundation, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters.


Music

Chamber works
  • "The Fragility Cycles" (1978), electronics, synthesizer, gambuh flute, and voice
  • "Gradual Requiem" (1980), electronics, synthesizer, flute, voice, mandolin, and piano
  • Fog Tropes (1981), brass sextet and tape
  • Voces Resonae (1984), string quartet (premiered by Kronos Quartet)
  • In My End is My Beginning (1985), Piano Quartet in 2 Movements (premiered by the Dunsmuir Piano Quartet)
  • Evensongs (1992), string quartet
  • Fog Tropes II (1994), string quartet and tape
  • Sierran Songs (1994), bass, marimba, and electronics
  • In Deserto: Smoke Creek (2003), violin, bassoon, percussion, guitar, cello, and electronics
  • Muddy Waters (2004), piano, percussion, electric guitar, bass, bass clarinet, and cello (premiered by Bang on a Can All-Stars)
  • Sea Tropes (2007), flute, violin, cello, bass clarinet, marimba, and tape


Orchestral works
  • "Spiritus" (1981)
  • "Sinfonia Dolce far Niente" (1989)
  • Peaceable Kingdom (1991)
  • "Kingdom Come" (1997)
  • Bright Kingdoms (2003)
  • Dark Florescence (2004), Variations for Two Guitars and Orchestra (with and Ben Verdery)
  • Orphic Memories (2006)


Choral works
  • Savage Altars (1992), chamber choir, violin, viola, and tape
  • Hymnodic Delays (2001)
  • A New Haven Psalter (premiered on November 30, 2012 by the Yale University Glee Club and the Yale Concert Band)


Solo works
  • Soe-pa (2000), solo guitar with electronics
  • Authentic Presence (2001), solo piano (premiered by Sarah Cahill)
  • September Canons (2003), solo violin (premiered by Todd Reynolds)
  • Five Easy Pieces (2003), Piano four-hands
  • "Baghdad Blues" (2006), solo oboe with electronics
  • "Florescence Soledad" (2007), solo guitar


Interviews


External links


Listening

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