Draft:Thomas Beveridge

{{Short description|American musician, singer, composer, conductor, and teacher}}

{{Draft topics|biography|music}}

{{AfC topic|blp}}

{{AfC submission|||ts=20250325181914|u=B768304|ns=118}}

{{Infobox person

|birth_date = {{birth date|1938|6|4}}

|birth_place = New York City, U.S.

|occupation = Musician, singer, composer, conductor, teacher

|spouse = Meryle Secrest

|years_active = 1955–2005}}

Thomas Beveridge (born June 4, 1938) is an American musician, singer, composer, conductor, and teacher.

Early life and education

Thomas Gattrell Beveridge was born in New York City to Lowell P. Beveridge and Ida (Gatrell) Beveridge. Lowell served on the music faculty of Columbia University and was organist and choirmaster at Columbia's St. Paul's Chapel. After gaining ordination as an Episcopal priest, Lowell taught at the Virginia Theological Seminary and served on the faculty of the Union Seminary School of Sacred Music.{{cite news |last1=Anonymous |title=The Rev. Lowell Beveridge, professor of music, dies |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1991/06/20/the-rev-lowell-beveridge-professor-of-music-dies/b9e898f1-334c-44d7-bbdd-66354b1bbe83/ |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=June 19, 1991}}

Older brother Lowell Peter "Pete" Beveridge Jr. is a published author of two books and a former editor of The Liberator magazine.{{cite web |last1=Sullivan |first1=Sady |title=Pete Beveridge |url=https://oralhistory.brooklynhistory.org/interviews/beveridge-pete-20120523/ |website=Oral History Collections, Center for Brooklyn History |publisher=Brooklyn Public Library |date=May 23, 2012}}

Exposed from birth to music, Thomas started taking piano lessons at age six, developing within a few years into a pianist capable of accompanying his father on the organ. Thomas began composing music at age eleven. As a teenager, he also learned the oboe. By the time he entered Harvard University in 1955, Beveridge had written seventy-five pieces.{{cite web |title=Thomas Beveridge Biography |url=https://www.singers.com/bio/2940 |website=Singers.com |publisher=United Singers International}}

As an undergraduate student, Beveridge studied composition with Walter Piston and Randall Thompson and choral conducting with G. Wallace Woodworth at Harvard, and voice with Olga Averino and Mascia Predit at the nearby Longy School of Music of Bard College. Beveridge continued to compose as a student, producing more substantial works, including a modern opera based on Dido and Aeneas. He wrote music specially for the Harvard Glee Club, in which he was also a soloist. On a visit to Harvard, Nadia Boulanger invited Beveridge to study composition and conducting at her Fontainebleu school in France.{{cite web |last1=Levin |first1=Neil |title=Artists: Thomas Beveridge |url=https://www.milkenarchive.org/artists/view/thomas-beveridge |website=Milken Archive of Jewish Music }}

Career

After graduation, Beveridge enlisted in the United States Army. He soon joined the Army Chorus based in Fort Myer in Arlington County, Virginia as a bass soloist and staff arranger. Beveridge served 20 years, retiring at the rank of master sergeant. While in the army, Beveridge married the English journalist and biographer Meryle Secrest on November 23, 1975. Upon his discharge, Beveridge stayed in the Washington, D.C. area, where his career as choral singer, composer, and conductor grew.{{cite web |title=Thomas Beveridge, Artistic Director |url=https://www.newdominion.org/Artistic-Director |website=New Dominion Chorale }}

= Singer =

Beveridge has been a soloist in performances with the National Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Opera Company of Boston, the Choral Arts Society of Washington, the Cathedral Choral Society, the New Amsterdam Singers, the Bethlehem Bach Choir, and the Philadelphia Singers. He has also appeared at the New England Bach Festival and the Yehudi Menuhin Festival in Gstaad, Switzerland. Beveridge has given solo recitals at Carnegie Hall, the Symphony Space in New York, the Phillips Collection, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Library of Congress, and the National Gallery of Art.

= Conductor =

Beveridge has served as director of choral activities at George Mason University; chorus master of the Washington National Opera; instructor in voice, conducting and composition at the Levine School of Music; and Director of the Washington Men's Camerata. He has appeared as guest conductor for music organizations including the Smithsonian's National Gallery Orchestra, the Washington Chamber Symphony, and the Choral Arts Society of Washington's performance of The Eighth Chapter by Alexander Knaifel at the Washington National Cathedral featuring cellist Mstislav Rostropovich. Beveridge has also served as organist and choirmaster Western Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C.; founder and artistic director of the National Men's Chorus, a vocal ensemble devoted to the adult male voice choral tradition; and co-founder and artistic director of the 175-voice New Dominion Chorale.

Works

Beveridge has composed more than 700 works, including nearly 500 for choir. He has also composed three symphonies including Symphony of Peace, an oratorio entitled Once: In Memoriam Martin Luther King, Jr., and Yizkor Requiem , a concert work melding Jewish and Christian musical traditions.{{cite web |last1=Celentano |first1=Andrew |title=Interview with Thomas Beveridge |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEm_OgOYSlY |website=YouTube |publisher=Google |date=October 18, 2022}}

He has received commissions from Harvard University, the Harvard Divinity School, Union Theological Seminary, the Choral Arts Society of Washington, and the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation at the Library of Congress.

Beveridge has recorded for labels such as Centaur Records, Crystal Records, RCA Records, and Vox Records.

= Notable compositions =

Symphony of Peace (2002), cantata for vocal soloists, chorus, and orchestra. In an interview{{cite news |last1=Page |first1=Time |title=For Thomas Beveridge, 'Peace' at Long Last |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2002/11/09/for-thomas-beveridge-peace-at-long-last/3c7628df-2ec8-4888-8294-51c1849c4fc9/ |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=November 8, 2002}} shortly before its premier, Beveridge recalled starting work on the piece in 1972 while still in the army. Unable to express his anti-war sentiments while in the military, he wrote the symphony using biblical texts to support world peace.{{cite news |last1=McLellan |first1=Joseph |title=Thomas Beveridge's Welcome 'Peace' Offering |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/2002/11/12/thomas-beveridges-welcome-peace-offering/931ae1e3-7317-4087-bb1c-0b81fe6160cb/ |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=November 11, 2002}}

Yizkor Requiem: A Quest for Spritual Roots (1994) is dedicated to the memory of his father, Lowell Beveridge, and inspired by his father's pursuit of ecumenism between Judaism and Christianity. When his father retired from teaching, Beveridge's parents traveled to Israel to study at the Tantur Ecumenical Institute in Jerusalem. Beveridge reflected his father's work in Yizkor Requiem by combining elements of the Jewish burial service and the Catholic requiem mass, using a cantor speaking in Arabic and Hebrew and a chorus singing in English and Latin.{{cite web |last1=Town & Gown |title=5 Questions with composer Thomas Beveridge |url=https://www.statecollege.com/articles/spot-2/5-questions-with-composer-thomas-beveridge/ |website=StateCollege.com |date=March 29, 2016}}

References

{{reflist}}