Jean Eichelberger Ivey
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File:Jean Eichelberger Ivey at the Toronto Electronic Music Seminar (1964).jpg
Jean Eichelberger Ivey (July 3, 1923 – May 2, 2010) was an American composer who produced an extensive and diverse catalog of solo, chamber, vocal, and orchestral works as an innovator and "respected electronic composer."{{Cite journal |last=Pool |first=Jeannie G. |date=1979 |title=America's Women Composers: Up from the Footnotes |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3395571 |journal=Music Educators Journal |volume=65 |issue=5 |pages=28–41 |doi=10.2307/3395571 |issn=0027-4321|url-access=subscription }}
Early life and education
Born in 1923 to Joseph S. Eichelberger and Mary Elizabeth Pfeiffer, Jean B. Eichelberger Ivey attended high school at the Academy of Notre Dame in Washington, D.C. Though her childhood was impacted by the Great Depression and her father's loss of his job as editor of the anti-feminist serial The Woman Patriot,{{cite web|last=National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage|date=1918–1932|title=THE WOMAN PATRIOT: A NATIONAL NEWSPAPER FOR HOME AND NATIONAL DEFENSE AGAINST WOMAN SUFFRAGE, FEMINISM AND SOCIALISM.|url=https://www.loc.gov/item/sn84032244/|access-date=October 25, 2021|website=Library of Congress}} Jean Eichelberger won a full-tuition scholarship at Trinity College in Washington, D.C. where she graduated magna cum laude with her bachelor's degree in 1944.{{Cite news |last=Townsend |first=J. Kenneth |date=1983-11-01 |title=Jean Eichelberger Ivey |language=en-US |newspaper=Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1983/11/01/jean-eichelberger-ivey/33bc96e2-ba9e-4f5b-8804-2ed818a5bf0a/ |access-date=2023-01-28 |issn=0190-8286}} Subsequently, she earned master's degrees in piano performance from Peabody Conservatory and composition from the Eastman School of Music where she studied under Wayne Barlow, Kent Kennan, and Bernard Rogers. In the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s she taught at Trinity College (1945-1955), the Peabody Conservatory (1946), and the Catholic University of America (1952-1955), and College Misericordia (1955-1957). From 1960 to 1962 she taught at Xavier University in New Orleans.{{Cite book |last=Cohen |first=Aaron I. |title=International encyclopedia of women composers |date=1987 |publisher=Books & Music USA |isbn=978-0-9617485-2-4 |edition=2nd ed., rev and enl |location=New York}} In 1964 she began a Doctor of Musical Arts program in composition, including studies in electronic music, at the University of Toronto and completed the degree in 1972.{{cite book |last1=Friedburg |first1=Ruth C. |last2=Fisher |first2=Robin |title=American Art Song and American Poetry |date=2012 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location=Lanham, MD |isbn=9780810881747 |page=269}} She served as the editor of the American Society of University Composers newsletter from its founding in January 1968 until summer 1970.{{Cite web |title=The American Society of University Composers Newsletter {{!}} SCI Archive: Society of Composers, Inc. |url=https://library.uta.edu/sci/newsletter/2852 |access-date=2023-01-28 |website=library.uta.edu}}
Peabody
She founded the Peabody Electronic Music Studio in 1967,{{cite web |last1=Wright |first1=Geoffrey |last2=Boyle |first2=McGregor |title=History |url=https://pcm.peabody.jhu.edu/wordpress/?page_id=402 |website=Peabody Computer Music |accessdate=March 19, 2019 |archive-date=May 15, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190515095531/https://pcm.peabody.jhu.edu/wordpress/?page_id=402 |url-status=dead }} and taught composition and electronic music at the Peabody Conservatory of Music until her retirement. Works composed by Ivey and her students within the studio's first full season were presented at New York's Carnegie Recital Hall, around Peabody, and on radio and television.{{Cite web |title=Peabody Computer Music Department |url=http://pcm.sapp.org/info/history/ |access-date=2023-01-28 |website=pcm.sapp.org}} Most of her electronics works are composed for mixed mediums including acoustic instruments and voice. At the Peabody Conservatory Summer Session, Ivey presented a workshop on electronic music, using her own tape recorders and borrowed equipment, for an audience of school music teachers. She then persuaded the Conservatory to purchase its own equipment and launch the Peabody Electronic Music Studio in 1969, the first such studio at a conservatory. Ivey directed the studio (later renamed the Computer Music Studio) and the computer music composition program at Peabody until her retirement in 1997, earning tenure in 1976 and serving as an adviser to dozens of composers over the years. The Baltimore Symphony premiered two of her works which combine tape with orchestra, and her music has been recorded on the CRI, Folkways and Grenadilla labels. Her publishers include Boosey and Hawkes, Carl Fischer, Inc. and E.C. Schirmer.
Achievement
Ivey is listed in the New Grove Dictionary of Music{{Cite web |title=Ivey, Jean Eichelberger |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000014003 |access-date=2024-12-06 |website=Grove Music Online |language=en}} and Who's Who in America. She is also the subject of a half-hour documentary film prepared in Washington: A Woman Is... a Composer. Her awards include a Guggenheim fellowship,{{cite web
|url=http://www.gf.org/fellows/7150-jean-eichelberger-ivey
|title=Jean Eichelberger Ivey – John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
|publisher=gf.org
|accessdate=August 29, 2009
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604000450/http://www.gf.org/fellows/7150-jean-eichelberger-ivey
|archivedate=June 4, 2011
}} two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, annual ASCAP awards since 1972, the Peabody Director's Recognition Award, and the Peabody Distinguished Alumni Award.
On her compositional ideals, Ivey wrote: "I consider all the musical resources of the past and present as being at the composer's disposal, but always in the service of the effective communication of humanistic ideas and intuitive emotion."
Influence
While pursuing her doctoral studies at University of Toronto, she studied electronic music under Myron Schaeffer and Hugh Le Caine. Composing and conducting are two of the last male bastions, though women are steadily making inroads into these fields. Jean Eichelberger Ivey battled this prejudice not only in the field of music but also in academia where women were less likely to be awarded tenure, foundation grants, performance opportunities, and commercial recordings. [4]
Compositions
Chamber Music
Androcles and the Lion
Dinsmoor Suite
Music for Viola and Piano
Ode for Violin and Piano
Pantomime
Scherzo for Wind Septet
Six Inventions for Two Violins
Sonatina for Unaccompanied Clarinet
Song of Pan
String Quartet
Suite for Cello and Piano
Tonado
Triton’s Horn
Electronic Music (Tape Only):
Continuous Form
Cortege – For Charles Kent
Enter Three Witches
Pinball
Theater Piece
Live Performers Plus Tape:
Aldebaran
Hera, Hung from the Sky
Prospero
Sea-Change
Skaniadaryo
Terminus
Testament of Eve
Three Songs of Night
Music for Theater, Films, and Television:
Androcles and the Lion
Continuous Form
The Exception and the Rule
Montage IV: The Garden of Eden
Montage V: How to Play Pinball
Documentary film on Jean Eichelberger Ivey
Orchestra Music:
Festive Symphony
Forms in Motion
Little Symphony
Ode for Orchestra
Overture for Small Orchestra
Passacaglia for Chamber Orchestra
Sea-Change
Testament of Eve
Tribute: Martin Luther King
Piano Music (Artist Level):
Prelude and Passacaglia
Skaniadaryo (Piano and Tape)
Sonata for Piano
Theme and Variations
Piano Music (Teaching Pieces):
Magic Circles
Modal Melodies (7)
Parade (Duet)
Pentatonic Sketches (5)
Sleepy Time
Tiny Twelve-Tone Tunes (5)
Water Wheel
Vocal and Choral Music:
Absent in the Spring
Ave Verum, see Lord, Hear My Prayer
The Birthmark
A Carol of Animals
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
Hera, Hung from the Sky
Iliad, see Two Songs for High Voice, Flute or Clarinet, and Piano
Lord, Hear My Prayer
Morning Song
Night Voyage, see Two Songs for High Voice, Flute or Clarinet, and Piano
Notes Toward Time
O Come, Bless the Lord
Panis Angelicus, see O Come, Bless the Lord
Prospero
Solstice
Terminus
Testament of Eve
Three Songs of Night
Tribute: Martin Luther King
Two Songs for High Voice, Flute or Clarinet, and Piano
Other
She met and married Fred Ivey, an American living in Germany. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1974. [5] Ivey died on May 2, 2010, in Baltimore, Maryland.
Pinball (Folkways records FMS 3/3436)
Hera, Hung from the Sky combines taped and live performances and inspired by poem by Carolyn Kizer (Composers Recording, Inc. CRI-SD 325, Garden [1961]),
Testament of Eve (1974).[6]
Her many notable composition students include Michael Hedges, Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez, Geoffrey Dorian Wright, Richard Dudas, McGregor Boyle, Vivian Adelberg Rudow, Lynn F. Kowal and Daniel Crozier.
Sources
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External links
- [http://www.bruceduffie.com/ivey.html Interview with Jean Eichelberger Ivey], February 28, 1987
- https://aspace.library.jhu.edu/repositories/4/resources/1490
- https://aspace.library.jhu.edu/repositories/4/resources/1490
- https://aspace.library.jhu.edu/repositories/4/resources/1490
- http://www.bruceduffie.com/ivey.html
- http://www.thelizlibrary.org/collections/woa/woa01-07.html
- https://folkways.si.edu/music-by-jean-eichelberger-ivey-for-voices-instruments-and-tape/contemporary-electronic/album/smithsonian
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Category:American women composers
Category:American women in electronic music