Emma Lou Diemer
Born: 1927 (USA)
Died:
yahoo.com>)— Vast collection — No Restrictions — Own Your Music!
Sheet music
- SheetMusicPlus
- VirtualSheetMusic
[details ←] Psalm Interpretations For Organ Organ,
[details ←] Monkey Dance
[details ←] Praise Organ,
[details ←] Madrigals Three Piano, choral
[details ←] Four Chinese Love Poems Piano, Vocal,
[details ←] In You,0 Lord,Do I Put My Piano, Vocal, Organ,
[details ←] Quiet, Lovely Piece Piano, Clarinet,
[details ←] Three Madrigals Piano, choral
[details ←] Psalms For Organs Organ,
[details ←] Seasonal Psalms for Organ, Vol. 1 Organ,
[details ←] Quartet Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello,
[details ←] Quartet for Trumpet, Horn, Trombone and Piano Piano, Trumpet, Trombone,
[details ←] Communion Hymns For Organ Organ,
[details ←] Eldorado Piano, choral
[details ←] Concerto Flute,
[details ←] Rejoice in the Lord - flute Flute, choral
[details ←] Hope is the thing with feathers choral
Music
Compositions available on Vienna Modern Masters
Biography
"Having studied at Yale under the Hindemith influence in the late ‘40s and early ‘50s, my concept of composing is to some extent the Gebrauchsmusik approach," Diemer wrote in The American Organist in September, 1982. In The Piano Quarterly, Spring 1985, she wrote, "Most of my music has been produced within a certain context: composition student, composer-in-residence, organist/choir director in various churches, university professor. If I had been apprenticed to a ballet company, a symphony orchestrao an opera company, I would have written music for that situation... I have little affinity with the composers who write only for their fellow composers. Some of history’s dullest, most ephemeral music has been produced for that reason."
lt is precisely this grassroots quality that has made Diemer one of the most widely performed composers in America today. Hers is music to be used, much of it (particularly a vast output of choral music) written to fill a need. Yet, even at its most conservative, it is substantial, innovative, sometimes whimsical, and always enduring.
About this piece, Diemer notes: "Fantasie was written in 1958 at Eastman when l was working on my Ph.D. in composition. I remember writing it in one of the practice rooms and feeling quite happy about the fugue subject, which came to mind in an especially free frame of mind." (The performer senses Buxtehude’s approval.) "The piece originally had a slow middle section based on the 4-note idea that the whole work is based on (short-short-short-long), but Oxford eliminated it. The beginning and ending are improvisatory with the more structured fugal section in between."
Oxford University Press published this piece in 1967, as catalogue number 93.107.
Concerts
[You can submit announcements for concerts with music from Emma Lou Diemer.]
Events
[If you know of an event (date and year) for Emma Lou Diemer, then let me know, and I will add it.]

