Rowan Taylor


150,000+ page views monthly! Advertise?

Composer news →

Philip Glass gets commission from NYC Opera 30 Sep 2008
Mauricio Kagel dies in Cologne at 76 19 Sep 2008
New Mozart tune found in France 18 Sep 2008
Nathan Currier wins International Sackler Award 18 Sep 2008
[→ submit news]

Upcoming concerts →

– Wed 15 Oct: Iron Rain Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, Finland
– Wed 15 Oct: Opera For Piano Mannes College of Music, Manhattan, New York City, USA
– Thu 16 Oct: thingNY does Berio Secret Project Robot, Brooklyn, NY (USA)
– Thu 16 Oct: Outsound and The Luggage Store Gallery New Music Series Luggage Store Gallery, San Francisco, CA, USA
– Fri 17 Oct: 23rd Annual Concert of Sacred Choral Music Cathedral of the Holy Angels, Gary, Indiana, USA
[→ submit concert]

Today → (14 Oct)

Birthdays:
Alexander von Zemlinsky
Ernest Pingoud
La Monte Young
Kaija Saariaho
Claudio Alsuyet
Dying days:
Pietro Antonio Cesti
Domenico Alberti
František (Franz) Xaver Brixi
Johann Kaspar Mertz
Rodolfo Halffter
Events:
– (1883) Antonín Dvořák: Premiere of violin concerto in a minor op. 53, in Prague, Czech Republic.
– (1924) Gustav Mahler: Premiere of Symphony no. 10 in F sharp major, in Vienna, Austria.
– (1924) Arnold Schoenberg: Premiere of Die Glückliche Hand, in Vienna, Austria.
– (1933) Alexander von Zemlinsky: Premiere of Der Kreidekreis, in Zürich, Switzerland.
– (1951) Pablo Casals: Premiere of La Sardana (for 123 cellos), in Zürich, Switzerland.

Tomorrow →

Latest changes →

Sergio Fidemraizer (10 Oct)
Giovanni Giovenale Ancina (9 Oct)
Jan Adams (Johann Adam) Reinken (8 Oct)
Richard Englefield (8 Oct)
John Arrigo-Nelson (8 Oct)
Arthur Butterworth (8 Oct)
George Butterworth (8 Oct)
Luís Carvalho (8 Oct)
Thomas Alexandrovich de Hartmann (2 Oct)
Josef Antonín Gurecký (2 Oct)

Best visited →

[Page views per month]
Wolfgang Amadeus (Amadé) Mozart [2188]
Antonio Vivaldi [2154]
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky [1658]
Ludwig van Beethoven [1081]
Johann Sebastian Bach [1052]
Johann Nepomuk Hummel [1017]
Johannes Brahms [992]
Antonio Salieri [991]
Gustav Mahler [986]
Georges Bizet [961]


Sheet music for Taylor




[No items found.]


Sheet Music Plus Featured Sale

Classical Sheet Music to download instantly at Virtual Sheet Music ®


Cds for Taylor



In association with Amazon.com

Mormoniana

by: Grant Johannesen;Christian Asplund;Todd Coleman

Classical Music : Mormoniana

Amazon.com's Price: $15.95
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours



Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Click to Display

This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0714861005523
Label: Tantara Records
Manufacturer: Tantara Records
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Tantara Records
Release Date: December 23, 2004
Studio: Tantara Records




Disc 1:
  1. “Women in Christ’s Line” Deon Nielsen Price
  2. “Fallen Angel” Gaylen Hatton
  3. “The Swirling World of Ersatz Earth” David Fletcher
  4. “Hill Cumorah” Reid Nibley
  5. “He Annointed the Eyes of the Blind Man” Rowan Taylor
  6. “The Raising of Lazarus” David H. Sargent
  7. “Untitled (corner grid)” Lansing D. McLoskey
  8. “Vision” Christian Asplund
  9. “Five” Jeff Manookian
  10. “He Was Cut Out of the Land of the Living” Nathan Fifield
  11. “Exquisite Corpse” Todd Coleman
  12. “Winter Radiance—Lake Powell” Crawford Gates
  13. “The First Principle” Murray Boren
  14. “In Old Nauvoo” Royce Campbell Twitchell
  15. “An Ice Cream Between Friends” Lisa DeSpain
  16. “Mountains” Robert Cundick
Browse for similar items by category: Click to Display



Editorial Review:

Album Description:
Sixteen American composers who are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints were invited to participate in a collaborative project initiated by Mormon Artists Group, an organization in New York City. The premise was simple: each composer was to select a visual artwork created by an LDS artist and write a piano composition inspired by it.

Together the finished compositions form a new, 16-movement concert work for the piano. The resulting score, a celebration of LDS artists and composers, is titled Mormoniana (Mor-mo-ni-a-na). Pianist Grant Johannesen agreed to collaborate on the endeavor. He placed the finished works in sequence and recorded it in the fall of 2003 at the Assembly Hall in Salt Lake City's Temple Square.









 


FREE Classical MP3! Download 25 tracks from eMusic
Vast collection — No Restrictions — Own Your Music!

Born: 7 April 1927 — California — USA
Died: 7 September 2005USA
→ See also: American composers | Modern composers |
Reactions

[Be the first to write a reaction.]


Music


[Submit information about the music of Rowan Taylor.]

Life

Rowan Taylor was inducted into the World Who’s Who Hall of Fame in 1996 by the International Biographical Centre (Cambridge, England). Other honors from this organization include: International Man Of The Year (for both 1991 and 1992), inclusion in its publications 20th Century Award Of Achievement, Men Of Achievement, International Who’s Who Of Music, International Leaders in Achievement, 2000 Scholars Of The 20th Century and award For Meritorious Achievement and Most Prolific Symphonist.

He is listed in the new Strathmore’s Who’s Who. He has received these honors from the American Biographical Institute: Outstanding Man Of The Century (20th Century), Outstanding Man Of The Century (21st Century),Man Of The Decade (1990’s), Man Of The Year (1991, 1993, 1995), Who’s Who Of The Year (1994), World Intellectual Of 1993, and has been presented with three International Cultural Diplomas (Most Prolific Symphonist Of The 20th Century, Most Prolific Symphonist In History, Presidential Seal Of Honor). He is also listed in 2,000 Notable Men, The Most Admired Men and Women of 1993-1994, and Five Hundred Leaders Of Influence, 2,000 Outstanding Scholars of the 21st Century and the International Directory of Distinguished Leadership.

He is listed is Marquis’ Who’s Who In The World, Who’s Who In America, Who’s Who In The West, and Who’s Who In American Education. He is also listed in Five Thousand Personalities Of The World, The International Register Of Profiles, Personalities of America, International Who’s Who Of Contemporary Achievement, International Register Of Biography, and other such publications.

He studied composition with Leroy Robertson, Leon Dallin, Carl Fuerstner, Crawford Gates, Lukas Foss and John Vincent. His original works include an oratorio (Coriantumr), a sacred cantata, (O God, Where Art Thou?), an opera (The Birthmark, after Nathaniel Hawthorne), a full-length pageant (San Bernardino), a ballet (Poetry And Penny Candy) for Virginia Tanner’s Children’s Dance Theater, 46 concerti for various instruments, 10 rhapsodies, more than 1700 Bagatelles for piano solo, 2455 songs, and 258 symphonies. A world record was established in June 1995. Also, over 250 chamber works, and hundreds of other compositions and arrangements. His music has been performed on six continents. His works have been performed by the National High School Orchestra and The National College Orchestra (Interlochen, Michigan), The Burbank Symphony, The New Valley Symphony Orchestra, The Rio Hondo Orchestra, The Brentwood/Westwood Symphony Orchestra, The Seventh Division Band (in Korea and Japan), The Pierce College Symphonic Winds, The All Southern California MIA Festival Orchestra, The California String Quartet, The William Steed Woodwind Quintet, The Covina Stake Choir (with members of The Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra), The San Fernando Valley Symphony Orchestra in collaboration with The West Valley Chamber Orchestra and numerous other groups. His concerti have been performed by Karen Lynn, Dawn Phelps Neal, Sam Rifkind, David Hoover, William Melton, Mike Roberts, Julian Friedman, Clyde Mitchell, Jonathan Wilson, William Bonness, Howard Anderson, John Schneider, Ron Anthony, Dennis Costa, Larry Munson, Lorraine Eckardt Kimball, Stefan Rado, Judith Rado, Erich Messerschmidt, Stephen Piazza, Priscilla Taylor, Craig Donkin, Phillip Letcher, Laura Caplan, Rowena Hammill, Norberto Guinaldo, Rachael Swearengin Lonergan, Aaron Malone, Melissa Sturm, Josephine Ha and David Blum.

He has conducted many orchestras, bands and choruses during the past 58 years. These include the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, The Burbank Symphony, The Brentwood/Westwood Symphony, The Los Angeles Civic Orchestra, The New Valley Symphony Orchestra, The National High School Orchestra and The National College Orchestra (Interlochen, Michigan), The Brigham Young University Symphony Orchestra, The Deseret Opera Guild, The Seventh Infantry Division Band, The East Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and a chorus of over 900 men. In the 1970’s he conducted a choir of about 375 in the Salt Lake Tabernacle with Roy Darley at the tabernacle organ. In 1972 he conducted a choir of 3500, an orchestra of 300 with audience participation of 18,000 in the Los Angeles Sports Arena. He was the first recipient of the Southern California Conductor’s competition for high school students in 1945, at which time he won a scholarship to Interlochen, Michigan. He also won a scholarship to Brigham Young University. He has played string bass under Leopold Stokowski, Thor Johnson and Nicolai Malko.

He studied conducting with Richard Lert, Lawrence Sardoni, William Knuth, Thor Johnson and Nicolai Malko. He was the founder of The West Valley Chamber Orchestra, The Pierce College Brass and Percussion Ensemble, The Deseret Opera Guild, and was co-founder (with Stephen Piazza) of The Pierce College Symphonic Winds. He was honored as a Pierce College teacher of the month. In early March of 2001 results of the www.gradeyourprof.com showed him graded highest among the professors at Pierce College and fifth highest in the United States. He is now in his 38th year at Pierce College. His latest award is a Gold Medal of Honor from the American Biographical Institute.

His greatest achievement is his wife, Priscilla, to whom he has been married for nearly forty-five years. His posterity includes nine children (one deceased), twenty-four grandchildren and five great grandchildren.

In the Army he served in Korea, as a Chaplain’s assistant to Rabbi Chaim Potok, a now world-famous author (whose novels are all autobiographical). Our Korean experiences are retold in the novel Book of Lights. He calls himself Gershon Loran. He calls his assistant Roger Tat, thus preserving his actual initials. Potok credits Taylor with saving his life at least twice.

His A.B. and M.A. are from Brigham Young University. He did three years additional study at UCLA under Lukas Foss, John Vincent and Thomas Marrocco.

Sources — links

Concerts

[Submit concert announcements for Rowan Taylor.]

Events

[Submit an event (date and year) for Rowan Taylor.]


© 1995–2008 Jos Smeets — Quixote; Last update: 2005-09-21 15:54:34.