Aaron Copland

@Teacher, Family and Childhood

Aaron Copland was a renowned American composer, writer, and conductor

Nov 14, 1900

Alzheimer'sJewish SingersAmericanMusiciansComposersWritersScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 14, 1900
  • Died on: December 2, 1990
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Teacher, Writers, Jewish Singers, Musicians, Composers, Writers
  • Siblings: Laurine, more, Ralph
  • Universities:
    • The Fontainebleau Schools
  • Birth Place: Brooklyn

Aaron Copland born at

Brooklyn

Unsplash
Birth Place

Aaron Copland never married and remained a bachelor throughout his life. It is believed that he was gay and had love affairs with several men including Victor Kraft, artist Alvin Ross, pianist Paul Moor, and dancer Erik Johns.

Unsplash
Personal Life

He passed away on December 2, 1990 due to respiratory failure and Alzheimer’s disease.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Aaron Copland was born to a conservative Jewish family of Lithuanian origin on 14 November 1900, in Brooklyn, New York. His parents were Harris Morris Copland and Sarah Mittenthal Copland. Among their five children, Aaron was the youngest one.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Their original family name was ‘Kaplan.’ His father had changed it earlier due to certain reasons, though Aaron himself was unaware of the fact for a long time.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Unlike his father who was not interested in music at all, his mother liked to sing as well as play the piano, and she arranged musical classes for the children too. Among his siblings, his older brother Ralph was the most talented in music, having become proficient with the violin at a very young age. It was Aaron’s sister Laurine, who was the closest to him among all his siblings. She supported and encouraged him in his career.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

At the early age of eight, Copland started writing songs, and at the age of eleven, he composed his first notated music for an opera scenario. Later, he studied under Leopold Wolfsohn for a period of four years.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Later, he studied under Rubin Goldmark in Manhattan and also attended classical music performances. He then continued his studies in Fontainebleau in France, where he was taught by the famous French musician Nadia Boulange. Her broad taste in music had a deep influence on him.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

After studying under many reputed European composers abroad, Aaron Copland came back to the US. His debut work ‘Symphony for Organ and Orchestra’ was released on January 11, 1925.

Unsplash
Career

Later on he was drawn to jazz and popular music, genres which he had explored previously as well while he was in Europe. Several of his works, including ‘Four Piano Blues’ had a Jazz influence.

Unsplash
Career

As an author he wrote the first edition of ‘What to Listen for in Music.’ In the book, which was published in 1939, he gives the reader a proper guidance on the appreciation of music. He also wrote and published ‘Our New Music’ and ‘Music and Imagination’ in 1941 and 1952 respectively.

Unsplash
Career

Aaron Copland spent his time in other countries during the Great Depression years. He went to Europe, Africa, and then to Mexico as well, where he got acquainted with the Mexican composer Carlos Chavez. He composed several musical works using Mexican folk music as well, such as ‘El Salon Mexico.’

Unsplash
Career

He is also remembered for composing film scores. The films he worked on include ‘Mice and Men’ (1939), ‘Our Town’ (1940), and the ‘North Star’ (1943). He also worked on ‘The Heiress’ in 1949 for which he was awarded an Oscar.

Unsplash
Career

‘The Piano Variations’ of Copland, which were written for piano solo, was dedicated to Gerald Sykes, a renewed American writer. The musical performance, which lasts for around 11 minutes, was first published in 1932 by Cos Cob press.

Unsplash
Major Works

Another significant work his was ‘El Salon Mexico.’ It was composed during one of his visits to Mexico using pure Mexican folk music. The work, which comprises three different musical styles, depicts an imaginary dance hall in Mexico City. Copland had started working on it from 1932, and completed it in 1936.

Unsplash
Major Works

His ‘Connotations’, which was a musical composition for symphony orchestra was another major work. However upon its premier it was received negatively by many; some critics considered Copland’s use of serial techniques quite detrimental to his music. But others saw it only as a proof of his growth and unique inventiveness.

Unsplash
Major Works

One of his most popular works was ‘Rodeo’ which was premiered in 1942. It was a ballet consisting of five sections: ‘Buckaroo Holiday’, ‘Corral Nocturne’, ‘Ranch House Party’, ‘Saturday Night Waltz’, and ‘Hoe-Down.’ Considered as one of the earliest examples of a true American ballet, ‘Rodeo’ can be regarded the combination of Broadway music with a classical ballet.

Unsplash
Major Works

‘Symphony No. 3’ which was Aaron Copland’s third and final symphony, is among one of his significant works. It was premiered on October 19, 1946, by the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Serge Koussevitzy. It was written at the end of the Second World War, and it is regarded as the essential American symphony as it fuses Copland’s distinct ‘Americana’ style with the form of the symphony.

Unsplash
Major Works