Ernest Bloch

@Composers, Birthday and Personal Life

Ernest Bloch was a Swiss-born American music composer who started playing violin at the age of nine

Jul 24, 1880

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 24, 1880
  • Died on: January 1, 1970
  • Nationality: Swiss
  • Famous: Musicians, Composers
  • Spouses: Marguerite Schneider
  • Childrens: Ivan, Lucienne, Suzanne
  • Universities:
    • Conservatory in Brussels
    • Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt

Ernest Bloch born at

Geneva

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Birth Place

Ernest Bloch’s Childhood and Early Life Ernest Bloch was born in Geneva, Switzerland, on 24 July 1880. Later he moved to America and took up an American citizenship. His father was a well-off Swiss manufacturer dealing in watches and clocks. Bloch’s interest in music started at a very early age and by the age of nine, he had started playing the violin. Soon after, he also started composing. Bloch then studied music at the school of arts in Brussels where he was tutored by the Belgian violinist Eugène Ysaÿe. He also studied eurhythmics with Émile Jacques-Dalcroze. Subsequently, he moved out of Switzerland and travelled throughout Europe, Belgium, Munich and Paris in due course. In 1900, he moved to Germany and for a year he studied composition with Iwan Knorr in Frankfurt at the Hoch Conservatory. He went to Paris in 1903, then returned to Geneva, and later travelled to the United States. As a student, he was very productive but he couldn’t publish any of the compositions that he wrote during this time. Career In Music And Later Life Bloch travelled to New York in 1916 during the World War I. He went there as a conductor with the Maud Allan Dance Company but due to an unfortunate circumstance (the company went broke) he was left stranded in Ohio. This forced him stay in America, which eventually brought him success as composer, director, teacher and music school administrator. He performed in many concerts in New York and Boston and with time he became a major figure among the contemporary musicians of America. His important teaching assignments were at the Mannes School of Music in New York and the Cleveland Institute of Music where, in 1920, he became the institute’s first Musical Director and served there for five years. After that he was appointed as the director of the San Francisco Music School in the year 1925 and also served there for five years. In 1927, he composed America, an Epic Rhapsody, which won the first prize in a contest, which was sponsored by Musical America. In 1930, he returned to Switzerland and lived there for a decade. During this time he travelled extensively around Europe giving performances of his works while at the same time composing. He went back to the U.S before the start of the World War II because of the rise of Nazism in Germany and also to retain his U.S citizenship. In America, he settled at Agate Beach, Oregon, where he worked as a professor teaching summer courses at the California University in Berkeley till his retirement. Personal Life And Death In 1904, Bloch married Marguerite Schneider and they raised three children—Ivan, Suzanne and Lucienne. Ivan, who was born in 1905, became an engineer with the Bonneville Power Administration in Portland. The second born, Suzanne, followed in her father’s footsteps. She became a musician with interests in Renaissance music and taught lute and cembalo at the Julliard School in New York. Lucienne was born in 1909 and worked as a chief photographer at the Rockefeller Center Mural project. Ernest Bloch died of cancer, for which he was suffering for a long time, at Agate Beach, Oregon, on July 15, 1959, at the age of 78. Works And Achievements Though Bloch had a significant interest in photography and developed a sizeable collection of his photographic works, he is best remembered for his music. His opera Macbeth (1910), which he performed in Paris was largely unappreciated by the audience but his subsequent works would gain him both name and fame. Most of his well known works were heavily influenced by Jewish liturgical and folk music. His composition, Schelomo (1916), for cello and orchestra, was dedicated to the cellist Aleixandre Barjansky. Stage Works Macbeth (opera). Orchestral Works Symphony in C sharp minor, Symphony in Eb, Symphony for Trombone (or Cello) and Orchestra. Concerts And Similar Works Concertino for Flute, Viola and String. Concerto Grosso No.1, for string orchestra and piano. Concerto grosso No.2, for string quartet and string orchestra. Concerto symphonique, for piano and orchestra (or 2 pianos). Proclamation, for trumpet and orchestra (or piano). Schelomo, rhapsody for cello and orchestra. Scherzo fantasque, for piano and orchestra (or 2 pianos). Suite for Viola and Orchestra (after Suite for Viola and Piano). Suite hébraïque, for viola and orchestra. Suite modale, for flute and strings. Violin Concerto Voice in the Wilderness, symphonic poem for cello and orchestra Other Orchestral Works Evocations, suite (or 2 pianos) Hiver—Printemps, 2 symphonic poems In the Night 3 Jewish Poems, suite Poems of the Sea Suite symphonique Other Chamber Works Abodah: a Yom Kippur melody, for violin and piano Baal Shem: 3 Pictures of Hassidic life, for violin and piano 4 Episodes, for chamber orchestra Exotic Night, for violin and piano From Jewish Life, 3 sketches for cello and piano Meditation Hébraïque, for cello and piano Melody, for violin and piano 3 Nocturnes for Piano Trio Piano Quintet No. 1 Quintet for Piano and Strings No. 1 Quintet for Piano and Strings No. 2 Violin Sonata No. 1 Violin Sonata No.2 (Poème mystique) Vocal Works America: An Epic Rhapsody, for chorus and orchestra Avodath Hakodesh (Sacred Service), for baritone, chorus, and orchestra Poèmes d'automne, 4 songs for mezzo and orchestra (or piano) Prelude and 2 Psalms, for soprano and orchestra (or piano) Psalm 22, for alto (or baritone) and orchestra Piano Works 4 Circus Pieces Danse sacrée Enfantines, (10 Children's pieces) Ex-voto Nirvana, poem Amongst all his works the main compositions for which he is much appreciated and remembered for are the four String Quartets, Symphony in E-flat, Sinfonia Breve, Piano Quintet No. 11, works for trombone, trumpet and flute with orchestra, and several suites for stringed instruments. Legacy Ernest Bloch leaves behind an impressive legacy and there are many awards and accolades, societies, foundations, books and so on dedicated to his memory. Society and Festivals Ernest Bloch Society (Israel and Switzerland) International Ernest Bloch Society (U.K) Bloch Festival in Chicago - 1950 Bloch Festival in Italy - 1953 Books on Bloch A Guide to Research Bloch, Schoenberg, Bernstein: Assimilating Jewish Music Ernest Bloch Ernest Bloch: Creative Spirit His Life and his Thoughts (four volumes) Jewish Identities The Ernest Bloch Companion The Ernest Bloch I Knew: The Agate Beach Years Voices in the Wilderness Awards & Accolades Bloch received many awards for his contributions to music. He won the Coolidge Prize for Viola and Piano in 1919, received the Carolyn Beebe Prize (four episodes for Chamber Orchestra) 1926, the Musical America Prize in 1928 and in 1930, the Victor Prize. In the year 1942, he received a gold medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in Music. He was also bestowed with the New York Music Critics Circle Award (1947 and 1954), the National Jewish Welfare Board Frank L. Weil Award (1956), the Fine Arts Commission of the City of Portland Special Award (1958) and the Brandeis Creative Arts Award (1959). He also earned honorary degrees from Linfield College (1948), the Jewish Theological Seminary, Reed College (1955) and Brandeis University (1955).

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