Francis McBeth
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William Francis McBeth (March 9, 1933 – January 6, 2012) was an American
composer A composer is a person who writes music. The term is especially used to indicate composers of Western classical music, or those who are composers by occupation. Many composers are, or were, also skilled performers of music. Etymology and Defi ...
, whose wind band works are highly respected. His primary musical influences included Clifton Williams,
Bernard Rogers Bernard Rogers (4 February 1893 – 24 May 1968) was an American composer. His best known work is ''The Passion'', an oratorio written in 1942. Life and career Rogers was born in New York City. He studied with Arthur Farwell, Ernest Bloc ...
, and Howard Hanson. The popularity of his works in the United States during the last half of the twentieth century led to many invitations and appearances as a guest conductor, where he often conducted the premiere performances of some of his compositions, the majority of which were commissioned. His conducting activities took him to forty-eight states, three Canadian provinces, Japan, and Australia; and for a number of years he was principal conductor of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra in the capital of Little Rock. At one time, his "Double Pyramid Balance System" was a widely used pedagogical tool in the concert band world. From 1957 until his retirement in 1996, McBeth taught at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Arkansas.


Career

McBeth was born in
Ropesville, Texas Ropesville is a city in Hockley County, Texas, United States. Its population was 434 at the 2010 United States Census, 2010 census, down from 517 at the 2000 United States Census, 2000 census. Geography Ropesville is located on the high plains o ...
(near Lubbock). His parents were Joseph Phinis McBeth, a Baptist minister, and Lillie May Carpenter McBeth. McBeth had a brother, Harold, and a sister, Laura Fay. He had an early start to his musical training, studying piano with his mother and taking up the trumpet in the second grade. He graduated from Irving High School in Irving, Texas where he served as President of the IHS Senior Class of 1951, as well as President of Future Farmers of America. He lettered in football and track and was a member of the Tiger Band and choir. (Mary Sue White McBeth, wife of Francis, was also in the Irving High Tiger Band class of 1951.) He attended Hardin-Simmons University in
Abilene, Texas Abilene ( ) is a city in Taylor and Jones Counties in Texas, United States. Its population was 125,182 at the 2020 census, making it the 27th-most populous city in the state of Texas. It is the principal city of the Abilene metropolitan statis ...
. While an undergraduate at H-SU, McBeth played in the university band. From December 1952 to January 1953, the band traveled with U.S. Camp Shows to Europe. He also played string bass in a jazz combo, which was unusual for the time period due to widespread segregation throughout the South. McBeth married Mary Sue White in 1953. They had a daughter, Laura and a son, Matthew. He served in the military from 1954 to 1956 with the 101st Airborne Band at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and the 98th Army Band at Fort Rucker, Alabama. He was initiated into the University of Texas Alpha Iota chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia in 1957. In 1962, McBeth conducted the Arkansas All-State Band, with future president Bill Clinton playing in the tenor saxophone section. He served as the third conductor of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra from 1970 until 1973. He died on January 6, 2012 (age 78) in Arkadelphia, Arkansas.


Awards

The most outstanding of his awards have been the Presley Award at Hardin-Simmons University in 1954, the Howard Hanson Prize at the Eastman School of Music for his Third Symphony in 1963, recipient of an ASCAP Special Award each consecutive year from 1965 to present, the American School Band Directors Association's Edwin Franko Goldman Award in 1983, elected Fellow of the American Wind and Percussion Artists by the National Band Association in 1984, National Citation from Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia fraternity in 1985, in 1988 Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia's
Charles E. Lutton Man of Music Award The Charles E. Lutton Man of Music Award is one of the highest honors awarded to members of the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia fraternity for a lifelong achievement in uplifting the world through art and music. Its recipients include musical legends such as ...
for his achievement and continued contribution to American music, Kappa Kappa Psi's Distinguished Service to Music Medal in 1989, Mid-West International Band and Orchestra Clinic's Medal of Honor in 1993, the John Philip Sousa Foundations Sudler Medal of Honor in 1999, and Past President of the American Bandmasters Association. In 1975 McBeth was appointed Composer Laureate of the State of Arkansas by the Governor, the first Composer Laureate named in the United States.


Works


Works for Orchestra


Symphonies

* 1955 ''Symphony No. 1'', opus 7 * 1956 ''Symphony No. 2'', opus 10 * 1963 ''Symphony No. 3'', opus 27 * 1969 ''Symphony No. 4'', opus 49A


Other Orchestral Works

* 1956 ''Suite on a Biblical Event'', opus 8 * 1956 ''Overture for Orchestra'', opus 9 * 1957 ''Pastorale'', for woodwinds and strings, opus 11 * 1960 ''Pastorale and Allegro'', opus 21 * 1961 ''Allegro Agitato'', opus 24 * 1963 ''Quanah'', opus 29 * 1974 ''Grace, Praeludium and Response'', opus 53 * 1974 ''The Badlands'', opus 54A * 1975 ''Kaddish'', opus 57A


Works for Winds

(The bulk of McBeth's wind ensemble and concert band music is published by Southern Music Company of San Antonio, Texas.) * 1954 ''Orfadh'', opus 3 * 1954 ''Divertimento for Band'', opus 4 * 1957 ''Andalusia'', opus 14a * 1957 ''Call and Response'', opus 14b * 1959 ''Cavata'', opus 17 * 1960 ''Second Suite for Band'', opus 20 * 1961 ''Narrative'', opus 23 * 1961 ''Chant and Jubilo'', opus 25 * 1963 ''Mosaic'', opus 29A * 1964 ''Reflections Past'', opus 30 * 1964 ''Joyant Narrative'', opus 34 * ''Two Fanfares'' *# 1959 Thaxton Fanfare, opus 16 *# 1964 Cooper Fanfare, opus 32 * 1965 ''Battaglia'', opus 36 * ''Two Symphonic Fanfares'' *# 1965 Jenkins Fanfare, opus 35 *# 1966 TCU Fanfare, opus 38 * 1966 ''Cantique and Faranade'', opus 39 * 1967 ''Texas Tech Fanfare'', for two wind orchestras, opus 43 * ''Symphonic Sounds for the Field'' *# 1967 Bowie Fanfare, opus 41 *# 1968 Fredericksburg Fanfare, opus 45 * 1967 ''Masque'', opus 44 * ''Big Sounds for young bands'' *# 1967 Weiss Fanfare, opus 42 *# 1968 Jayton Fanfare, opus 46 * 1969 ''Drammatico'', opus 48 * 1969 ''Divergents'', opus 49 * 1972 ''The Seventh Seal'', opus 50 * 1973 ''Festive Centennial'', opus 51 * 1973 ''To be Fed by Ravens'', opus 52 * 1974 ''Capriccio Concertant', opus 54 * 1975 ''Kaddish for Symphonic Band'', opus 57 * 1976 ''New Canaan'', opus 58 * 1977 ''Canto'', opus 61 * 1979 ''Caccia'', opus 62 * 1979 ''Cavata'', opus 63 * 1981 ''The Feast of Trumpets'', opus 64 * 1981 ''Grace Praeludium'', opus 65 * 1982 ''Flourishes'', opus 66 * 1983 ''Praises'', opus 70 * 1984 ''Beowulf – An Heroic Trilogy'', opus 71 * 1986 ''To the Unknowns'', opus 73 * 1986 ''With Sounding Trumpets'', opus 74 * 1987 ''The Fifth Trumpeter'', opus 75 * 1988 ''They Hung Their Harps in the Willows'', opus 77 * 1990 ''Of Sailors and Whales'', opus 78 *# Ishmael *# Queequeg *# Father Mapple *# Ahab *# The White Whale * 1991 ''Drayton Hall Esprit'', opus 79 * 1992 ''Daniel in the Lion's Den'', opus 80 * 1992 ''This Land Of El Dorado'', opus 81 * 1993 ''Wine From These Grapes'', opus 83 * 1993 ''Through Countless Halls of Air'', opus 84 *# First Flight – Daedalus And Icarus, *# Kitty Hawk – Orville And Wilbur, *# High Flight – BeeGee and the Blackbird *1997 ''The Sea Treaders'' * ''Come Wandering Shepherds'' * ''Eulogies by the Bard of Great Falls'' * ''Fanfare "The Lions of North Bridge"'' * ''Lauds And Tropes'' *# Laud I, II. *# Trope I, III. *# Laud II, IV. *# Trope II, V. *# Laud III * ''Tenebrae'' * ''The Gathering of the Waters'' * ''When Honor Whispers And Shouts'' * ''Variants on a Chorale of Clifton Williams'' (unpublished, 1977) *When Rossi Strikes *The Dream Catcher *Scaramouche *Estampie


Pedagogical Works

* ''Effective Performance of Band Music'': Solutions to specific problems of 20th Century Music (Southern Music Co. 1972) * ''New Theories of Theory'': Helpful New Ideas for the Understanding of 18th Century Harmony (Southern Music Co. 1979) * ''The Complete Honor Band Manual'': A guide for the Preparation and Organization of Honor Band Clinics (Southern Music Co. 1986) * ''Twentieth Century Techniques of Composition for the Beginning Student'' (Delta Publications 1994)


References

* Preston, Keith Y. (2006). William Francis McBeth (born 1933): Composer, conductor, music educator. D.M.A. dissertation, Arizona State University, United States—Arizona. Retrieved November 1, 2009, from Dissertations & Theses @ Arizona State University.(Publication No. AAT 3210200).


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:McBeth, W. Francis 1933 births American male classical composers American classical composers Musicians from Arkansas Classical musicians from Texas 20th-century classical composers 2012 deaths Hardin–Simmons University alumni People from Hockley County, Texas Distinguished Service to Music Medal recipients 20th-century American composers 20th-century American male musicians