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Today we note the birthday anniversary of American composer and teacher Wayne Barlow, who was born in Elyria, Ohio on today’s date in 1912, and died in Rochester, New York, in 1996.
As a composer, Barlow is mostly remembered for a single work: a rhapsody for oboe and strings entitled The Winter’s Past, first performed at the Eastman School of Music in 1938 by the Rochester Civic Orchestra under the direction of another noted American composer, Howard Hanson, with Eastman faculty oboist Robert Sprenkle as the soloist.
Barlow received his bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees from Eastman and taught there for over 40 years, eventually becoming chairman of the composition department, director of the school’s electronic music studio, and dean of graduate studies. He also served as organist and choirmaster at two churches in Rochester and composed a set of hymn voluntaries for organ, covering the church year.
Barlow once said, “While it’s impossible to know everything involved in the art of music, it’s just as impossible to be a totally successful teacher, or composer, or musicologist, or theorist, or performer or conductor without knowing something about how all these pieces of the art fit together.”
Wayne Barlow (1912-1996): The Winter’s Past; Humbert Lucarelli, oboe; Brooklyn Philharmonic; Michael Barrett, conductor; Koch 7187
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
Today we note the birthday anniversary of American composer and teacher Wayne Barlow, who was born in Elyria, Ohio on today’s date in 1912, and died in Rochester, New York, in 1996.
As a composer, Barlow is mostly remembered for a single work: a rhapsody for oboe and strings entitled The Winter’s Past, first performed at the Eastman School of Music in 1938 by the Rochester Civic Orchestra under the direction of another noted American composer, Howard Hanson, with Eastman faculty oboist Robert Sprenkle as the soloist.
Barlow received his bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees from Eastman and taught there for over 40 years, eventually becoming chairman of the composition department, director of the school’s electronic music studio, and dean of graduate studies. He also served as organist and choirmaster at two churches in Rochester and composed a set of hymn voluntaries for organ, covering the church year.
Barlow once said, “While it’s impossible to know everything involved in the art of music, it’s just as impossible to be a totally successful teacher, or composer, or musicologist, or theorist, or performer or conductor without knowing something about how all these pieces of the art fit together.”
Wayne Barlow (1912-1996): The Winter’s Past; Humbert Lucarelli, oboe; Brooklyn Philharmonic; Michael Barrett, conductor; Koch 7187

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