Haskell Small

Haskell "Hal" Small, born 3 June 1948, is a composer, pianist,[1] and music teacher in Washington, D.C.

Musical Background

After starting college as a science and engineering major, Haskell Small began his musical education at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and earned a BFA in music from Carnegie-Mellon University in 1972, where he studied piano under Harry Frankin and composition under Roland Leich. Subsequently he studied composition privately under Vincent Persichetti, and studied piano privately under Theodore Lettvin, Leon Fleisher and William Masselos. Masselos continued as Small's teacher until his death in 1992.

In addition to his mastery of the standard classical repertoire, including works by Beethoven, Scarlatti and Schubert, Small played in rock and roll bands during his college years, and he integrates blues, jazz and other modern and postmodern idioms into his compositions.

Pianist

Small has given concerts in major European capitals, South America, Japan and China, and was hailed for his "dazzlingly prodigious technique" by England's venerable Musical Times in 1976. In the United States he has performed in such venues as Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center and the Spoleto Festival. He was featured in the PBS special “A Celebration of the Piano" and on NPR's "All Things Considered" in 1988. In 21st-century seasons, he has played recitals in Japan, Paris and London and participated in the 2007 Festival of American Music in Poland.

Small has recorded an extensive discography, including a George Gershwin disc, a Children’s CD with narrator Robert Aubry Davis, and Bach’s Goldberg Variations, in addition to many of his own compositions. He is a champion of 20th century Catalan composer Frederic Mompou and in 2008 released a recording of Mompou's iconoclastic, more than hour-long Música Callada ("Quiet Music").

Haskell Small is a Steinway Artist.

Composer

Small follows in the tradition of 18th- and 19th-century pianist/composers. In addition to music for the piano, he has written works for woodwinds and other instruments, ensembles and the symphony orchestra, as well as choral pieces and music with narration. He has received commissions from such organizations as the Washington Ballet, Three Rivers Piano Competition, Georgetown Symphony and Paul Hill Chorale, and he was the winner of the 1999 Marin Ballet Dance Score Competition. From 2000 to 2003, he was composer-in-residence with the Mount Vernon Orchestra.

In 2005 Small completed "Renoir's Feast," a piano piece commissioned by the Phillips Collection to celebrate the return of Renoir's painting Le Déjeuner des Canotiers (Luncheon of the Boating Party) to the Washington gallery. Small approached the endeavor in a manner reminiscent of Moussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition. He studied biographical information on each of Renoir's friends and acquaintances who were pictured in the boating party in order to create a portfolio of musical portraits, then established continuity among them with a recurring theme representing the flowing of the river.

In 2006 Small composed a suite of miniature blues and jazz pieces, "Scraps," for Dutch pianist Marcel Worms's multi-national Blues Project.

In 2007 he was commissioned by pianist Soheil Nasseri to write "Lullaby of War," an emotionally charged series of piano accompaniments and interludes for the recitation of several poems about war from various eras. Although the piece expresses a powerful anti-war sentiment, a preview performance featured readings by a U.S. Air Force general and his wife. Nasseri performed the world premiere of the composition in Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall, and was soon invited to perform it in Berlin, with Small narrating.

Renoir's Feast and Small's own orchestral transcription of Scraps have been published by PeerMusic.

Teacher

Small is the Chair of the Piano Department at the Washington Conservatory of Music in Bethesda, Maryland.

Reviews

According to "A Golden 'Silence' From Haskell Small" by Stephen Brookes of the Washington Post, ". . . . [A]s pianist Haskell Small showed in an unusual recital Sunday at the Phillips Collection, Mompou's music is worth attention. ... Much of the credit goes to Small, who may be better known to Phillips audiences for fine performances of his own works."[2] Small has also been praised by other Washington Post reviewers, including Mark Carrington, Sunil Freeman, Joseph McLellan, Tim Page, Cecilia Porter, Joan Reinthaler and Bob Waters, and New York Times writers Bernard Holland, Anna Kisselgoff and Edward Rothstein.

He has also received favorable reviews from Die Welt, Der Tagesspiegel, the Washington Times, Music and Vision Magazine,[3] Piano and Keyboard Magazine, Fanfare Magazine, 20th Century Music Magazine, Ovation Magazine, the American Record Guide, Records International, The Sioux City Journal, the Montgomery County Gazette and independent reviewer Donald Satz.

Roberta/Nikolas J. Lund Reviews Hal's Symphony for Solo Piano CD

Go

Small is a 4-dan Go player (amateur rating scale) and is the leader of the Greater Washington Go Club. Under the auspices of the American Go Association, he organized the first U.S. Go Congress in 1985, an event that continues to be held annually.[4] One of his musical compositions is called "A Game of Go".[5][6]

Family

Haskell's wife Betsy Small, born 1947, is a certified yoga instructor, and also a musician (lute, voice, guitar) and a go player. They have two grown daughters, Rachel and Sarah (a singer in the New York City a cappella Balkan music group Black Sea Hotel).

References

  1. Photograph of Hal playing the piano.
  2. Stephen Brookes' article on Hal
  3. Roderic Dunnett's article
  4. "The first US Go Congress was initiated in 1985 by Haskell Small. National Congresses have been held annually since then."
  5. Small's A Game of Go
  6. “Go World” magazine, Autumn, 1987, No. 49, “Go and Music: Two Fine Arts”

External links

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