Newton Wayland

Newton Hart Wayland
Born (1940-11-05)November 5, 1940. --> November 5, 1940
Santa Barbara, California, U.S.
Died September 5, 2013(2013-09-05) (aged 72) (death date then birth date)
Alma mater New England Conservatory of Music
Occupation Musician, conductor, composer
Spouse(s) Jan Curtis

Newton Hart Wayland (November 5, 1940 – September 5, 2013) was an American orchestral conductor, arranger, composer and keyboardist. The product of an elite musical education, Wayland was known for his dedication to performing for the broadest possible audience.[1]

During a professional musical career that began in 1963, Wayland appeared as a conductor with symphony orchestras across the United States. His programming drew from a background that included Symphonic, Operatic, Chamber Music, Jazz and Musical Comedy. Wayland's symphonic arrangements were performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and recorded with the Boston Pops.

In 1978, Wayland was one of a select handful of people in consideration to succeed the longtime Boston Pops Conductor, Arthur Fieldler.[2][3][4]

Wayland had a long association with WGBH/PBS television as a musical director and composer for television programs. He composed the “Come on and Zoom” theme song for the Emmy-award winning children’s show, Zoom.[5]

Biography

Newton Hart Wayland was born to physicians, Helen Hart and L.C. Newton Wayland, in Santa Barbara, CA. He trained as a pianist and, when he was a teenager, formed a jazz combo and chamber group. After graduating from Santa Barbara High School, Wayland attended Harvard University. While at Harvard, he started a jazz band and soon transferred to the New England Conservatory of Music, earning a Bachelor of Music degree in Arranging (1964) and a Masters in Chamber Music (1966). He earned the Chadwick Award for contributions to the Conservatory.

Conducting

Encouraged to try “pops” by Gideon Toeplitz, Wayland found his musical and philosophical niche with popular music orchestras, preferring to perform popular music instead of opera or symphonies because through the popular tunes, he could reach a wider audience.[6]

Arthur Fieldler provided a model for Wayland's own conducting career. “I think his major genius, if you will, was in programming. It's a very delicate line, pops programming, because you're basically dealing with a symphony orchestra, and a symphony orchestra in the Western tradition is a rather elitist institution which prides itself . . . on the high-class status of its operation . . . So Fiedler's genius was to program material which was acceptable for that symphony orchestra, and yet which drew in a large, general public.”[7]

In 1980, at age 36, Wayland was one of the conductors in the running to replace Fiedler. Others included Mitch Miller, Henry Mancini, Franz Allers, John Williams, Frederick Fennell, Michael Sasson, John Mauceri, John Lanchbery and Norman Lyden. John Williams was ultimately selected.

By 1984, Wayland was guest-conducting up to 20 symphony concerts per year. During this period, he had these requirements for his shows: first, that the concert be audience-oriented; second, to program a variety of somewhat different or unusual works, along with familiar ones; third, the concert had to be challenging for the orchestra. Wayland also wanted to challenge himself. “I don’t want to rest on my laurels and do the same old stuff I know works.”[8] He said “live performance can be visual and exciting – an event; a festive occasion, in a variety of ways: improvised now happenings, audience clap-alongs and sing-alongs.”[9]

The Boston Herald dubbed Wayland “a musician who refuses to be tied down to a single category.”[10] His adventurous nature was exhibited throughout his conducting career, such as when he used garden hoses as instruments in his concert tribute to Arthur Fieldler.[11]

Conducting highlights

Musical projects

A gifted pianist and harpsichordist, Wayland was the first-call keyboardist for the Boston Symphony throughout the 1960s and provided keyboards for his own performing and recording groups throughout his career. A Boston Symphony Orchestra highlight was his accompaniment of soprano Beverly Sills as the harpsichordist for the Orchestra’s staged performance of the U.S. premiere of the original, 1912 version of Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal's "Ariadne Auf Naxos." It was telecast live from Symphony Hall, Boston on January 7, 1969, and released on DVD in 2006.[14]

Other notable performances include:

Wayland told the Santa Barbara News-Press, “as for my own musical style, you could say I am Bartokian, Hindemithian –with a considerable dose of jazz.” In the 1960s, Wayland formed a performing group called “The Great All-American Music Machine.” The group consisted of Wayland on keyboards, Frank Nizzari (alto, soprano, baritone saxophone), Ken Wenzwll (electric bass, trumpet, trombone, fluegelhorn, flute), John Chiodini (guitar, bass, banjo), Fred Budda (percussion), Jan Curtis (Mezzo-soprano), and David Evitts (Baritone). They performed and recorded ragtime, opera, folk, pop, jazz, classical, musical comedy and even rock music, as well as Wayland’s original compositions.[18][19]

Music for television

While a student at the New England Conservatory, Wayland was the host of the educational TV show “Performance.” After the Conservatory, Wayland was a Rockefeller Artist-in Residence at WGBH-TV in Boston.[20] He was Musical director of the WCVB-TV Boston series “Catch a Rainbow“ 1977-1978. He also arranged music scores for many network television shows, including compositions and arrangements for PBS “Nova”.[21]

Wayland was the first and only Music Director for Zoom, the Emmy award-winning PBS children’s show. He was Zoom’s music director from 1971-1978 and wrote both the theme song “Come on and Zoom” as well as the "Send it to Zoom" address song.[22]

Recordings

Wayland's discography includes:

Personal

Wayland married American mezzo-soprano, Jan Curtis, in 1969. The couple performed together for many years before the marriage ended in divorce.

Videography

Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos [original version] (Sills, Nagy; Leinsdorf, 1969) [live Concert Version] VAI

References

  1. Herman, Kenneth (August 30, 1985). "Pops To Journey On Memory Lane". Los Angeles Times.
  2. "Who will Pop up on Podium When Fiedler Passes Baton?". Boston Herald. July 11, 1978.
  3. "The irreplaceable Arthur Fiedler". Boston Sunday Globe. July 9, 1978.
  4. "Newton Wayland a smash at Pops". Boston Herald. July 22, 1978.
  5. "ZOOM Behind the Scenes". PBSKids.org.
  6. Apone, Carl (April 5, 1989). "Piano Roll Brings Gershwin to Heinz Hall". Pittsburg Press.
  7. Wolf, Robert (August 9, 1985). "Don`t Expect Ordinary In Arthur Fiedler Salute". The Chicago Tribune.
  8. "Guest Conductor Offers Something 'Light, Frothy, Fun'". The Argus Leader. June 27, 1984.
  9. "Upbeat Conductor to Lead Midwest Pops in Concert". The South Bend Tribune. October 13, 1980.
  10. "Who will Pop up on Podium When Fiedler Passes Baton?". Boston Herald. July 11, 1978.
  11. Wolf, Robert (August 9, 1985). "Don`t Expect Ordinary In Arthur Fiedler Salute". Chicago Tribune.
  12. Stryker, Mark (March 17, 1991). "Wayland's Way". South Bend Tribune.
  13. Coolman, Alex (April 7, 2000). "Reflecting His Soul". Daily Pilot.
  14. Page, Tim (July 3, 2007). "A Voice That Carried Weight". The Washington Post.
  15. "Creation of the Monster from Bride of Frankenstein, Adventures in Music Orchestra". Franz Waxman Papers. Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries.
  16. Dietz, Dan (2010). Off Broadway Musicals, 1910-2007. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0786433995.
  17. Strickland, Edward (1993). Minimalism - Origins. Indiana University Press. p. 221. ISBN 0-253-35499-4.
  18. "Music in Review". Chautauquan Daily. July 19, 1976.
  19. "Aelica Bows with 'Mod' Bach". Billboard Magazine. May 20, 1967.
  20. "Rockefeller Artists in Television". Open Vault - WGBH Media Library and Archive.
  21. "NOVA: THE FINAL FRONTIER (TV)". The Paley Center for Media.
  22. "ZOOM {SERIES PREMIERE} (TV)". The Paley Center for Media.
  23. "Berlin to Broadway with Kurt Weill, A Musical Voyage (1972)". The Kurt Weill Foundation for Music.
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