Jan Williams

American percussionist, teacher, conductor, and composer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican percussionist, teacher, conductor, and composer
PlacesUnited States of America
isMusician Educator Music educator Conductor Percussionist Composer
Work fieldAcademia Music
Gender
Male
BirthUtica
The details

Biography

Jan Williams (born Jan Gardner Williams, July 17, 1939 in Utica, New York) is a percussionist, arts administrator, teacher, conductor, and composer who has championed avant-garde and progressive music in the United States. He is recognized as an important proponent of percussion performance and its literature.

Biography

Williams first studied drums in elementary school in Utica, NY under George Claesgens. After experience playing snare drum in marching and concert bands, he began to study timpani while in high school. At Clarkson University (Potsdam, New York), then called Clarkson College, he elected an Electrical Engineering major because his teachers discouraged music as a career. Within a year, he was out of school, and the following fall he entered the Eastman School of Music to study with William Street, who advised Williams to study the keyboard percussion instruments seriously. Sometime during that year at Eastman, Williams read a magazine article that praised the work of Paul Price, a percussion teacher at the Manhattan School of Music who was performing new music for percussion ensemble. In the Fall of 1959, Williams moved to New York City to study with Price at the Manhattan School of Music. He spent five years at the Manhattan School, earning a bachelor's degree (1963) and master's degree (1964) in music performance. From 1962 to 1964, he was a member of the American Symphony Orchestra under conductor Leopold Stokowski. In 1964, Williams was selected as one of the first Creative Associates at the Center of the Creative and Performing Arts at the University at Buffalo, which was founded by Lukas Foss and Music Department Chair, Allen Sapp. He remained at UB, where he created the Percussion Ensemble, with fellow Creative Associate percussionist, John Bergamo, continued an active performance career specializing in contemporary music and served as chair of the Music Department from 1981 to 1984. He retired in 1996 as Professor Emeritus. Williams also served as Artistic Director of the Center of the Creative and Performing Arts from 1974 to 1979 and as its resident conductor from 1976 to 1980. He co-directed, with Yvar Mikhashoff, the North American New Music Festival from 1983 to 1992.

Williams has been featured as solo percussionist with orchestras in Paris, Berlin, Tel Aviv, Copenhagen, Detroit, New York City, Buffalo and Los Angeles and appears internationally as percussionist, conductor, and instructor. Noted composers Lukas Foss, John Cage, Elliott Carter, Morton Feldman, Iannis Xenakis, Frederic Rzewski, Nils Vigeland, Joel Chadabe, Luis De Pablo, Gustavo Matamoros, and Orlando Garcia have written works for him. His playing and conducting have been captured on numerous commercial and archival recordings.

Williams was a member of the Percussion Jury for Germany's prestigious ARD International Music Competition in 1997, 2001 and 2014.

In 2014 the Burchfield Penney Art Center celebrated Williams' 75th birthday with a special tribute concert. Williams conducted colleagues and former students in a performance of Edgard Varèse's iconic percussion composition, Ionization.

Williams' wife Diane was a violist with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra for 28 years and his daughter Amy Williams is a composer and pianist (Bugallo-Williams Piano Duo).

Performance

Williams has appeared professionally as a percussionist and conductor in the United States and internationally.

Percussionist (selected listing)

  • Member of Creative Associates, Center of the Creative and Performing Arts, University at Buffalo, 1964-1980 with John Bergamo, George Crumb, and founder Lukas Foss, along with over 100 other "CAs"
  • Member of the Feldman Soloists with pianist Nils Vigeland and flutist Eberhard Blum
  • Premiered Morton Feldman's Why Patterns?, Crippled Symmetry, and For Philip Guston and performed them extensively with the Feldman Soloists in Europe, the Middle East and the United States
  • Premiered Lukas Foss' Paradigm, Ni Bruit, Ni Vitesse, Concerto for Percussion and Large or Small Orchestra, Curriculum Vitae with Time Bomb, and MAP
  • Premiered Elliott Carter's Adagio and Canto from Eight Pieces for Solo Timpani
  • Performed internationally and recorded numerous works by Earle Brown, Morton Feldman, John Cage, and Christian Wolff (The New York School)

Williams has recorded for Columbia, Vox/Turnabout, Desto, Lovely Music, Spectrum, Wergo, DGG, Orion, Hat-Art, OO, New World, Deep Listening, EMF Media, Frozen Reeds and Mode Records.

The University at Buffalo Music Library has curated and archived 219 of his annotated scores (link below).

Conductor (selected listing)

  • Resident Conductor, Center of the Creative and Performing Arts, 1976-1980
  • UB Percussion Ensemble, 1964-1995
  • Guest Conductor, numerous ensembles in USA, Europe, South America and Australia

Compositions

  • Variations for Solo Kettledrums (1964)
  • Dream Lesson, (1970)
  • Deep Cello, (ca 1978, rev 2016)
  • [1] Colla Voce Music

Teaching (selected listing)

  • Master Artist, New Music on the Point, 2017
  • Professor, University at Buffalo, (1964-1996), where he founded and directed the percussion program
  • Advisor, Bard Conservatory of Music Percussion Program
  • University of North Texas College of Music, Division of Composition Studies, 1990
  • The Ohio State University New Music Collective and Percussion Studio, 2010
  • Numerous master classes, lectures, workshops and seminars at colleges, universities and music conservatories in USA, Europe, South America, New Zealand and Australia

Publications

  • Percussive Arts Society - "Percussive Notes" magazine
Interview with Morton Feldman, Vol. 21, September 1983
Iannis Xenakis, Persaphassa, An Introduction, Vol.25, March 1987
Collaboration II: A Conversation Between Joel Chadabe and Jan Williams, Vol.25, March 1987
Elliott Carter: Eight Pieces for Timpani: The 1966 Revisions, Vol. 38, December 2000
Interview of Jan Williams by John Hepfer, Vol 45, February 2007
Twelve-Tone Timpani: Variations for Solo Kettledrums (1964), Vol.46. August 2008
"All Angels Have Big Feet": Concerto for Percussion and Large or Small Orchestra by Lukas Foss, Vol.49, July 2011
Remembering John Cage, Vol 50, September 2012
Elliott Carter: Eight Pieces for Timpani, Vol 53, May 2015

Administrator

  • Trustee and member of Artistic Committee, Yvar Mikhashoff Trust for New Music
  • Artistic director, Center of the Creative and Performing Arts, 1974-1979
  • Co-director, North American New Music Festival, 1983-1991
  • Founder, New Percussion Quartet, 1966-1971

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.