An Essay About John Williams - 684 Words | 123 Help Me

An Essay About John Williams

684 Words2 Pages

Mason Perricone
American Music Final

John Williams

When John Towner William was born February 8, 1932 in Floral Park, New York, no one knew what he would become, what he would create. Now, to some, he is one of if not the greatest film composer of all time. After a career spanning six decades and over 80 feature length films, Williams is known as one of the best minds in composition. Son of Johnny and Esther Williams, John relocated to the Los Angeles are in 1948. His father a jazz percussionist, Williams’ love for music was inspired from a young age. Williams studied piano as a child, and later trumpet, trombone, and clarinet. He did some work as a teenager with pianist and arranger Bobby van Epps before moving from his native New York to Los Angeles. After graduating from North Hollywood High School in 1950, he was accepted to the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). While at UCLA, Williams was privately tutored by Italian composer Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Tedesco, know as a revolutionary in guitar composition, composed for over 200 films produced by MGM studios. Before finishing his undergrad degree at UCLA, Williams was drafted into the United States Air Force in 1952. While enlisted, he conducted and arranged music for the US Air Force as part of his assignments (Dinneen, 2009). In 1954 he returned to New York, enrolled at the Juilliard School, and studied piano with Rosina Lhévinne. Lhévinne, one the most noted pianists of the twentieth century and a highly influential teacher, was a virtuoso performer. One of the last artists in the nineteenth-century Russian pianistic tradition, she taught some of the most famous musicians of the twentieth century, including Van Cliburn, John Browning, Mischa Dichter, Ade...

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...ation as a conductor, resulting in his appointment as conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra from 1980 to 1993. He has conducted for a number of orchestras, and in 1993 he was appointed artist in residence at Tanglewood, in Lenox, Massachusetts, teaching young film scorers how to develop their craft.
Most of Williams’s early work was for television. With the increasing number of television shows in the 1950’s, he had plenty of opportunities. Williams’s early work in film was as an orchestrator for established film composers, providing cues for films such as The Apartment (1960) and The Guns of Navarone (1961). Composing his own music, he ranged from comedies (such as John Goldfarb, Please Come Home), to disaster films (such as The Towering Inferno), to cowboy dramas (such as The Missouri Breaks), to Alfred Hitchcock’s final film, Family Plot.