John Barnes Chance (1932-1972) was born in Texas, where he
played percussion in high school. His early interest in music
led him to the University of Texas at Austin, where he received his
bachelor's and master's degrees, studying composition with Clifton
Williams. The early part of his career saw him playing
timpani with the Austin Symphony, and later playing percussion with the
Fourth and Eighth U.S. Army Bands during the Korean War. Upon
his discharge, he received a grant from the Ford Foundation's Young
Composers Project, leading to his placement as resident composer in the
Greensboro, North Carolina public schools. Here he produced
seven works for school ensembles, including his classic Incantation and
Dance. He went on to become a professor at the
University of
Kentucky after winning the American Bandmasters Association's Ostwald
award for his Variations
on a Korean Folk Song. Chance was
accidentally electrocuted in his backyard in Lexington, Kentucky at age
39, bringing his promising career to an early, tragic end.
The OCU School of Music Band Program Note database offers this note on Elegy
When a member of the West Genesee Senior High School Band died, Elegy was commissioned in his memory. It is a single-movement, solemn work based on a five-note motif stated initially in the low woodwinds. The piece builds to a bold statement in the horns which grows to a dramatic climax. A brass fanfare played with the theme in the woodwinds again ends abruptly, after which the piece closes in a fragmented echo of the beginning. The music symbolizes the tragedy of a life cut short, seemingly unfinished, as a portion of the original motif is left hanging while each instrument dies away.
Sadly, Chance wrote Elegy only months before his own sudden and tragic death. The piece stands as an emotional monument to this composers unfinished career.
Some links:Listing of a John Barnes Chance CD on Amazon.com with an extensive customer review at the bottom that is required reading.
Also, here's John Barnes Chance's wikipedia bio.
This performance of Elegy is among the best you will ever hear. It is Frederick Fennell conducting the Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra, the finest conductor the wind band has ever known leading one of the finest bands in the world. Together Fennell and the Kosei folks play this tragic piece with all the necessary gravitas and emotion.
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