Applauded by Aaron Copland, inspired by Desmond Tutu, and mentored by Hugo Friedhofer and Earle Hagen, Bruce Babcock has spent his working life composing music for the musicians of Los Angeles. Successful in both film and television, and the concert hall, he is known for vibrant, sonorous, expressive pieces that immerse audience and performers alike in an inclusive and exuberant celebration of the musical art.
Babcock
holds Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in music composition
from California State University, Northridge (CSUN). While at CSUN,
Bruce’s Impasse was performed for Aaron Copland during his 1975
residency. Copland’s comments on the piece, recorded for posterity,
include “an impression of musicality which is very pleasant, indeed...a
convincing sense of an overall mood...knows what he wants...sure of what
he’s doing.” Babcock’s mentors in Hollywood included Hugo Friedhofer,
Paul Glass, and Earle Hagen. He won an Emmy Award for Outstanding
Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a Series in 1992, one of
eight total Emmy nominations in a ten-year period, as well as eight
TV/Film awards from BMI. He has also collaborated as an orchestrator and
conductor with some of the biggest names in film scoring, including
James Newton Howard, Michael Kamen, and Christopher Young.
In the concert music world, Babcock’s Pacific Serenades Trio,
for clarinet, viola and piano, was commissioned by Mark Carlson’s
Pacific Serenades series, and was premiered by that organization in
2004. He was chosen by Artistic Director Daniel Kepl to be composer in
residence at the 2005 Santa Barbara Chamber Music Festival, where he was
featured in three newly commissioned works. The Donald Brinegar Singers
premiered Babcock’s Night Songs, on poems of Sara Teasdale, in 2006.
SpringScape was the winning piece in the Debussy Trio 2006 Composition Competition. This Is What I Know: Four Poems of Dorothy Parker,
commissioned by UCLA Professor of Voice Juliana Gondek, was one of the
winners in the 2011 Boston Metro Opera Contemporary American Festival
Competition, and was performed in Boston in conjunction with “Opera
Conference America 2011.”
All Unto Me, inspired by and dedicated to Archbishop Desmond Tutu, was performed with the Archbishop in attendance in 2011. Be Still,
for a cappella choir, received its European premiere in November 2013
by the Haga Motettkör of Göteborg, Sweden, Mikael Carlsson, Music
Director.
Bruce’s latest CD release is TIME, STILL from Navona Records. Eleven Los Angeles musicians are featured in this collection of chamber, vocal, and choral music. Five of the pieces on this album were commissions and two were winners in international competitions. The album is available from Amazon and iTunes.
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