James Hotchkiss Rogers

James Hotchkiss Rogers (Fair Haven, Connecticut, February 7, 1857 Pasadena, California, November 28, 1940) was an American organist, composer, teacher, music critic, and publisher.[1]

James Hotchkiss Rogers
Background information
Born(1857-02-07)February 7, 1857
Fair Haven, Connecticut
DiedNovember 28, 1940(1940-11-28) (aged 83)
Pasadena, California
GenresClassical
Occupation(s)Composer, teacher, critic, publisher
InstrumentsOrgan

Biography

James was born to Martin L. and Harriett Hotchkiss Rogers[2] in Fair Haven, Connecticut, descended from a family of "old New England stock".[3] He began studying piano by the age of twelve[4] and organ with Clarence Eddy in Chicago. At the age of eighteen he went to Berlin, Germany, where he studied for two years with Carl August Haupt and Rohde,[5] followed by two years in Paris, France, where he studied with Alexandre Guilmant, Henri Fissot, and Charles-Marie Widor.[6] He worked for a year in Burlington, Iowa before moving to Cleveland, Ohio, where he established himself primarily as an organist.[1] Rogers married Alice Abigail Hall on 20 October 1891 and had two children, Stewart and Marian.[7]

In addition to his organist positions at the Euclid Avenue Temple[8] (a position he held for 50 years), he taught at the Cleveland School of Music and served as a critic for the Cleveland Plain Dealer.[1] He was not a harsh critic: even when Isadora Duncan danced in an outrageous red costume in 1922, Rogers simply wrote, "all things considered, the orchestra did very well." Rogers explained his role was not to discourage but rather to encourage and advise.[7] He also published some of his own music and those of others.[1]

Upon his retirement from the Cleveland School of Music, he was honoured by 500 musicians and friends at a farewell dinner. He moved to Pasadena, California, where he died. He was buried in Lake View Cemetery.[7]

In 1946, the Cleveland Orchestra dedicated a program to music by Rogers. A portrait, painted by Mary Seymour Brooks,[9] was presented to the Western Reserve Historical Society a year later.[2]

Music

Rodgers was a prolific composer, writing about 550 works.[1] He composed organ works, church music, and over 130 art songs.[1][10]

He also composed lighter secular partsongs, Christmas and Easter cantatas, several Mass settings, and temple service music.[1]

Rogers also published several pedagogical volumes for the piano, and he edited and published several volumes of organ pieces from a variety of sources.[1]

Footnotes

  1. William Osborne, "Rodgers, James H(otchkiss), in The Grove Dictionary of American Music
  2. J. Heywood Alexander, It Must Be Heard, quoted in the online Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
  3. Benjamin, Biographies of Celebrated Organists of America, p. 110.
  4. Biographical Sketches, Songs by Thirty Americans, p. xiii.
  5. Benjamin, p. 110
  6. Biographical Sketches, Songs by Thirty Americans, p. xiv.
  7. The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
  8. http://www.clevelandjewishhistory.net/syn/anshechesed.htm
  9. WRHS Permanent Collection item 46.1057. "Presented to the W.R.H.S. at a meeting & tea arranged by Mrs. Adella Prentiss Hughes, Dec. 6, 1947.
  10. His songs were composed between 1878 and 1933.

References

  • Alexander, J. Heywood (1981), It must be heard : a survey of the musical life of Cleveland, 1836-1918, Cleveland, Ohio: Western Reserve Historical Society
  • Benjamin, William Howard (1908), "James H. Rogers", Biographies of Celebrated Organists of America, Albany, New York: Benjamin Publishing Company, p. 110
  • Osborne, William (2013), "James H(otchkiss) Rogers", in Garrett, Charles Hiroshi (ed.), The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 7, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 193–194, ISBN 978-0-19-999066-5
  • Hughes, Rupert, ed., Songs by Thirty Americans, Boston: Oliver Ditson, 1904
  • article in the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
  • The James Hotchkiss Rogers Papers at the Western Reserve Historical Society in Cleveland, Ohio
  • Songs by Thirty Americans on IMSLP
  • Pupils of Alexandre Guilmant
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.