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BOB BECKER
Born
on June 22, 1947 in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Bob Becker holds the
degrees Bachelor of Music with Distinction, and Master of Music
(Performance and Literature) from the Eastman School of Music where he
studied percussion with William G. Street and John H. Beck, and
composition with Warren Benson and Aldo Provenzano. As an undergraduate
he was also awarded the school's prestigious Performer's Certificate
for his concerto performance with the Rochester Philharmonic. He later
spent four years doing post-graduate study in the World Music program
at Wesleyan University where he became intensely involved with the
music cultures of North and South India, Africa and Indonesia. As a
founding member of the percussion ensemble NEXUS, he has been involved
with the collection and construction of a unique multi-cultural body of
instruments as well as the development of an extensive and eclectic
repertoire of chamber and concerto works for percussion.
Becker's performing experience spans nearly all of the musical
disciplines where percussion is found. He has been percussionist for
the Marlboro Music Festival and timpanist with the Marlboro Festival
Orchestra under Pablo Casals. He has also performed and toured as
timpanist with the Kirov Ballet and the Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra.
For several years he toured as drummer and percussionist with the Paul
Winter Consort. He has performed and recorded with such diverse groups
as the Ensemble Intercontemporaine under Pierre Boulez, the Ensemble
Modern of Germany, the Schoenberg Ensemble of Amsterdam, and the Boston
Chamber Players. In 2003 and 2004 he performed as percussionist with
the Grand Teton Music Festival Orchestra. He has worked with today's
most significant conductors including, among many others, Seiji Ozawa,
Zubin Mehta, Christoph Eschenbach, Sir Andrew Davis, and Michael Tilson
Thomas. In 1988 he directed and performed in the show SuperPercussion
at the Tokyo Music Joy Festival, which brought together NEXUS, the
Korean percussion group Samul-Nori, drumset artist Steve Gadd, and
Ghanaian master drummer Abraham Adzenyah.
His work with
African percussion traditions includes study and performance with
master drummers Abraham Adzenyah, Gideon Alorwoye, and Freeman Donkor,
as well as with mbira specialist Paul Berliner. In 1986 he traveled to
Senegal, Mali, Ivory Coast, and Kenya as the representative of the
World Drums Festival of Expo '86. He was co-founder and the first
director of the Flaming Dono West African Dance and Drum Ensemble in
Toronto, a group devoted to learning and performing the dance-drumming
styles of the ethnic groups in present-day Ghana.
A disciple of Pandit Sharda Sahai, the foremost exponent of the Benares
tabla style, Becker began his study of Hindustani music in 1970. He has
since appeared with many of India's leading artists including sarangi
virtuoso Ram Narayan, sarodist Amjad Ali Khan, composer and flutist
Vijay Raghav Rao, and vocalists Laksmi Shankar, Pandit Jasraj, and
Jitendra Abisheki. In addition, he has worked closely with some of the
most significant American exponents of Indian classical music -
sitarist Peter Row, bansuri flutist Steve Gorn, and sarodist Steve Oda.
For several years Row, Gorn, and Becker performed together as the
Vistar Trio. Becker made his tabla solo debut in 1982 at the Nagri
Natak Academy Concert Hall in Benares, India.
Becker co-founded the percussion group NEXUS, which gave its first
performances in 1971 and continues to perform around the world. The
ensemble has toured extensively throughout North America, Europe, and
Asia, performing in chamber music venues as well as with symphony
orchestras, and has recorded over twenty-five CDs. With NEXUS Becker
has appeared as soloist with the New York Philharmonic, the Boston
Symphony, the Chicago Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the
Cleveland Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, and the Los Angeles
Philharmonic, among many others, and has received the Toronto Arts
Award and the Banff Centre for the Arts National Award. In 1999 he and
the other members of NEXUS were inducted into the Percussive Arts
Society Hall of Fame.
Becker has been a regular member of the ensemble Steve Reich and
Musicians since 1973. With this group he has appeared as soloist with
the Israel Philharmonic, the Brooklyn Philharmonic, the New York
Philharmonic and the London Symphony and recorded extensively for
Deutsche Grammophone, EMI and Nonesuch. In 1998 the ensemble won a
Grammy award for its recording of Reich's Music for 18 Musicians. Becker has been a featured performer in all of Reich's percussion music, including Drumming, Piano/Marimba Phase, Six Pianos/Six Marimbas, Sextet, and Nagoya Marimbas; the large ensemble and orchestral pieces, such as Tehillim, The Desert Music, and City Life; and also the recent large-scale theater works, including The Cave and Three Tales.
Generally considered to be one of the world's premier virtuoso
performers on the xylophone and marimba, Becker also appears regularly
as an independent soloist and clinician. In particular, his work toward
resurrecting the repertoire and performance styles of early 20th
century xylophone music has been recognized internationally. He has
appeared as xylophone soloist at the Blossom Festival, the Eastern
Music Festival, the Meadow Brook Festival, the Grand Teton Music
Festival and with orchestras and concert bands throughout the United
States. Since 2000 he has directed an annual ragtime xylophone seminar
at the University of Delaware, Newark, DL, which has attracted an
international student body. In 1998 he was concertmaster, marimba
soloist, and xylophone soloist with the 164-member Musser Festival
Marimba Orchestra, conducted by Frederick Fennell, at West Point, NY.
In 2005 he was again concertmaster and soloist with the Clair Musser
World's Fair Marimba Orchestra at Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.
Becker has performed and lectured for music departments and percussion
programs throughout North America and Europe. His clinics and workshops
cover a wide variety of percussion topics including North Indian tabla
drumming, West and East African percussion, “melodic” snare drumming,
rudimental arithmetic, creative approaches to cymbal playing, and
ragtime xylophone improvisation concepts. In 1996 and 2001 he was a
Guest Lecturer for the Banff Centre for the Arts, Banff, Alberta. In
the fall of 2002 he was a jurist for the Geneva International Music
Competition in Switzerland and in 2005 he was a member of the jury for
the International Percussion Competition Luxembourg. He has served as
editor for the contemporary percussion issue of the British publication
Contemporary Music Revue
and served for two years on the board of directors of the Percussive
Arts Society. For the fall term of 2005 he was appointed Lecturer in
Percussion and Director of the Percussion Ensemble at Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, NJ.
Since 1988 he has been associated with the Malletech Company, where he helped design the Bob Becker Concert Xylophone
as well as a successful line of signature xylophone mallets now used by
percussionists around the world. As an endorser for the Sabian cymbal
company he has helped design special instruments for applications in
symphonic and contemporary chamber contexts, the Becker Bowing Cymbal
being one result. In 2005 he received Sabian's Lifetime Achievement
Award. In 2006 he was recognized as a “Master Drummer” by the
International Association of Traditional Drummers, an organization
founded by the legendary rudimentalist John S. Pratt.
Becker's compositions and arrangements are published by Keyboard
Percussion Publications and are performed regularly by percussion
groups world-wide. He also has a long history of association with
dance, and has created music for the Joffrey Ballet in New York, among
others. In 1991 he and Joan Phillips were awarded the National Arts
Centre Award for the best collaboration between composer and
choreographer at Toronto's INDE '91 dance festival. His most recent
works include There is a Time, commissioned by Rina Singha and the Danny Grossman Dance Company, Noodrem, commissioned through the Canada Council by the Dutch ensemble Slagwerkgroep Den Haag, Turning Point, composed for the NEXUS ensemble, Cryin' Time, a setting of poetry by the Canadian artist Sandra Meigs, Never in Word and Time in the Rock, settings of poetry by the American author Conrad Aiken, and Music On The Moon,
commissioned through the Laidlaw Foundation by the Esprit Orchestra in
Toronto. Five of his compositions are included on his solo album, There is a Time,
released in 1995 on the Nexus Records label. In the spring of 1997 he
was selected to be composer-in-residence for the Virginia Waterfront
International Festival of the Arts which featured the United States
premier of Music On The Moon by the Virginia Symphony,
conducted by JoAnn Falletta, and a concert of his chamber works by his
own group, the Bob Becker Ensemble. In April, 2005 he was featured
during the 25th Anniversary of the Budapest Spring Festival as guest
soloist with the Hungarian percussion ensemble Amadinda in a concert of
his own compositions. He is presently finishing work on a book titled Rudimental Arithmetic,
an in-depth study of the mathematical bases of the rudiments of snare
drumming and their applications in composition and polyrhythmic theory.
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