Bernard Rogers

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Bernard Rogers (4 February 1893 – 24 May 1968) was an American composer. His best known work is The Passion, an oratorio written in 1942.[1]

Life and career

External audio
audio icon You may hear Bernard Rogers' Soliloquy for Flute and String Orchestra performed by Howard Hanson conducting the Eastman-Rochester Symphony Orchestra and Joseph Mariano, flute in 1941 Here on archive.org

Rogers was born in

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He joined the Eastman faculty in 1929.[3] He composed five operas, five symphonies, other works for orchestra, chamber music, three cantatas, choral music and Lieder. His one-act opera "The Warrior," for which Norman Corwin wrote the libretto, received its premiere at The Metropolitan Opera on January 11, 1947.[4]

He was a National Patron of Delta Omicron, an international professional music fraternity.[5]

Rogers retired from Eastman in 1967. He died in Rochester on May 24, 1968, two days after a heart attack.[4][6][7]

Notable students

References

Citations

Sources

External links