Talib Rasul Hakim

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Talib Rasul Hakim (1940-1988) was an American composer of

Chou Wen-Chung, William Sydeman, Hale Smith, and Charles Whittenberg.[2]

Hakim first came to attention in the wider music community through appearances of his works on the "Music in Our Time" concert series in New York in the mid-1960s. He received awards and residencies from the Bennington Composers Conference (1964–90) and the Connecticut Commission on the Arts (1981–2), as well as

ASCAP, grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Creative Artist Public Service Program. In addition to composing, Hakim taught at Pace University, Adelphi University, Nassau Community College, and Morgan State University
, as well as working as a radio and television producer.

After converting to Sufism in 1973, Hakim changed his name. He died on March 31, 1988, in New Haven, Connecticut.[2]

List of works

* Indicates extant score materials located in College Archives & Special Collections at Columbia College Chicago[3]

  • Mutations (1964)* bass clarinet, horn, trumpet, viola, cello
  • Six Players and Voice (1964)* Soprano, clarinet, trumpet, cello, 2 percussion, and piano
  • Four (1965)* Clarinet, trumpet, trombone, piano
  • Piano Piece (1965) Piano
  • Shapes (1965)* Chamber Orchestra
  • Three Play Short Five (1965)* Bass clarinet, percussion, bass
  • Contours (1966)* Oboe, Bassoon, horn, trumpet, cello, bass
  • Currents (1967)* String Quartet
  • Elements (1967) Flute/alto flute, clarinet/bass clarinet, violin/viola, cello, piano, glass and bamboo wind and hand chimes
  • Roots and Other Things (1967) Flute/alto flute, oboe/EH, clarinet/bass clarinet, trumpet, horn, trombone, viola, cello, bass
  • Sound-Gone (1967) Piano
  • Inner-Sections (1967) Flute, clarinet, trombone, piano, percussion
  • Sound Images (1969) Brass, 3 percussion, strings, female chorus
  • Tone-Poem (1969)* Soprano, percussion, contrabass, and piano (text by Langston Hughes)
  • Placements (1970)* Piano, percussion
  • Set-Three (1970) Soprano, cello, piano
  • Timelessness (1970) Flugelhorn, horn, trombone, tuba, 2 percussion, bass, and piano
  • Uranian-Projections (1970) Soprano, percussion, and piano
  • Visions of Ishwara (1970)* Orchestra
  • Reflections on the 5th Day (1972) Narrator, chamber orchestra
  • Concepts (1974)* Orchestra
  • Recurrences (1974)* Orchestra
  • Arkan- 5 (1980–81)* Chamber Orchestra
  • Lailatu'l-Qadr (The Night of Power) (1984) Bass clarinet, bass, percussion
  • Az-Zaahir-Al Batin(The Outward-The Inward) (1985–86)* Orchestra

References

  1. ^ "Talib Rasul (né Stephen Alexander Chambers) Hakim." The Black Perspective in Music 16.2 (1988): 245-46
  2. ^ a b Alison Deborah Jones. "Hakim, Talib-Rasul." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. 14 February 2010.
  3. ^ Columbia College Chicago, Guide to the Talib Rasul Hakim Collection (2020). CBMR Collection Guides

Further reading

  • Horne, Aaron. Keyboard Music of Black Composers: A Bibliography. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood, 1992.
  • Horne, Aaron. String Music of Black Composers: A Bibliography. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood, 1992.

External links