Henry Cowell
A Man Made of Music
Joel Sachs
From Our Blog
By Joel Sachs Unidentified key players are the bane of biographers, who cannot resist the urge to tie all the knots. In my case, writing about the extraordinary life of the composer Henry Cowell, two people resisted identification, both of them connected with the sad story of Cowell's imprisonment on a morals charge.
Posted on July 11, 2013
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By Joel Sachs As I began to go through papers at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, I was buffeted by competing forces: the exhilaration of unravelling the stunning reality of a man's life, and the growing fear that, should I actually live to read all of the documents, I might never be able to digest them.
Posted on September 20, 2012
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By Joel Sachs Many people begin a conversation about Henry Cowell by telling me why he spent four years in San Quentin. Although I prefer to dwell on Cowell's enormous accomplishments as a composer, theorist, performer, and educator, there is no need to run from the matter. The misinformation begins with the idea that he was convicted of a morals charge. He was not 'convicted;' there was no trial.
Posted on September 25, 2012
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