Background
Bacon, Ernst (b. Chicago, IL, 26 May 1898; d. Orinda, CA, 16 Mar 1990). Composer and
pianist. He studied at Northwestern University (1915-18), the University of Chicago
(1919-20), and the University of California (M.A. 1935) [where his master's thesis was
the choral cantata The Song of the Preacher (1935)]. Among his teachers
were Alexander Raab and G. D. Dunn (piano), Weigl and Bloch (composition), and Goosens
(conducting), under whom he was assistant conductor of the Rochester Opera Company. He
taught at the Eastman School (1925-28) and the San Francisco Conservatory (1928-30); in
1935 he instituted and conducted the Carmel Beach Festival in California, and the next
year he was supervisor of the WPA Federal Music Project in San Francisco and conductor of
its orchestra. Subsequent teaching appointments took him to Converse College,
Spartanburg, South Carolina, as dean and professor of piano (1938-45), and to Syracuse
University, as director of the school of music and professor (1945-63, professor emeritus
from 1964). Among his honors are a Pulitzer Award (1932, for the Symphony in D minor) and
two Guggenheim Fellowships.
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