Fred Sturm

Frederick I. Sturm (March 21, 1951 – August 24, 2014) was a jazz composer, arranger and teacher.[1]

Sturm studied at Lawrence University, the University of North Texas College of Music, and the Eastman School of Music. He played trombone[2] and performed with the jazz nonet Matrix from 1974 to 1977. He served as Director of Jazz Studies at Lawrence University from 1977 to 1991, then joined the Eastman School of Music faculty as professor of jazz composition/arranging, conductor of the Eastman Jazz Ensemble and Studio Orchestra, and chair of the Eastman Jazz Studies and Contemporary Media Department. In 2002, he returned home to Wisconsin to direct the Lawrence University Jazz and Improvisational Music Department and hold the Kimberly-Clark Endowed Professorship in Music.[3]

Conductor/clinician

Sturm has conducted the HR (Hessischer Rundfunk) Big Band in Frankfurt; the NDR (Norddeutscher Rundfunk) Big Band in Hamburg; the Bohuslän Big Band in Gothenburg, Sweden; the Klüvers Big Band in Aarhus, Denmark; the Arendal Big Band in Arendal, Norway; and collegiate and state honors high school jazz ensembles in the U.S. He has served as a visiting professor at Det Jyske Musikkonservatorium (Royal Conservatory) in Denmark and the Associazone Italian Gordon per l'Apprendimento Musicale in Rome. Down Beat magazine has cited his university jazz ensembles with 9 Student Music Awards. He was a co-owner of Tritone Jazz Fantasy Camps.

Composer/arranger

Sturm's Migrations contained indigenous music from 22 countries and was premiered by vocalist Bobby McFerrin and the NDR Big Band in 2007. He toured Europe the following summer. He arranged and recorded two albums: Libertango: Hommage an Astor Piazzolla[4] and Do It Again: Three Decades of Steely Dan[5] with the HR Big Band.

Abstract Image won the 2003 ASCAP/IAJE Commission in Honor of Quincy Jones. He is the Artistic Director, composer, and arranger for the Baseball Music Project, a concert program collaboration with the Baseball Hall of Fame that has been performed by the Boston Pops and symphony orchestras in Chicago, Seattle, Houston, Miami, Detroit, Indianapolis, Phoenix, and San Diego.

While studying at the University of North Texas College of Music in the 1970s, Sturm was a member of the One O'Clock Lab Band, which has produced dozens of professionally engineered albums, 52 of which are part of UNT Jazz Department's annual Lab Band recording project launched in 1967. On Lab 2010 (2010), the One O'Clock Lab Band recorded Sturm's arrangement of "Pretzel Logic" by Steely Dan.

Publications

Sturm is the author of Changes Over Time: The Evolution of Jazz Arranging (Advance Music), Maria Schneider: Evanescence (Universal Edition), and Kenny Wheeler: Collected Works on ECM (Universal Edition). His compositions and arrangements have been published by Universal Edition, Kendor Music, Sierra Music Publications, Lorenz, Neil A. Kjos Music Company, and Alfred Music. He has received commission and research grants from ASCAP, International Association for Jazz Education, NARAS, NEA, NEH, the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund, and the American Composers Forum.

gollark: That why was rhetorical.
gollark: As I said on the forums:```That makes sense. If many new eggs are being introduced to the system, then that will most affect the stuff which is rarest, by making it rarer by comparison, but commons will stay the same. As for why it happened now? Weekly updates, possibly.```
gollark: Why?
gollark: I think it's just halloween.
gollark: Isn't emergent behavior *fun*?

References

  1. http://www.esm.rochester.edu/news/2014/08/renowned-jazz-composer-teacher-fred-sturm-dies/
  2. "After Lawrence". Lawrence University. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  3. "Kimberly-Clark Professor of Music". Lawrence University. Archived from the original on 2010-08-23. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  4. "¡Libertango! – Hommage an Astor Piazzolla". HR Bigband. Archived from the original on 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  5. "Do It Again". HR Bigband. Archived from the original on 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
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