Houston Bright


Robert Houston Bright was a composer of American music, known primarily for his choral works. The best-known of these is the original spiritual "I Hear a Voice A-Prayin'," but he wrote dozens of highly regarded pieces over the course of his career, including a number of instrumental compositions. Bright was, among his peers, well known and respected as a composer, choral director, and professor. He spent his entire academic career in the Music Department of West Texas State College.

Life

Houston Bright was born January 21, 1916, in Midland, Texas. He was the son of a Methodist minister, the Rev. John R. Bright. Houston learned to read music and play the piano while still a small boy; he composed his first piece of music at the age of ten. In his teens the young Houston went on to study voice, clarinet, and cornet, as well as piano. He attended high school in Shamrock, in the Texas Panhandle. After graduating high school in 1932, he attended West Texas State. He organized a dance band, the "Kampus Katz," in the 1935–1936 school year; the band played locally and also toured Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado during the following summer.
While a college student Houston also became known as a classical vocalist, singing baritone in solo recitals and as a soloist in college oratorio concerts; his brother, Weldon, sang tenor.
Bright received his Bachelor of Science degree in music in 1938. Afterward he was the first student to be designated as a "graduate assistant." He received his Master of Arts degree in music education in 1940 and took a full-time faculty appointment at that time. On June 5, 1941, he was wed to Frances May Usery, a West Texas State piano instructor whom he had met while he was still a student. "Music brought us together," he later said. "She was my accompanist."
During World War II, Bright served as an Army officer in Europe 1942–1945, leaving the service as a captain in the infantry to return to West Texas. Through summer study and a leave of absence, he completed his work for a Ph.D. degree in musicology in 1952 at the University of Southern California. There he studied conducting under Dr. Charles C. Hirt, musicology under visiting professor Curt Sachs, and composition under Austrian émigré composer Ernest Kanitz and American composer Halsey Stevens. His dissertation was titled The Early Tudor Part-Song from Newarke to Cornyshe.
Beginning as an instructor, Bright rose to the rank of full professor; he taught composition and music theory, and directed the college's A Cappella Choir, which he founded in 1941. The various West Texas choirs frequently toured the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma, and New Mexico; and they premiered many of Bright's works. His earliest published compositions are the choral pieces "Weep You No More, Sad Fountains" and "Evening Song of the Weary," both dating from 1949. In 1965, college president James P. Cornette, honoring Bright's twenty-five years of creative service to the college, would grant him the title of Composer-in-Residence.
Throughout his three decades at West Texas, Bright was surrounded by, and worked with, considerable musical talent. Some of his early works were composed specifically with West Texas music ensembles in mind, and dedicated to them. Among his academic colleagues was Royal Brantley, the original musical director and eventual artistic director of the long-running outdoor musical drama Texas, performed each summer at nearby Palo Duro Canyon. Another colleague was band director Gary Garner, who would be honored by the Texas Bandmasters Association as 1987's "Bandmaster of the Year."
Hugh Sanders, who served as Bright's assistant director for the West Texas choral program, subsequently succeeded him as its director; Sanders ultimately gained great acclaim as choral director at Baylor University. Bright also mentored the young choral teacher Alfred R. Skoog, who went on to serve as director of choral activities at Arkansas State University for over three decades.
In the decades following Bright's death in 1970, West Texas and the Texas A&M Board of Regents would posthumously honor him as a Professor Emeritus; and a music department scholarship would be created in his memory.
Bright's professional memberships included the American Choral Directors Association, the Choral Conductors Guild of America, the Texas Composers Guild, and the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers. He also conducted numerous workshops, including two for the Texas Choral Directors Association.
Houston Bright continued composing and teaching until his death, of cancer, on December 8, 1970 in Canyon. He was 54 years old. His widow, the pianist and teacher Frances Usery Bright, donated the composer's original manuscripts and other papers to the West Texas A&M University Music Library the following year. In 1974, Shawnee Press published his "We'll Sing a Glory" as a concluding opus posthumous.

Books

The works of Houston Bright comprise around one hundred compositions, including pieces for symphony orchestra, concert band, choir, piano, and instrumental chamber ensembles, as well as a handful of songs for solo voice and piano. His music has been performed not only throughout North America and Europe but in South America, Taiwan, Japan, and Africa as well. Diverse choral and instrumental groups have performed his music, including the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Amarillo Symphony, the Wiener Singakademie, the American Woodwind Quintet, the Slovak Philharmonic Choir of Bratislava, the Eastman Wind Ensemble, and Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians. Most of Bright's scores were originally published by Waring's Shawnee Press.

Symphony Orchestra

The Amarillo Symphony Orchestra premiered Bright's Symphonic Dance in 1951, and his Symphony in E minor on March 24, 1959. Both were conducted by that ensemble's music director, A. Clyde Roller.
The Vision of Isaiah, a three-movement cantata or short oratorio, received its debut on November 1, 1966 by the Amarillo Symphony Orchestra and a special two-hundred-voice Festival Chorus, under the baton of Roller's successor, Dr. Thomas Hohstadt. The work was subsequently published by Shawnee Press as a score for organ and chorus, with the orchestral score and parts for hire.

Concert Band

"Houston Bright combined academically correct form with fresh and brilliant scoring," write professors Norman E. Smith and Albert Stoutamire in their volume Band Music Notes, a global survey of the wind-ensemble genre. "He handled the colors of the band with skill and variety."
During preparations for the two-hundredth anniversary of the founding of the United States of America, the National Association for Music Education appointed a Bicentennial Commission to recognize, and promote the performance of, "significant" works by American composers. Two works by Bright — his Prelude and Fugue in F minor and his Passacaglia in G minor — were so honored in the commission's "Selective List of American Music for the Bicentennial Celebration," alongside music by such canonical U.S. composers as Sousa, Gershwin, and Copland.
Bright's Prelude and Fugue in F minor, in particular, has come to be considered a standard of the wind band repertory. In the 2007 volume Composers on Composing for Band, for example, Dr. Jared Spears ranks that composition as being among "Ten Works All Band Conductors at All Levels Should Study," categorizing the piece as "intelligently written, historically important," and "educationally worthwhile."

Piano

In her wide-ranging Pianist's Guide to Standard Teaching and Performance Literature, Prof. Jane Magrath cites Houston Bright's Four for Piano as a suite of "upbeat, rhythmic pieces that may captivate the student who thinks he does not like contemporary music."

Woodwind Quintet

"Houston Bright is Composer-in Residence and head of the Theory Department of West Texas State University," writes Clark F. Galehouse in notes accompanying a commercial recording of the woodwind quintet. "In the three movements of this suite, he injects fresh musical interest and enjoyable listening into the classic fast-slow-fast pattern."

Brass Quartet

Bright's Legend and Canon was included in a "Selected List of Twentieth-Century Ensembles for Three or More Brass Instruments," published in Music Educators Journal after the composer's death. In the accompanying article, Prof. John R. Shoemaker described the works so chosen as "outstanding" pieces of music numbering "among the most important in the literature." The compositions were selected by a group consisting of classical-music critics and members of the National Association of College Wind and Percussion Instructors who were recognized as "specialists in the brass chamber-music field"; their wide-ranging list encompasses a variety of works by American and European composers such as Gunther Schuller, Francis Poulenc, Paul Hindemith, Nicolai Berezowsky, and Malcolm Arnold.

Solo Voice



Bright's best-known choral piece, the original spiritual "I Hear a Voice A-Prayin'", was composed for mixed chorus ; this work proved so popular that the composer subsequently transcribed it for men's chorus ; a transcription for women's chorus followed, and later an SSAB arrangement for "young and developing" choirs as well. Other well known, internationally performed Bright choral compositions include "Rainsong," "Never Tell Thy Love," "Three Quatrains from the Rubaiyat," "Reflection," the Trilogy for Women's Voices, and his "Te Deum laudamus."
Most of his musical work was completely original, although he made a handful of arrangements of American folksongs and a few adaptations of works by Romantic-era composers. Several Bright pieces were settings of poems by Percy Bysshe Shelley, such as "Lament of the Enchantress," "Winter Night on the Mountain," and "Clouds that Veil the Midnight Moon." His choral works also put to music texts by various nineteenth-century British and American poets. Other works set sacred Christian liturgical texts ; while still others set Bright's own original lyrics.
Houston Bright composed, on commission, numerous pieces for school choruses as well as for college and festival choirs in several states. In so doing, he wrote largely with student singers and journeyman musicians in mind. Yet, according to Nick Strimple of the USC Thornton School of Music, Bright "created several little pieces that have stood the test of time, the musical content making them still appropriate for university and community choruses…"
Citing Bright's Four Sacred Songs for the Night as ranking among his favorites in the choral repertory, Dr. Floyd Slotterback, choral director and professor of music at Northern Michigan University, told an interviewer in March 2001: "Certain pieces kind of stick… I really enjoyed those Houston Bright pieces; the pieces sing well; he treats the voice very nicely. And they're very attractive; I think they'll please people… Good repertoire is just good repertoire, period."
Similarly, in singling out "Lament of the Enchantress," Forrest Daniel, director of the Sisters Community Chorus, observed: "Shelley and Houston Bright, two very good artists. Houston Bright didn't really get his due. He lived in this little town in Texas and he had this magnificent talent."