Milton Adolphus


Irving Milton Adolphus was an American pianist and composer.

Biography

Born in the Bronx, New York, and educated at Yale University, his classical compositions include over 200 orchestral, vocal and chamber works, among them 13 symphonies and 35 string quartets. In 1935 he moved to Philadelphia where he studied composition with Rosario Scalero. He was also a founding member of the American Composers Alliance ; involved extensively with the Curtis Institute of Music; a board member of the League of Composers; Director of the Philadelphia Music Center and active in the US civil rights movement. He married Elena Watnik, and had a son, Stephen Harris Adolphus.
He was appointed director of the Philadelphia Music Center in 1936, and in 1938 moved to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he worked for the Department of Labor and Industry of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania until his retirement in West Harwich, where he organized the Chatham Unitarian Universalist Fellowship. He died in Harwich, Massachusetts, on August 16, 1988.

Jazz

During the 1920s and early 1930s, Adolphus played with many jazz bands and orchestras in the vaudeville circuit in New York's Catskill Mountains and in New York City, including Irving "Ving" Merlin, with whom he composed I Can't Believe It. in 1931. During the 1930s, he was an arranger for Glen Gray's Casa Loma Orchestra and arranged their theme song, "Smoke Rings".
The BMI Foundation distributes the Milton Adolphus Award, which is given every year at New York City's LaGuardia High School for Performing Arts to a student for excellence in jazz improvisation.

Compositions

Few Adolphus recordings are currently available; however, Adolphus/Pisk/Gerschefski/McBride, a Composers Recordings, Inc. album from 1965, recorded by the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, was reissued in 2010 by New World Records, and contains Adolphus' Elegy. Additionally, many scores can be ordered from the .