(Jack Vartoogian/FrontRowPhotos/New York Times)
New York Times
By MARGALIT FOX
Published: November 11, 2013
Kermit Moore, a cellist, conductor and composer who in all three
capacities was concerned with music rooted in the black experience, died
on Nov. 2 in Manhattan. He was 84.
The cause was complications after recent surgery, his wife, the composer Dorothy Rudd Moore, said.
As a cellist, Mr. Moore appeared as a soloist and chamber player on some
of the world’s leading concert stages. He was renowned for championing
the work of 20th-century composers: where another cellist might present a
recital in which a single modern work was interleaved among more
traditional fare, Mr. Moore typically offered a half-dozen contemporary
pieces at once.
Writing in The New York Times in 1969, Peter G. Davis reviewed a program
by Mr. Moore at Carnegie Recital Hall that included works by Ben Weber,
Iain Hamilton, Roger Sessions, Beatrice Witkin and the African-American
composer Hale Smith.
“Mr. Moore vaulted every technical hurdle of his formidable recital with
disarming ease,” Mr. Davis wrote. “He is a virtuoso cellist, a
sensitive musician and something of a hero.”
Mr. Moore also collaborated with jazz musicians, including the pianist McCoy Tyner and the bassist Ron Carter.
On the podium, he was a regular guest conductor of the Brooklyn
Philharmonic and also led the Detroit Symphony, the Berkeley (Calif.)
Symphony and Opera Ebony.
Mr. Moore was a founder, the principal cellist, a frequent conductor and
an administrator of the Symphony of the New World, an ensemble, begun
in New York in 1964, that sought to represent minorities and women in
far greater numbers than traditional orchestras did.
He was also the founder and conductor of the Classical Heritage
Ensemble, a chamber orchestra specializing in rarely performed classical
works.
As a composer, Mr. Moore was known for “Many Thousand Gone,” for
strings, flute, percussion and chorus; string quartets; and several
pieces for the cello, an instrument that has long been painfully
underrepresented in the solo literature.
He composed the soundtrack for “Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice,” a
documentary about that pioneering black journalist, first broadcast on
PBS in 1989.
With the photographer, filmmaker, musician and polymath Gordon Parks,
Mr. Moore wrote the soundtrack for the 1984 PBS documentary “Solomon
Northup’s Odyssey,” about a free black man forced into bondage. Mr.
Northup’s story is the subject of the current feature film “12 Years a
Slave.”
Kermit Diton Moore was born in Akron, Ohio, on March 11, 1929; his
middle name was in honor of the African-American composer Carl Diton,
whom his parents admired. He began piano lessons with his mother at 5
and at 10 took up the cello.
While still in high school, Mr. Moore studied at the Cleveland Institute
of Music; by the time he was 19, he was playing solo recitals in New
York.
In Manhattan, Mr. Moore studied the cello with Felix Salmond at the
Juilliard School while simultaneously studying composition and
musicology at New York University, from which he received a master’s
degree. He later studied at the Paris Conservatoire.
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