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DAVID RANDOLPH has been the conductor
of The St. Cecilia Chorus and Orchestra since 1965.
Born in New York City, he received his B.S. from the College of
the City of New York, where he planned to be a physicist until
meeting up with higher mathematics. Having scored in the 98th percentile
on a musical aptitude test, he changed his major to music, which
had always been one of his loves. He proceeded to get his Master
of Arts degree at Teachers College, Columbia University.
From 1943 to 1947 he was a Music Specialist for the United States
Office of War Information. In 1947 he became the Music Annotator
for the Columbia Broadcasting System, writing the broadcast scripts
for concerts by The New York Philharmonic, The Philadelphia Orchestra,
and all other classical music presentations on the network.
In 1946, he began a series of weekly broadcasts called "Music
for the Connoisseur," later known as "The David Randolph
Concerts," on New York City's radio station WNYC. For his
fourth broadcast, on July 23, 1946, he surveyed the subject of "Humor
in Music," thus "inventing" the type of radio broadcast
devoted to a single musical subject with commentary.
The broadcasts were later heard nationwide on the 72-station network
of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters. These
broadcasts, which won four Ohio State University Awards as "The
best programs of music and commentary in the nation," continued
for 33 years and resulted in invitations from 23 publishers to
write a book.
His book, This Is Music, was described by The New York
Times as "One of the Best of the Year." It was recently
re-published by Creative Arts Book Company, and can be ordered
at any bookstore, or online from Amazon.com.
For many years, Mr. Randolph conducted his own five-voiced madrigal
group, The Randolph Singers, which toured, gave concerts in Town
Hall, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Carnegie Recital Hall,
made many recordings, and was the subject of a full two-hour "Today" show
on NBC-TV. In 1948, Mr. Randolph married the contralto of the group,
Mildred Greenberg.
He was the host of the program "Lincoln Center Spotlight," heard
weekly on radio station WQXR; host for "Young Audiences," a
series of 39 programs on the CBS Television network; and appeared
as a guest on the Metropolitan Opera Intermission broadcasts. He
has been a regular guest critic on WQXR's "First Hearing."
David Randolph was the conductor of the original Masterwork Chorus
and Orchestra from its founding in 1955 until his resignation on
January 1, 1993. With them, Mr. Randolph developed a specialty
as a conductor of Handel's "Messiah." His much-acclaimed
interpretation of that beloved masterpiece became a seasonal tradition
in New York City, eventually resulting in as many as seven sold-out
performances a season and a world record. His 2005 Carnegie Hall
performances with The St. Cecilia Chorus and Orchestra brought
that record number to 172 performances.
The David Randolph Distinguished
Artist-in-Residence Program
In 1996, in honor of his 30 years as
their conductor, The St. Cecilia Chorus endowed The
David Randolph Distinguished Artist-in-Residence Program at
The New School, where he had taught for 17 years. | More |
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