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Richard Toensing
Biography
Richard Toensing (11 March 1940 – 2 July 2014) was an American composer and music educator.
Dr. Toensing studied composition at St. Olaf College and the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where he earned the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in 1967. His most notable teachers include Ross Lee Finney and Leslie Bassett.
After an initial appointment at Upsala College in East Orange, New Jersey, in 1966, Toensing joined the faculty of the University of Colorado at Boulder College of Music in 1972. Toensing retired in 2005 from the College of Music, where he served as professor of composition and as the former director of the University's Electronic Music Studio, New Music Festival, and New Music Ensemble, as well as chair of the Composition and Theory Department from 1984 to 2001.
Raised a Lutheran, Toensing joined the Orthodox Church in the 1990s. He has since written Christmas carols and Kontakion on the Nativity of Christ, a setting of a sixth-century poem by St. Romanos.
Toensing received numerous awards for composition, most notably from Columbia University (Joseph H. Bearns Prize), the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts, and BMI. He was selected as a Fellow for the MacDowell Colony three different times.
Works for Winds
- Concerto for Flute and Band
- Doxologies (1965)
- For All the Wild Things (1972)
- Evening Prayers
- Laments and Refrains
- Night Songs
- Serene and Heavenly Bells
- Whitman Tropes
Resources
- Heritage Encyclopedia of Band Music. "Richard Toensing." Accessed 14 September 2019
- Richard Toensing website Accessed 20 September 2020
- Richard Toensing, Wikipedia Accessed 14 September 2019