Earle Brown
December 26, 1926 - July 2, 2002born in Lunenburg, MA, composed during the Contemporary period
Biography
Earle Brown was born in Lunenberg, a farm town in Worcester County in central Massachusetts. He picked up the trumpet at age 10 and led a small dance band through high school. While at Northeastern University in Boston, studying engineering and mathematics, Brown played weekends in a "territory" jazz band. He joined the Air Force to become a pilot, but wound up in an Army band unit. Therein Brown met a fellow player who sparked his interest in the Joseph Schillinger method of musical composition. After Brown was discharged, he embarked on four years of study at Schillinger House in Boston (now Berklee School of Music) under Brogue Henning. His earliest works, such as the Music for Violin, Cello and Piano, are 12-tone based and make use of methods derived from the Schillinger system.
In 1951, in Denver Earle Brown first met composer John Cage. Cage invited Brown to move to New York City the following year. Earle Brown worked with Cage and David Tudor in the Project for Music for Magnetic Tape. During that time, Brown created a key pioneering electronic work, the Octet for Eight Loudspeakers, the first piece of musique concrète to be executed in multi-track stereo. Later that year, Brown worked on a series of compositions entitled Folio that one by one began to reduce certain elements of notation.
Selected Discography

