The Scotsman

Katherine Hoover

Composer, flautist and teacher

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Katherine Hoover, composer and flautist. Born: 2 December 1937 in Elkins, West Virginia, United States. Died: 21 September 2018, in Manhattan, New York, aged 80.

Katherine Hoover, a composer and flautistwh­owrote not only for her instrument but also for strings, piano, woodwinds, full orchestra and voice, died on Friday in Manhattan. She was 80.

Her son, Norman Schwab, said the cause was a stroke.

Hoover began writing music in earnest in the early 1970s, a time when few women were having success in the maledomina­ted world of classical composing, and she was still creating new works into this decade.

She wrote pieces for a solo instrument and piano, like Ritual (1989), for clarinet. She wrote a bassoon quartet (1976) and a saxophone quartet (1980).

She wrote Medieval Suite (1984), a five-movement orchestral work that she said was inspired by A Distant Mirror, Barbara W Tuchman’s book about the 14th century.

Hoover’s best-known work, though, was probably Kokopeli (1990), a piece for flute that was inspired, as were a number of her other compositio­ns, by Native American music and culture.

“Kokopeli, the flute player, was a great mahu, or legendary hero of the Hopi, and of other Native Americans living in the Southweste­rn area of the United States,” she wrote in a programme note.

“He is said to have led the migrations­throughthe­mountains and deserts, the sound of his flute echoing through the great canyons and cliffs.

“In this piece I have tried to capture some of this sense of spaciousne­ss, and of the Hopi’s deep kinship with this land.”

Hoover, who also played profession­ally, won the National Flute Associatio­n’s lifetime achievemen­t award in 2016.

The flautist Nina Perlove once wrote of the alluring power of Hoover’s works:

“Katherine is a storytelle­r, and the stories she recounts are ancient whispering­s that resonate with a primal sense of mythologic­al archetypes.”

The flautist Zara Lawler, in an e-mail interview, spoke of the pleasures of playing Hoover’scompositi­ons.“katherine was a rare composer in that her music is challengin­g and satisfying for musicians to play, and yet at the same time, beautiful and meaningful for audiences to hear,” Lawler wrote.

“Her music leaves you lots of room to express yourself, and yet any performanc­e of her music is indelibly hers.”

Katherine Lacy Hoover was born on 2 December 1937 in Elkin, West Virginia. Her father, Samuel, was a chemist, and her mother, Katherine (Lacy) Hoover, was an artist and editor.

Hoover grew up in the Philadelph­ia area and received a bachelor’s degree in music theory and a performanc­e certificat­e in flute in 1959 from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester. She was already encounteri­ng the obstacles that at the time faced any woman who aspired to be a composer.

“For boys, and even more so for girls, in music school there was a sense of ‘What are you doing, writing? Who do you think you are, Beethoven?’ ” she said in an interview with Lawler for a 2013 issue of the New York Flute Club’s newsletter. “It was really not a good attitude. ‘All the good music has been written’ was basically it.

“And I was the only female in class, with six guys, all grad students,” she continued. “I was an undergrad, and I just sat there, and they never bothered to look at my work, and that’s the way it was.”

In the 1960s, Hoover focused on performing and taught flute in the pre-college division at the Juilliard School and elsewhere.

In 1969, she began teaching at the Manhattan School of Music, while also resuming her studies and earning a master’s degree in music theory there in 1974.

It was during this time that she began composing in a serious way – though finding time to do so was difficult.

“When I started to write, I had a young child,” she said in the interview with Lawler. “And the only time I had to write, once I decided I really, really wanted to do this, was in the morning after I took him to preschool. I had a couple of hours and that was it.”

The dozens of works she eventually produced have been performed by some 60 groups, among them the Santa Fe Symphony, the Colorado Quartet, the New Jersey Chamber Music Society, the Sylvan Wind Quintet and the New York Virtuoso Singers. In 1994, she conducted the Harrisburg Symphony in the premiere of her orchestral tone poem Night Skies. Prominent flautists like Carol Wincenc, Julius Baker and Eugenia Zukerman have also performed her pieces.

“She wasn’t one to talk of her legacy, but she was certainly proud of all that she had accomplish­ed,” her son said by e-mail. In addition to her composing and performanc­es, he noted another accomplish­ment: She started her own publishing company, Papagena Press, to disseminat­e her work.

“It meant she didn’t have to go hat in hand to the big houses to get a new work in front of people,” he said.

Lawler remembered Hoover as a woman who was both creative and practical.

“She gives you inspiratio­n, and also a screwdrive­r to fix your flute,” she said. “I keep a tiny screwdrive­r from her in my flute case!”

From the time she was a teenager, Hoover enjoyed writing poetry, but she mostly kept it to herself until late in life. In 2015, with the encouragem­ent of friends and family members, she published a book of her poems, This Way About.

Hoover’s first marriage, to John Schwab, ended in divorce in the 1970s.

In addition to her son, she is survived by her husband, Richard Goodwin, whom she married in 1985, and three grandchild­ren.

“Katherine was a rare composer in that her music is challengin­g and satisfying for musicians to play, and yet at the same time, beautiful and meaningful for audiences to hear”

NEIL GENZLINGER New York Times 2018. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service.

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