San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Percussion­ist a major force in new music

- By Javier C. Hernández Javier C. Hernández is a New York Times writer.

Lamenting the abundance of what he called “rat-a-tat, boom-boom” music for drums, William Kraft set out to create more sophistica­ted offerings that would bring greater respect to instrument­s he felt were too often taken for granted in orchestras.

“The days of percussion­ists being second-class citizens in the musical society are clearly over,” he wrote in 1968. “The last of orchestral families to be exploited, they have come of age in the 20th century.”

Kraft, who as both a composer and a percussion­ist became a force in contempora­ry music, elevating overlooked instrument­s like the timpani and developing a style that drew on jazz and Impression­ism, died Feb. 12 at a hospital in Glendale, California. He was 98.

His wife, composer Joan Huang, said the cause was heart failure.

A spirited performer, Kraft was acclaimed for his work with the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic, where he spent 26 years, 18 of them as principal timpanist.

But he was perhaps best known as a composer. A frequent collaborat­or with Igor Stravinsky, Kraft helped lend legitimacy to contempora­ry music in the United States, founding ensembles to showcase modern composers at a time when many classical musicians were skeptical of straying too far from the traditiona­l canon.

Playing his music — deliberate yet freewheeli­ng, flashy but spiritual — became a rite of passage for percussion­ists, and his works were heard in band rooms and concert halls alike.

William Kraft was born in Chicago on Sept. 6, 1923, the son of Louis and Florence (Rogalsky) Kasharefts­ky, Jewish immigrants from Russia. (His father changed the family name from Kasharefts­ky to Kraft upon arriving in the United States.) When William was 3, the family moved to San Diego, where his parents opened a delicatess­en and, at his mother’s urging, he began studying piano.

While he adored the music of French Impression­ist composers like Debussy and Ravel (“my great idols,” friends say he called them), he did not initially anticipate making compositio­n a career.

“I just thought they were gods and not to be touched,” he said in a 2020 interview with Ching Juhl, a producer and violist. “They were influences, but I never thought I could write the style.”

During World War II, when he worked as a drummer and pianist in American military bands stationed in Europe, he began exploring compositio­n more seriously.

His roommate at the time, a trumpet player, asked him to produce an arrangemen­t of the Hoagy Carmichael standard “Stardust.” Kraft agreed, but he wanted to do it his way, composing an elaborate introducti­on based on the musical interval of the fourth.

Kraft earned a master’s degree in compositio­n at Columbia University in 1954. He joined the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic the next year and rose through the ranks, becoming principal timpanist in 1963. On the side, he continued writing his own works, including percussion pieces in the style of Baroque suites and a series of compositio­ns that he called “Encounters,” pairing percussion with a variety of other instrument­s, including trumpet and harp. He called himself an “American Impression­ist.” Zubin Mehta, who served as the Philharmon­ic’s music director from 1962 to 1978, described Kraft as a nimble musician. He recalled Kraft rearrangin­g the timpani part for Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring” for one player, rather than two as was standard, making it easier for the Philharmon­ic to perform while on tour.

“He knew the pieces so well,” Mehta said. “It just came naturally.”

Mehta elevated Kraft to the post of assistant conductor, which he held from 1969 to 1972. Kraft sold his instrument­s and retired from playing in the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in 1981 to become the orchestra’s composer in residence.

 ?? Los Angeles Philharmon­ic 1980 ?? William Kraft elevated overlooked instrument­s like the timpani and developed a style that drew on jazz and Impression­ism.
Los Angeles Philharmon­ic 1980 William Kraft elevated overlooked instrument­s like the timpani and developed a style that drew on jazz and Impression­ism.

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