Keith Humble (1927-1995)
Keith Humble had a profound impact on Australian contemporary music and influenced many of the next generation of composers and performers with his ideas on music education, performance and composition.
Humble began learning piano at the age of five, and while in high school began to perform with jazz groups. In 1946 he enrolled at the Melbourne University Conservatorium, where he studied traditional harmony, composition and counterpoint. An AMEB Commonwealth Scholarship enabled him to travel to Britain in 1950 to study at the Royal College of Music, London. Here he studied under Howard Ferguson and Paul Steinitz to obtain his Licentiate Diploma, before travelling to Paris on another scholarship to attend the ??cole Normale de Musique, where he studied piano with Madame Bascourret, Alfred Cortot's assistant. Humble was accepted as a private composition student by Ren?? Leibowitz, who introduced him to the concept of serialism.
After studying with Leibowitz for a year, Humble became his assistant, working as a rehearsal pianist for recordings such as Schoenberg's Gurrelieder, and also gaining experience as a conductor. Humble returned to Australia in 1956 to join the staff of the Melbourne Conservatorium, but became so discouraged by the lack of interest in contemporary music that he remained in Australia for only one year before returning to Paris. He returned to working with Leibowitz on recording projects and in classes and established the Centre de Musique at the American Centre for Students and Artists in 1959. He was the musical director of the Centre de Musique from 1960 until he returned to Australia permanently in 1966, resuming this position for periods of three and six months respectively in 1966/67 and 1968. In this period (1959-68) Humble also gave composition classes for seven- to twelve-year olds.
In 1964 Humble undertook a lecture/recital tour of colleges and universities in the USA and also visited Australia briefly to present a composers' workshop, which has been regarded as being the impetus for the formation of the Melbourne Branch of the International Society for Contemporary Music. He returned permanently in 1966, taking up the position of Senior Lecturer at the Melbourne Conservatorium, where he established the Electronic Music Studio at the Grainger Centre, re-established the Opera School and formed the Society for the Private Performance of New Music.
Humble spent 1970 as Visiting Professor at the University of California, San Diego, and as a visiting lecturer at Boston University and at the University of New York, Albany. He was appointed Professor at the University of California, San Diego in 1971.
In 1974, Humble returned to Australia and was appointed Foundation Professor at La Trobe University. This position gave him the opportunity to put into practice the ideas on music education he had been formulating throughout his career, and which had hitherto only occasionally been realised in such achievements as the Centre de Musique. As the brief for the establishment of the department was that it should complement the other tertiary music institutions already established in Melbourne, Humble was able to make technology a focal point, placing electronic music on an equal footing with more traditional music studies.
Humble helped to found the Australian Contemporary Music Ensemble (ACME) in 1975, with the purpose of promoting contemporary music and encouraging and performing the work of young Australian composers. His vision for this ensemble was for it to be a national group that would present the best of contemporary music played by the best available performers. He himself performed with the group and was their musical director until 1978.
An accomplished pianist and conductor, Humble made regular tours of Europe and the USA to perform, and was frequently a guest lecturer at American universities. He maintained a special relationship with the University of California, San Diego, where he was several times Visiting Professor after having made Australia his permanent home. The periods of time he spent in this fashion at UCSD between 1982 and 1986 saw him engaged in computer-assisted experimental and intuitive music research as part of the ensemble KIVA, in conjunction with Professors Jean-Charles Francois and John Silber.
In 1977 Humble won the National Critics Award as the most outstanding recitalist working in Australia and he was awarded the Order of Australia (AM) for his services to music in 1982. On his retirement from La Trobe in 1989, he was nominated emeritus professor. He continued his activities in America and France after his retirement, which included acting as consultant on the formation of New Music Literacy projects for the European Community. In Australia, Humble was involved at various times between 1988 and 1995 as a Member of the Board of Management of Deakin University's Institute of the Arts, music consultant to the Victorian College of the Arts, and a Member of the Board of Studies in Music at Monash University.
- Information from
- Record number
- 1078846
- Other names
-
- Professor Keith Humble
- Leslie Keith Humble
- Born
-
- 06 September 1927, Geelong, Vic
- Died
-
- 23 May 1995, Geelong, Vic
- Gender
- male
- Activities
-
- musician
- composer
- pianist
- music teacher
- academic
- conductor
- performer
- Honours
-
- Member of the Order of Australia (AM), 14 June 1982
- National Critics Award, 1977
For: Most outstanding recitalist working in Australia
- References
-
-
Australian Music Centre website
Keith Humble [biography] http://www.amcoz.com.au/comp/h/khumb.htm Last accessed 05 October 2004 - Warren Bebbington (ed.), Oxford Companion to Australian Music, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1997
p285, John Whiteoak, Humble, (Leslie) Keith
-
Australian Music Centre website
- Updated
- 05 October 2004
- To cite this page
- http://nla.gov.au/nla.cs-ma-ANL%3AMA~1078846
Keith Humble (1927-1995)
- Information from
- Record number
- 000000301450
- Born
-
- 1927
- Died
-
- 1995
- Updated
- 03 February 1986
Keith Humble (1927-1995)
- Information from
- Record number
- 000001078846
- Other names
-
- Keith Leslie Humble (1927-1995)
- Born
-
- 1927
- Died
-
- 1995
- Updated
- 03 April 2000
Keith Humble (1927-1995)
- Information from
- Record number
- 000001134038
- Born
-
- 1927
- Died
-
- 1995
- Updated
- 03 February 1986