Remembering Colorado composer Richard Toensing, 1940-2014

Listen Now
1min 34sec

Photo: Composer Richard Toensing.Composer and University of Colorado music professor Richard Toensing died July 2 from pancreatic cancer.

He composed several massive choral works in the sacred tradition, including "Kontakion of the Nativity of Christ." His pieces were performed by choirs around the U.S. and many of them saw commercial release.

He served as a professor at the University of Colorado, in the College of Music's composition department from 1973 until 2005, teaching and inspring countless young composers.

The staff at CPR Classical interviewed Toensing and played many of his pieces on air. He will be missed.

Check back soon for CPR Classical's full tribute to the composer. In the meantime, click the audio above to hear Toensing tell CPR Classical's David Rutherford about the pleasures and challenges a composer encounters when hearing his own work performed.

Read Toensing's full obituary:

Richard Edward Toensing (1940-2014) was a prize-winning composer, a respected teacher, an accomplished choral conductor, a lover of good music and an avid gardener with a special weakness foririses. He died of pancreatic cancer on July 2.

Toensing was born and raised in St. Paul, Minnesota. In his youth he decided that he wanted to create music as well as conduct others performing it. Together, these two passions were the centerpiece of his professional life. Toensing received his B. Music degree with honors from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, and his M.M. and D.M.A. degrees from the University of Michigan, where he studied with Ross Lee Finney and Leslie Bassett, two of the great American composers of the twentieth century. At both St. Olaf and Michigan, he also received formal training in choral conducting.

His first teaching job was in the fine arts department at Uppsala College in East Orange, New Jersey. In 1973, Toensing joined the faculty of the College of Music at the University of Colorado, where he taught composition, as well as music analysis and theory, until his retirement in 2005. At the College of Music, he served at various times as director of the New Music Ensemble, head of the Electronic Music Studio and convener of the CU Festival of New Music. He trained dozens of undergraduate and graduate students who went on to successful careers as composers and musicians. He was well known at the College for his high academic and musical standards and his professional integrity, and he became a mentor to younger colleagues. He was chair of his department from 1984-2001, and was named professor emeritus upon retirement.

Toensing's compositions span a variety of styles, from the gestural, free atonal work of the 1960s and 1970s to a renewed interest in various forms of diatonic music in more recent years. He has written numerous works for chorus, chamber music in various genres, and works for large ensembles. His later compositions, particularly from the late 1990s onward, are informed by his careful study of the Orthodox Christian sacred musical tradition and suffused with his deep religious faith. Reviewers of Toensing's works, sacred and otherwise, have said that the listener is struck by a transparency of sound, a simplicity that exists inside complexity, and a sparkling clarity of parts. Toensing won numerous awards for composition, including the Joseph H. Bearnes Prize from Columbia University, two BMI student composer awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a commission from the National Endowment for the Arts. He was named a MacDowell Colony Fellow three times.

To date, Toensing's music has been performed on four continents and in such US venues as Carnegie Hall and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. With the help of grants and private donations, he released several recordings of his compositions. His sacred music has been featured on National Public Radio and local stations.

In the summer of 1998, the choir at the Church of St. Luke in the Fields in New York recorded the Responsoria, a complete setting of the Tenebrae services sung at Roman Catholic worship during Holy Week since the sixth century. Toensing called this work a "vast, three-movement choral symphony"; it follows in the tradition of several medieval, Renaissance and early modern composers who have set parts or all of the responsory texts. The Responsoria was released as a set of three compact discs in 2000.

Cappella Romana, a professional group based in Portland, Oregon, recorded a second major choral work, the Kontakion of the Nativity of Christ, for the Orthodox Christmas season of January 2009. In addition to his work in his studio and the classroom, Toensing served as choir director at Atonement Lutheran Church and Grace Lutheran Church, both in Boulder, and more recently at St. Luke's Orthodox Church in Erie. In later life, he wrote several pieces intended for Orthodox Church choirs.

Richard Toensing is survived by his beloved wife Carol, his sons Christopher and Peter, his grandchildren Jessica, Lauren, Andrew and Kathryn, his daughter-in-law Kari and his sister Marjorie, as well as numerous friends. He will be long remembered with tremendous love and great respect.