Founder
and Director of the Composers Cooperative Society in 1964, and
later, the Composers & Choreographers Theater, JOHN WATTS
(1929-82) was a member of the faculty at the New School for Social
Research in New York City from 1969 until 1982. He directed the
Electronic Music Program at the New School and coordinated numerous
music workshops, festivals, and concerts there.
Watts was born in Maryville, Tennessee, and began studying music
(clarinet) in his early teens. He received his B.A. in Music Composition
from the University of Tennessee in 1949, and subsequently entered
graduate school there, where he was a student of David Van Vactor
and John Krueger in composition, and Alfred Schmied in piano.
He won the Thomas Berry Prize for Composition in 1950, but was
soon drafted into the army, where he served briefly in the Korean
War. He was granted an honorable discharge in 1951 for medical
reasons.
Watts entered the University of Colorado with a music scholarship
in 1951 and graduated with a Masters Degree in Music in 1953.
He was a student of Cecil Effinger in composition, and Paul Parmelee
and Howard Waltz in piano. It was there he met the painter Charles
Bunnell, and began studies in painting and drawing. He was admitted
to the doctoral program in composition at the University of Illinois,
where he studied with Burrill Phillips, Robert Kelly, and Robert
Palmer. Following the move of his teacher Robert Palmer, Watts
left Illinois in 1956 for Cornell University, where he continued
to study with Palmer, though Watts became increasingly interested
in painting and literature, and lost focus on the doctoral program
in music. Taking a leave of absence from Cornell, he was hired
by the North Dakota State College in Fargo during the 1956-57
academic year, where he taught Music Appreciation and assisted
the Director of Bands.
At a summer music festival in 1950, Watts had met the composer
Roy Harris, who encouraged him to continue composition studies.
After the year of teaching in Fargo, Watts wanted to return to
composition, and sought private studies with Harris, then at Indiana
University. There, under Harris, Watts began to write Sonata for
Piano in 1958, which eventually became his professional debut
“break-out” piece some years later when it was premiered
at Carnegie Recital Hall by the young gifted pianist David Del
Tredici.
Invited by his mentor Harris, Watts attended the Inter-American
University in San Germán, Puerto Rico during the fall/winter
of 1960-61, continuing to work on the sonata, and there made the
acquaintance of many performers, including pianist Johanna Harris,
and trumpet player Robert Levy. After studies in San Germán,
Watts moved to New York City in 1962 where he worked as a teacher
at the Waltann School of Creative Arts in Brooklyn, and as a dance
accompanist at the North Shore Community Arts Center. It was during
this time that he met dancer-choreographer Laura Foreman. Watts
married Foreman in 1963 (his third and her first), in a Unitarian
ceremony near Foreman’s mother’s home in Los Angeles.
Watts continued to study with Harris informally for several years,
and won a residency to the prestigious Yaddo Arts Colony in 1964.
With this boost, letters of recommendation from Harris and Robert
Palmer, and the strong support of his new wife, Watts attempted
readmission to the doctoral program in composition at Cornell
in 1964, but his application was rejected. He rekindled his interest
in literary composition and journalism, and found work in New
York City as a newspaper editor for the weekly Manhattan East
News from 1965 to 1967. He taught music at the Eron Preparatory
School from 1965 to 1966, and edited the Journal of Prayer, a
non-denominational, inspirational publication from 1967-70.
In 1967, Watts returned to musical endeavors, and established
an organization for the purpose of presenting concerts of new
music. Initially called the Composer’s Cooperative Society,
it soon merged with the Laura Foreman Dance Company to become
the Composers and Choreographers Theatre—an entity that
quickly grew into a nationally-recognized venue for contemporary
music and dance in New York City.
The Composers and Choreographers Theatre (CCT) was registered
as a non-profit corporation and began an artists-in-residence
affiliation with the New School for Social Research in 1969. It
was established as a cultural and educational organization specifically
to help create a better performance environment for contemporary
music and dance, with Watts and Foreman as Co-Directors. At the
New School, it developed as one of the first university electronic
music/synthesizer programs in the country, created the annual
May Festival concert series, and pioneered workshop formats involving
composers, musicians, and music and modern dance specialists at
work and in concert. Through selective programming, the CCT defined
an active creative spectrum ranging from the traditional-based
to the avant-garde.
It was a fertile time for discovery of the uses of electronics
in music, for the implementation of theatrical elements and performance
art in concert, and for the mingling of various art forms, including
concert music, modern dance, theatre, photography, film, and early
videotape. Watts was introduced to the Moog synthesizer while
working with composer Gershon Kingsley at his mid-town studio
in the late 1960s. He acquired his own synthesizer in 1970, an
ARP, and began performing with it publicly in 1972 with his piece
Elegy to Chimney: In Memoriam, for trumpet, tape, and
live synthesizer.
Throughout the 1970s, Watts was a composer, an ARP synthesizer
soloist, Director of the Composers Theatre, and the Director of
the Electronic Music Program at the New School. To the detriment
of his composing and performing, he worked very hard to maintain
funding sources for the CCT. Overall, the CCT presented the works
of more than 200 composers, including 150 premieres and 50 commissions,
founded the Composers Festival Orchestra, and produced three LP
recordings. Composers whose works were premiered and performed
under the auspices of Composers Theatre include: William Albright,
David Amram, Robert Baksa, Warren Benson, Leonard Bernstein, Allan
Blank, Alvin Brehm, Earle Brown, Louis Calabro, Robert Clark,
David Cope, Mario Davidovsky, David Del Tredici, Roger Hannay,
William Hellerman, Gershon Kingsley, Barbara Kolb, Karl Korte,
Leo Kraft, Meyer Kupferman, William Mayer, Vincent Persichetti,
Quincy Porter, Ned Rorem, Peter Schickele, Elliott Schwartz, Robert
Starer, Francis Thorne, Gilbert Trythall, Gerald Warfield, John
Watts, Stephan Wolpe, Yehuda Yannay, Ramon Zupko, and many others.
The concerts generally took place at the Studio 58 Playhouse,
a salon-theatre on 58th street, seating 125 persons – intimate,
informal or formal, and acoustically appropriate for chamber ensemble
dimensions emphasized at the CCT concerts.
Watts and Foreman were constantly seeking publicity, which could
help them generate funds from government, corporate, and private
organizations. The most striking publicity they ever received
was for a dance concert performance that never actually took place.
Jack Anderson’s article in the New York Times (July 1981)
shows a poster of the Watts/Foreman presentation Wallwork
with a “Sold Out” sign printed across the center.
Not happening was the point of the concert, which was advertised—with
ticket prices, date, time, and reservation telephone number—
on posters all over New York City. When people called the number,
they were told that no further names were being added to the waiting
list. It was a hoax, though nobody was cheated out of any money.
Anderson called it “nutty and annoying,” but he admitted
that “it does raise questions about the relationship between
art and publicity.”
John’s last performed work, Time Coded Woman, was
written for Lukas Foss and the Brooklyn Philharmonic’s “Meet
the Moderns” series. It featured video footage by Laura
Foreman, with electronic music tracks and orchestra. The pre-flight
test premiere took place at Cooper Union on April 2, 1982, and
was well-received. The actual premiere at the Brooklyn Academy
of Music the following night did not fare well with reviewers.
Laura believed that the poor reception of this work—combined
with his recent termination from his teaching job at the New School—ultimately
contributed to his premature death. Three months after the premiere
of Time Coded Woman, he was found dead in his apartment,
from what appeared to be complications from chronic alcoholism.
©2002 Gina Genova
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