Kenton Summers Coe (November 11, 1930 â December 29, 2021) was an American composer.
Coe was born in Johnson City, TN, the younger of two sons born to Cleveland Beach Coe (1893-1945) and Margaret Rebecca (Summers) Coe (1893-1981).àHe spent the first five years of his life in Johnson City, after which he moved with his family to Knoxville and Chattanooga, where they lived from 1935-1945 while CoeâÂÂs father worked for the Tennessee Valley Authority and served in WWII.àIt was during that time, around 1936, that Coe first began his musical training at the Cadek Conservatory in Chattanooga.àCoe attended Sewanee Military Academy from 1946-1947 and then returned to Johnson City with his mother (his father died in 1945 while serving in WWII) where he graduated from Science Hill High School in 1948.àHe attended Hobart College in New York for two years before transferring to Yale University in 1950 to study composition with Paul Hindemith and Quincy Porter.àCoe graduated from Yale in May 1953 and left that summer for Paris, France to study music composition with Nadia Boulanger at the Paris Conservatory and the American School at Fontainebleau.àWhat was initially a six-week summer program evolved into three years of private composition study, sponsored by two scholarships through the French government for which Boulanger advocated.
It was during this time that Coe first met Jean-Pierre Marty, a pianist and conductor with whom Coe would share a romantic partnership for most of his life.ÃÂ Coe remained in France until 1957, when he and Marty moved to New York City, where they would remain until Coe returned to Johnson City in 1974 and Marty moved back to France. Aside from a five-year period living in Lake Summit, NC (2007-2012), Coe would stay in Johnson City for the next 43 years, until 2017.ÃÂ He spent his final years in Easley, SC and Asheville, NC, where he died on December 29, 2021.
While CoeâÂÂs student compositions date to the 1940s, he considered his first mature piece to be the opera âÂÂSouth,â which he began composing in 1960 and worked on until its premiere in 1965 by the Opera of Marseilles, under the direction of Jean-Pierre Marty.àThe work, based on Julien GreenâÂÂs three-act play âÂÂSudâ from 1953, would be performed again in 1972 by the Paris Opera, making Coe the first American to have an opera produced by the organization.àCoe went on to write a number of stage works (operas, one-act musical plays, and ballets), including the opera âÂÂRachelâ on which he collaborated with librettist Anne Howard Bailey and which was premiered by the Knoxville Opera Company in 1989.
Coe wrote extensively for piano and organ, including âÂÂSonata for Pianoâ which was given its American premiere by Kenneth Huber at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., in 1977, and âÂÂFantasy for Organâ (1991) which was commissioned by Stephen Hamilton and served as the focus of HamiltonâÂÂs 1992 DMA Thesis.àHe composed orchestral pieces, works for various chamber ensembles, and various pieces for chorus and vocal soloists.àAs an active member of the Episcopal Church, Coe also composed numerous anthems and other sacred pieces.àFinally, Coe composed over a half dozen film scores, first working with Romain Gary on âÂÂBirds in Peruâ in 1968, and going on to collaborate with documentarian Ross Spears on a number of films from the late 1970s through the 2010s, including "Agee" (1980) which was nominated for an Academy Award for best feature documentary.
Many of CoeâÂÂs pieces were written in response to specific commissions, including âÂÂConcerto for Organ, Strings, and Percussionâ commissioned by the Festival du Commings in 1980; âÂÂScherzo for Clarinet, Brass, and Stringsâ by the Johnson City Symphony in 1986; âÂÂIschianaâ by the Baton Rouge Symphony in 1989; âÂÂPurcellularâ by the City of London in 1995; and âÂÂArchitects of Heavenâ by the Carolina Concert Choir in Hendersonville, NC around 2008, which Coe once described as âÂÂprobably the best work I have ever written.âÂÂ
CoeâÂÂs work was also supported by various grants, awards, and fellowships throughout the years.àThis included two ten-week fellowships in 1960 and 1963 from the MacDowell Colony, an artistsâ residency and workshop in Peterborough, NH, where he worked on the opera âÂÂSouthâ under the sponsorship of composer Aaron Copland; a $75,000 award from the Lyndhurst Foundation in 1985; and various grants from state and federal arts organizations including the National Endowment for the Arts and the Tennessee Arts Commission.
Coe received a number of awards and accolades throughout his life, including the Samuel Doak Award from Tusculum College in 1980, a GovernorâÂÂs Award in the Arts from the state of Tennessee in 1990, Composer of the Year from the Tennessee Music Teachersâ Association in 1998, and an honorary doctorate degree from East Tennessee State University in 2007.