[an error occurred while processing this directive] Diehn Composers Room

Frank Erickson Collection

Biography
Collection Scope and Contents

Key to Finding Aids Terms / Scores and Parts: Alphabetical List / Scores and Parts: Chronological List / Authored by the Composer / Awards, Certificates, Degrees, etc. / Biographical and Bibliographical Material / Correspondence / Photographs / Programs, Program Notes, etc. / Reviews, Publicity and Newspaper Articles / Sketches and Sketchbooks / Sound Recordings, Films and Videos / Supplemental Material / Teaching Aids / Introduction

BIOGRAPHY

Frank William Erickson, the son of Frank O. and Myrtle (Leck) Erickson, was born in Spokane, Washington on September 1, 1923. He began studying piano at the age of eight, trumpet at ten, and wrote his first band composition when he was in high school. He received his Mus.B. in 1950 and his Mus.M. in 1951, both from the University of Southern California. Before entering college he studied privately with Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, and with Halsey Stevens and Clarence Sawhill after enrolling at USC

Erickson was a composer, conductor, arranger, and author of books on band method. He also lectured at the University of California at Los Angeles (1958) and was professor of music at San Jose State University. For a number of years he worked for a music publishing company, and later began his own company. He served with the United States Army Air Force from 1942-1946, and wrote arrangements for army bands during that time. After the war ended he worked in Los Angeles as a trumpet player and jazz arranger. He was a life member of the National Band Association, elected to the Academy of Wind and Percussion Arts in 1986, and a member of ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers), Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, Pi Kappa Lamda, Phi Beta Mu, and the American Bandmasters Association.

In 1953 he married Mary Theresa McGrorty. They had three sons, William, Richard, and Christian. Erickson's wife died in 1975, and on August 15, 1981 he married Mary Ann Smith. He died October 21, 1996.

Frank Erickson is listed in several biographical sources including, for example, The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, Who Was Who in America, and International Who's Who in Music. He is also the subject of a thesis, written by Pamela Joy Arwood in 1990 at Central Missouri State University, entitled Frank Erickson and His Music: A Biography, Analysis of Selected Compositions, and Catalogue. Biographical information above was taken from these sources.

COLLECTION SCOPE AND CONTENTS

The Frank Erickson Collection includes manuscript scores of both marching and concert band pieces, as well as his musical arrangements (mainly of traditional songs and hymns). Many of the materials that he used as a teacher of band music are also available. There is a fair amount of biographical material, including a master's thesis on his music. Newspaper articles and much of his professional and personal correspondence are also part of this collection.


[an error occurred while processing this directive]