His music combined elements of tonal and non-tonal classical music (in particular the influence of Messiaen) with American popular music and non-Western music,[3] in what has been described as "polystylistic" or "quaquaversal" music[4]—which makes the definition of an overall style difficult.[5] Albright's approach to some of his music has been considered to be surrealistic.[6] He was an enthusiast for ragtime[7] and made notable recordings of the piano rags of Scott Joplin and others. He also recorded an album of his own ragtime compositions.
In addition to his compositional and teaching activities, Albright maintained an active career and was regarded as both a virtuoso organist and pianist, performing many recitals on both instruments throughout North American and Europe. He was the featured organist for the 1976 International Contemporary Organ Music Festival at the Hartt School of Music.[8] He had earlier been commissioned to write his organ work Stipendium Peccati for the 1973 International Contemporary Organ Music Festival.[8] He commissioned new works for the organ from other contemporary composers to play on his international concert tours.[1] His hymns appear in hymnals of the Unitarian and Episcopal Churches.
Composer-In-Residence at the American Academy in Rome, 1979
Queen Marie-Jose Prize
American Academy of Arts and Letters
University of Michigan's Distinguished Service Award and Faculty Recognition Award.
Selected Compositions
Three Novelty Rags
Alliance
Stipendium Peccati
Bacchanal
Organbook I and II, for organ and tape
Sonata, for alto saxophone and piano
Chasm, for organ. Commissioned by the Ann Arbor and Detroit chapters of the American Guild of Organists for the 1986 AGO National Convention in Ann Arbor, premiered by Marilyn Mason.[9]
Perone, James Edward. 1988. "Pluralistic Strategies in Musical Analysis: A Study of Selected Works by William Albright". Ph.D. diss., Buffalo: State University of New York at Buffalo.
Rosenberg, Timothy Earl. 2010. "Interpreting the Music of William Albright: A Surrealistic Approach". Ph.D. diss., East Lansing: Michigan State University.
Further reading
Beckford, Richard Edward. 1997. "The Organ Symphony: Its Evolution in France and Transformation in Selected Works by Composers of the Twentieth Century". DMA diss. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University.
Krahn, Stephen W. 1994. "Structural, Tonal, and Linear Problems in William Albright's Symphony for Organ". DMA diss. Lincoln: University of Nebraska.
Little, Jeanie R. 1975. "Serial, Aleatoric, and Electronic Techniques in American Organ Music Published between 1960 and 1972." Ph.D. diss. Ames: University of Iowa.
Santos, Eric. 1999. "Requiem for Bill Albright". Perspectives of New Music 37, no. 1 (Winter): 35–37.
Szoka, Marta. 1994. "Twórczosc Williama Albrighta na tle wspólczesnej muzyki organowej w USA" [The Works of William Albright against the Background of Contemporary Organ Music]. In Organy i muzyka organowa IX (Prace specjalne 52), edited by Janusz Krassowski. Gdańsk: Akademia Muzyczna im. Stanisława Moniuszki.