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Ernst Toch
Ernst Toch
Austrian composer
1
Tristan Keuris
Tristan Keuris
Dutch composer
2
John Harbison
John Harbison
American composer
3
Alun Hoddinott
Alun Hoddinott
Welsh composer
4
Stefans Grové
Stefans Grové
South African composer
5
Henri Marteau
Henri Marteau
French violinist and composer
6
Marcel Mihalovici
Marcel Mihalovici
French composer
7
Jörg Duda
Jörg Duda
German composer
8
William Sydeman
William Sydeman
American composer
9
Theo Verbey
Theo Verbey
Dutch composer
10
Otomar Kvěch
Otomar Kvěch
Czech music educator, composer and university educator
11
Dmitri Smirnov
Dmitri Smirnov
Russian composer
12
Hendrik Andriessen
Hendrik Andriessen
Dutch composer, organist and music educator
13
Ruth Gipps
Ruth Gipps
English composer, oboist, pianist and impresario
14
Jiří Gemrot
Jiří Gemrot
Czech composer, radio executive, and record producer
Intro
composer
Awards Received
Guggenheim Fellowship
Music

William Jennings Bryan "Ben" Weber (July 23, 1916 in St. Louis – June 16, 1979 in New York City) was an American composer.

Weber He was "one of the first Americans to embrace the 12-tone techniques of Schoenberg, starting in 1938"; he was largely self-taught. He worked initially as a copyist and only came to recognition in the 1950s.

Weber used the twelve-tone technique but, rather than avoid tonality, he worked with it and achieved a virtuoso Romantic style: "Weber could not stifle his bent for expansive lyricism and bold gestures," wrote music critic Anthony Tommasini, adding: "One gets the sense that his adaptation of the 12-tone technique was his way of ensuring that his music would keep its cutting edge and not slip into Romanticism. There is a rather Brahmsian spirit trying to emerge here." He composed chamber music for various combinations of instruments, orchestral music including concertos for violin and piano, piano music, and songs.

Weber also wrote an unpublished memoir, How I Took 63 Years to Commit Suicide (as told to Matthew Paris).