0
Alan Shulman
Alan Shulman
American composer and cellist
1
Brandee Younger
Brandee Younger
American Harpist
2
Dorothy Ashby
Dorothy Ashby
American jazz harpist
3
Lavinia Meijer
Lavinia Meijer
Dutch musician
4
Yolanda Kondonassis
Yolanda Kondonassis
American musician
5
Sergiu Natra
Sergiu Natra
Romanian composer
6
György Cziffra
György Cziffra
Hungarian-French virtuoso pianist and composer
7
Marcel Grandjany
Marcel Grandjany
French musician
8
Yuja Wang
Yuja Wang
Chinese pianist
9
Joseph Banowetz
Joseph Banowetz
American musician
10
Paula Robison
Paula Robison
American musician
11
Adam Makowicz
Adam Makowicz
Polish-Canadian musician
12
Cristina Braga
Cristina Braga
Brazilian musician
13
Wayne Peterson
Wayne Peterson
American composer
14
Deborah Henson-Conant
Deborah Henson-Conant
electric harpist, touring musician, composer
15
David Diamond
David Diamond
American classical composer (1915-2005)
16
John Harbison
John Harbison
American composer
17
Tina Guo
Tina Guo
American cellist, musician and composer
18
Robert Casadesus
Robert Casadesus
French pianist and composer
19
Joan Tower
Joan Tower
American composer, concert pianist and conductor
20
Lucille Hegamin
Lucille Hegamin
American singer and entertainer
Ruth Berman Harris
Harpist, composer

Ruth Berman Harris

Intro
Harpist, composer
Genres
Awards Received
Max Planck Research Award
Music

Ruth Berman-Harris (November 3, 1916 – April 23, 2013) was a noted concert harpist, recording artist, and music educator. She performed for many years in New York in the jazz and classical fields, and authored eight books for harp students.

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Ruth Berman began her harp studies at the age of thirteen. At age fifteen she won the Madrigal Award at the Juilliard School. She studied under Carlos Salzedo, Marie Miller, Lucille Lawrence, Casper Reardon, and Ronald Herder. She married Sydney I. Harris, on October 6, 1946, and thereafter was professionally known as Ruth Berman-Harris.

As one of few harpists in New York who played both classical and jazz, Berman-Harris wrote her own jazz arrangements, while performing with symphony orchestras and working as a studio musician at NBC, CBS and ABC for forty-eight years. She performed with Arturo Toscanini and the NBC Symphony.

Her jazz harp recordings were remastered, using materials from the Library of Congress, on a 2008 CD entitled Swing Time, issued by MSR Classic and Jazz Recording Company.

Harris served on the faculty of the Hoff-Barthelson Music School and the Westchester Conservatory of Music. She co-directed the Purchase Music Ensemble, which sponsored the Aaron Copland Competition for Young Composers.

In September 1978 Berman appeared at a benefit concert hosted by the Connecticut chapter of the American Harp Society, where she and cellist Lisa Bressler performed original compositions for harp and cello by Berman.

Berman-Harris died on April 23, 2013, at the age of 96, at the Hospice of Arizona, in Peoria, Arizona.