Composers

Talib Rasul Hakim

1940 - 1988

About

Talib Rasul Hakim (1940 -1988) was born Stephen Alexander Chambers in Asheville, North Carolina, in 1940. He developed an interest in music in high school, studied clarinet and piano, and continued his education at the Manhattan School of Music (1958–1959) and the New York College of Music (1959–1963). . His major teachers and advisors included Hall Overton, William Sydeman, Hale Smith, Charles Whittenberg, Morton Feldman, Margaret Allison Bonds and Ornette Coleman.  Sometime in the 1960s he became interested in Sufism and assumed his Arabic name. He taught at several institutions and was the recipient of many awards and grants. His pieces “Sound-Gone” (1967), “Placements” (1970), and “Visions of Ishwara” (1970) were commercially recorded and published, and numerous other works received concert performances. Following the publishing of these pieces, Hakim taught at Pace College. His music often incorporated avant-garde compositional and performance techniques and also strongly reflect his interest in Islam and Eastern religions. He died in 1988.

(source: http://bmrcsurvey.uchicago.edu/collections/2533-1 ; http://oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.48282)

Related Information

Works by Talib Rasul Hakim

Title Collection Voice Type Range Poet
Ode to Silence Soprano Eb4 - A5 Talib Rasul Hakim
Title Published Size Solo with Ensemble Duration Range Level Orchestration
Bir-ming-ham Reflections Yes Full Orchestra under 5 Professional 3222-2230-timp-str
Composer Title Work Instrumentation Level Number of Movements Accompanied Size Duration Range
Talib Rasul Hakim Sound-Gone Piano 1 No Solo