Richard
Walter Hillert
Richard
Walter Hillert is Distinguished
Professor of Music Emeritus at Concordia University, River Forest,
Illinois. His career as a teacher at Concordia spanned five decades,
from 1959 to 1993. During this time he taught classes in music
theory and composition, music literature, 20th century music,
orchestration, organ and piano instruction, comparative arts and
liturgical worship.
He
served in various capacities in the music department, including
as chair in 1964-65 and from 1986-89, as coordinator of the Master
of Church Music program, and as associate editor of the journal
Church Music (1966-80).
Richard
Hillert was born in Clark County, Wisconsin, near the small town
of Granton, on March 14, 1923. There he attended parochial and
public schools and later enrolled at Concordia Teachers College
(now Concordia University), River Forest, where he received the
Bachelor of Science in Education. He served as teacher and music
director for parishes in St. Louis, Missouri, Wausau, Wisconsin,
and Chicago and Westchester, Illinois. He received both the Master
of Music and Doctor of Music degrees in composition from Northwestern
University, Evanston, Illinois. He later attended Aaron Copland's
Tanglewood, the Berkshire School of Music, where he studied composition
with the Italian composer, Goffredo Petrassi.
It
is for his work as composer and teacher of composition that Richard
Hillert is best known. His compositions and publications include
an array of pieces of liturgical music and hymns for congregation,
choral motets and hymn anthems, psalm settings, organ and chamber
works, concertatos and cantatas, including major settings of The
Christmas Story According to St. Luke and The Passion
According to St. John, and most recently The Seven Words
from the Cross. He edited eleven volumes of the Concordia
Hymn Prelude Series. He wrote liturgical pieces and hymns and
settings and served as music editor for Worship Supplement
(1969). He was a member of the Liturgical Music Committee
of the Inter-Lutheran Commission on Worship (1966-1978) and was
the music editor of Lutheran Book of Worship (1978).
Among
his most frequently performed liturgical works for congregation
is Setting One of the Holy Communion, which appears in Lutheran
Book of Worship and Lutheran Worship (1982) and
the most recent Lutheran Service Book (2006). Worthy
Is Christ, with its antiphon, "This Is the Feast of Victory,"
was written as an alternate Song of Praise for inclusion in Setting
One. It is now widely published in at least 30 recent worship
books, appearing along with his hymns in North American, Canadian,
and international publications.
The
list of original hymn tunes is extensive and many of them have
involved direct collaboration with a number of distinguished hymn
poets of the day. These include Jaroslav Vajda, Martin Franzmann,
Fred Pratt Green, Henry Lettermann, Gracia Grindal, Herman G.
Stuempfle, Jill Baumgaertner, Susan Cherwien, and Don Saliers.
Liturgical
texts have been chosen primarily from the biblical psalms, the
ordinary and proper readings from Old and New Testaments, and
words from the historic liturgy of the Western church.
Among
other compositions are symphonic works such as Symphony in
Three Movements, Variations for Orchestra, Suite for Strings,
chamber works for small orchestra and ensembles including Alternations
for Seven Instruments, two Divertimentos, as well
as many works for keyboard, instrumental solos and songs. The
latter include Sonata for Piano (1961), a violin sonata,
and two sonatas for flute and keyboard. Major organ works include
Prelude and Toccata, Ricercata, Passacaglia on Innocent Sounds,
Partita on Picardy, Partita on Atkinson, and Fantasy
on a Solemn Ostinato. There are also concert works with sacred
texts, such as Five Canticles from the Exodus (1958),
Te Deum for two pianos, percussion and wind instruments
(1962), The Alleluiatic Sequence (1980), and Seven
Psalms of Grace for baritone solo, choirs, and chamber orchestra
(1998).
Extended
choral works, many written for the choirs of Concordia University,
conducted by Thomas Gieschen, include the cantata, May God
Bestow on Us His Grace (1964), Motet for the Day of
Pentecost for choir, vibraphone, and tape recorder (written
for the round-the-world tour in 1969), Motet for the Time
of Easter for double choir, percussion, and harp (1971),
and Agnus Dei for three choirs and percussion.
Richard
Hillert has authored scholarly articles and reviews for periodicals
such as Church Music, CrossAccent, Currents in Theology and
Mission, and other professional books and journals.
His compositions have been recorded on more than 20 compact discs.
He received an honorary Doctor of Sacred Music from Valparaiso
University, and honorary Doctor of Letters from Concordia University,
Seward, Nebraska, and from Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri.
He is an honorary lifetime member of the Association of Lutheran
Church Musicians. Many of his former students throughout the land
have careers as practicing church musicians, as teachers in elementary,
secondary, and higher education, as music editors and publishers,
and as composers.
He
and his wife, Gloria Bonnin Hillert, live in Melrose Park, Illinois.
Her career has been as a professor of anatomy and physiology at
colleges in Springfield, Illinois, Winfield, Kansas, and in the
Chicago area. They are the parents of Kathryn Brewer, Virginia,
and Jonathan Hillert; and they have five grandchildren.
Books
by and about Richard W. Hillert
Choral
music by Richard W. Hillert