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Louis Horst
Louis Horst
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Louis Horst (born January 12, 1884, Kansas City, Missouri – died January 23, 1964, New York City) was a composer, and pianist. He helped to define the principles of modern dance choreographic technique, most notably the matching of choreography to pre-existing musical structure and the use of contemporary music for dance scores.

Key Information

Biography and work

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Horst was the musical director for the Denishawn company (1916-25) before working as musical director and dance composition teacher for Martha Graham's school and dance company (1926-48).

One memorable piece of advice that Horst gave dancers in his lessons in the 1930s, at times delivered in a sarcastic tone: "when in doubt, turn."[1][2][3][4][5] This is a variant of Ted Shawn's famous line "When in doubt, twirl."[6] The Grateful Dead Almanac adopted it as their motto.[7]

Apart from being a personal friend and mentor to Graham, Horst worked and wrote scores for many other choreographers, including:

Career

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Front cover of the February 1936 article of Dance Observer featuring a caricature of Horst, its editor

Horst composed scores for the Denishawn company, including Japanese Spear Dance (1919). He composed several of Graham's early group works: Primitive Mysteries (1931), Celebration (1934), Frontier (1935), and El Penitente (1940). For Anna Sokolow, Horst composed Noah (1935). He also composed several movie scores.

Horst taught art of choreography at Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater (1928-1964),[8] Bennington College (1934-45), Mills College, Connecticut College (1948–63), Barnard College, Sarah Lawrence College, Columbia University, and The Juilliard School (1951-64).

Horst lectured often on "Dance Composition", "Music Composition for Dance", and "Modern Dance and Its Relation to the Other Modern Arts". He wrote and published two books: Pre-classic Dance Forms (1937) and Modern Dance Forms (1960). He founded and edited Dance Observer Journal (1933-64).

In 1964 he became the second recipient of the Heritage Award of the National Dance Association.

References

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Further reading

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from Grokipedia
Louis Horst is an American composer, choreographer, and educator known for his pivotal role in shaping modern dance through his long collaboration with Martha Graham, his innovative teaching of dance composition, and his efforts to establish structural principles in choreography. Born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1884, Horst began his career as a professional pianist and accompanist, working in silent films, theater productions, and various performance venues before entering the dance world. He served as musical director for the Denishawn Dance Company from 1916 to 1925, where he first met Martha Graham. In 1926, Horst joined Graham's company as her music director, accompanist, and primary composer, remaining in these roles until 1948 and creating scores for landmark works such as Primitive Mysteries (1931), Frontier (1935), and Horizons (1936). His compositions emphasized matching choreography to pre-existing musical structures and incorporated contemporary musical elements, helping to define the musical foundation of modern dance. Beyond his work with Graham, Horst taught dance composition and music for dancers at major institutions including the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater from 1928 until his death, Bennington College, Connecticut College, and the Juilliard School from 1951 onward. He co-founded the Dance Observer journal in 1934, serving as editor and chief critic, and authored influential books including Pre-Classic Dance Forms (1937) and Modern Dance Forms (1961), which introduced students to historical dance structures and modern compositional techniques. Horst's teaching and writings influenced generations of choreographers, establishing him as a central figure in the development of American modern dance until his death in New York City in 1964.

Early Life

Early Years and Musical Training

Louis Horst was born on January 12, 1884, in Kansas City, Missouri, to German immigrant parents Conrad Horst and Carolina Nickell. His father was a musician, exposing him to music from an early age. Horst began studying piano early in life and was also trained as a violinist. After the family relocated to San Francisco, Horst engaged in rigorous musical training on piano and violin. As a teenager, he started his professional career playing piano for vaudeville shows and silent films. From 1902 to 1915, he worked primarily in California as a piano accompanist for theater companies and silent films, supplementing this with performances as a pit musician in casinos, brothels, resort hotels, and other venues across the east and west coasts. He also accompanied stock theater companies and Broadway rehearsals during this period. These varied experiences as a working musician built his versatility in accompaniment before his transition to dance.

Denishawn Period

Musical Director for Denishawn

Louis Horst served as the musical director and accompanist for the Denishawn Dance Company, founded by Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn, from 1916 to 1925. He initially joined the company in San Francisco for what was intended as a brief two-week emergency position providing piano accompaniment during a tour, but his talent led to a decade-long tenure in which he became a central musical figure. As musical director, Horst composed original scores for several Denishawn works, including the music for Ted Shawn's Japanese Spear Dance, which debuted in 1919 (though some sources note a 1921 premiere). This composition exemplified his ability to create atmospheric and culturally evocative music that supported the company's exotic and theatrical style. Horst also contributed to the overall musical landscape of Denishawn performances by arranging and playing for a wide range of the company's repertoire during its tours and seasons. Horst departed Denishawn in 1925 to pursue further study in musical composition in Vienna.

Collaboration with Martha Graham

Musical Director and Composer

Louis Horst served as musical director and composer for Martha Graham from her New York solo debut in 1926 until 1948, a period during which he provided essential musical accompaniment and original scores that shaped her emerging modern dance repertory. He had first accompanied Graham in 1916 when she took her initial dance lesson with Ruth St. Denis in Los Angeles, establishing an early connection that deepened into a profound professional and personal partnership upon her independent career launch. As Graham's closest artistic ally and confidante for more than two decades, Horst functioned as both accompanist and mentor, offering unwavering faith and understanding that she later described as creating "a landscape to move in." Graham acknowledged his indispensable role, stating that "without him I could not have achieved anything I have done." Their collaboration extended beyond performance support to include his composition of original scores tailored to her choreography, as well as his guidance in integrating music with movement during the formative years of her company. Horst composed the music for several of Graham's landmark early works, notably the score for Primitive Mysteries (1931), which established a model for subsequent modern dance compositions through its integration of music and choreography. He also created scores for Celebration (1934), Frontier (1935), El Penitente (1940), and other early group pieces, contributing to the distinctive sound and structure of her repertory during this era. His approach often involved matching choreography to pre-existing or contemporary musical forms, helping to define the musical language of American modern dance in its pioneering phase.

Teaching Career

Positions and Methods

Horst pursued an extensive teaching career dedicated to dance composition, serving on the faculties of several key institutions in American modern dance education. He taught the art of choreography at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater from 1928 to 1964. He was on the staff at Bennington College from 1934 to 1945, where he taught dance composition and music for dancers during the summer sessions. From 1948 to 1963, he taught at Connecticut College, and he joined the Juilliard School in 1951, remaining on the faculty there until 1964. Horst also held positions at Mills College, Barnard College, Sarah Lawrence College, and Columbia University. His pedagogical methods centered on instilling structural principles in modern dance choreography. Horst developed an approach that used pre-classic dance forms from the 16th and 17th centuries to provide a foundation for composition. He particularly emphasized the pavane, a slow dance in 2/4 meter that originated in the mid-16th century as an opening ceremonial dance and display of elegance, and the galliard, a lively court dance in 3/4 meter. These forms served as models to help students organize movement with clarity and formal coherence. He was known for his blunt classroom instruction, including the oft-repeated advice: “When in doubt, turn.” Horst collaborated with and was assisted by talented students in his teaching. Anna Sokolow studied choreography with him at the Neighborhood Playhouse in the early 1930s, quickly became his assistant, and was regarded as his most outstanding composition student. Through his rigorous courses, Horst influenced multiple generations of choreographers in the modern dance field.

Publications and Editorial Work

Books and Dance Observer

Louis Horst founded and edited the Dance Observer from 1934 to 1964, establishing it as a key periodical devoted to chronicling the emergence and development of American modern dance. During a period when mainstream dance publications largely overlooked modern dance, the journal provided critical reviews, articles, and commentary on performances, serving as an essential platform for the field and a voice for its practitioners. Horst authored Pre-Classic Dance Forms, published in 1937, which analyzed historical dance structures from the Renaissance and Baroque eras as precursors to modern choreographic principles. In 1961, he co-authored Modern Dance Forms in Relation to the Other Modern Arts with Carroll Russell, examining the underlying structural elements of modern dance and their correspondences with innovations in contemporary visual arts, music, and literature. Horst's writings consistently emphasized the necessity of formal structure in choreography and the interconnections between dance and other modern arts. These ideas grew out of his teaching experience.

Later Years and Legacy

Final Activities and Recognition

In his later years following the end of his long collaboration with Martha Graham in 1948, Louis Horst remained deeply engaged in education, continuing to teach dance composition at the Juilliard School of Music, the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater, and the Martha Graham School of Dance until 1964. He was active in these roles until the week before his death and remained editor of the Dance Observer journal. In 1964 he received the Heritage Award from the National Dance Association, honoring his extensive contributions to the field. Louis Horst died on January 23, 1964, in New York City at the age of 80. He is remembered as a pioneer and chief architect of American modern dance, whose work helped define choreography principles, mentored major figures in the field, and shaped generations of dancers and choreographers through dedicated teaching.
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