About
Dr. Ruth Watson
Henderson
1998 West Virginia All-State
Children's Chorus Accompanist



A native of Toronto, Ruth Watson Henderson
began to play piano at age two and won her
first competition when she was four. While
studying with Alberto Guerrero at The Royal
Conservatory of Music, she completed her
ARCT and LRCT, assisted by numerous
Conservatory and Kiwanis festival scholarships.
Two years of studies at the Mannes College
of Music in New York followed, and then,
after returning to Toronto in 1954, she
embarked on a career as a concert pianist,
appearing regularly on the CBC and as a
soloist with many Canadian orchestras.
In 1968, she became accompanist for the
Festival Singers Of Canada, and toured
with them frequently in Canada and
abroad. During this period, she began
writing choral music. Her "Missa Brevis",
written in 1974 and dedicated to Elmer
Iseler and the Festival Singers, is widely
performed internationally by many choirs.

Ms. Henderson has written commissioned
works for many outstanding choirs in
Canada and the United States. In recent
years, her association with Jean Ashworth
Bartle and the Toronto Children's Chorus
as their regular accompanist, has led to
many compositions for young people. She
wrote the musical score for "Clear Sky and
Thunder", a music-drama about Inuit children,
which was premiered by the Toronto
Children's Chorus in October, 1984, and later
performed by them at Expo '86 in Vancouver.
Another commissioned work for the Toronto
Children's Chorus is a Christmas fable entitled
"The Last Straw". It was premiered in
December 1990, with tenor, Ben Heppner, in the
solo role and is recorded on the CD "Along
the Road To Bethlehem." Her composition,
"Voices of Earth", for three choirs, two pianos
and percussion, received the Association of
Canadian Choral Conductors' National
Choral Award for the outstanding choral
composition for 1990-1992. Although Ms.
Henderson is best known for her choral
compositions, she has written pieces for piano
and for organ. Her "Chromatic Partita for
Organ" received an award in the International
Competition for Women Composers in
Mannheim, Germany, in 1989.


Ruth Watson Henderson continues to
maintain an active career as a pianist,
organist and teacher as well as a
composer. In 1996, she appeared with the
Toronto Symphony Orchestra in the
"Carnival of the Animals" by Saint
Saens. Currently, she is the accompanist
for the Toronto Children's Chorus,
The Oriana Singers and the 1997
Ontario Youth Choir.
 
 





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