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Jonathan Kramer, 61; Theorist, Composer Blended Musical Styles

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Jonathan Kramer, 61, a musical theorist and composer with a flair for mixing styles, died June 3 of leukemia at a New York City hospital.

Kramer, who taught composition and theory at Columbia University, was known for his provocative musical writings, particularly a 1988 book on time perception called “The Time of Music.”

His compositions were noted for their eclecticism. In a 2003 review of “Notta Sonata” in the Village Voice, Kyle Gann praised Kramer’s ability to combine techniques that might clash in another composer’s hands.

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Kramer was a native of Hartford, Conn., who earned a bachelor’s degree from Harvard and a master’s and doctorate from UC Berkeley. He taught at Berkeley, Oberlin, Yale and the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music before joining the Columbia faculty in 1988. He was also program annotator for the Cincinnati Symphony and other orchestras for many years.

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