Steve Tittle
Steve Tittle (born May 20, 1935 in Willard, Ohio) is a Canadian composer and music educator.
Biography
Steve Tittle studied composition at Kent State University with Harold Miles, John White and Fred Coulter, and at University of Wisconsin–Madison with Hilmar Luckhardt, Robert Crane and Burt Levy. He was a school music teacher 1962-65 in Ohio, and his early performance experience was as a trumpet player in US Navy bands (including the USS Iowa BB-61 ship's band) and in ensembles in Ohio and Wisconsin.
In 1970 he joined the faculty of Dalhousie University, where until 1990 he was associate professor of composition and theory. Founder and co-designer of the Dalhousie Experimental-Electronic Sound Studio, he also inaugurated an improvisation ensemble, Murphy's Law ensemble, which has evolved into the new music ensemble. He was a 1971 charter member, secretary and artistic director (1981-6) of NOVA MUSIC("inNOVAtions in MUSIC", an ensemble which preceded Murphy's Law by two years) and in 1989, together with several other Halifax professional musicians, created its successor, Upstream. In these enterprises, and in numerous solo and ensemble appearances in the city, as conductor, organizer, trumpet and flügelhorn player, and mallet percussionist, he was a catalyst for new music performance life in the Maritimes, in particular introducing the potential of synthesizer and tape composition to the region. Tittle has performed with other noted composers and musicians, including Philip Glass and Allen Ginsberg. He is a charter member of the Atlantic Canadian Composers Association and producer of its chamber music recording. Tittle is also a member of SOCAN and the Canadian League of Composers. Now retired from teaching, he lives in Nelson, B.C.