Bloch was born in
Geneva on July 24, 1880, to
Jewish parents. He began playing the violin at age 9, and began composing soon after. He studied music at the conservatory in
Brussels, where his teachers included the celebrated Belgian violinist
Eugène Ysaÿe. He then traveled around Europe, moving to
Germany (where he studied composition from 1900 to 1901 with
Iwan Knorr at the
Hoch Conservatory in
Frankfurt), on to
Paris in 1903 and back to Geneva before settling in the
United States in 1916, taking US citizenship in 1924. He held several teaching appointments in the US, where his pupils included
George Antheil,
Frederick Jacobi,
Quincy Porter,
Bernard Rogers, and
Roger Sessions. In 1917, Bloch became the first teacher of composition at the
Mannes School of Music, a post he held for three years. In December 1920 he was appointed the first musical director of the newly formed
Cleveland Institute of Music, a post he held until 1925. In 1919 the San Francisco Symphony gave two of the earliest performances of his
Schelomo, receiving high praise from multiple critics.
Ada Clement and Lillian Hodghead of the newly named
San Francisco Conservatory of Music visited Bloch in Cleveland in 1923 and invited him to teach at the Conservatory the following summer. He had previously been encouraged to come to San Francisco by
Alfred Hertz and
Temple Emanu El cantor Reuben Rinder. In 1925 Bloch resigned from the Cleveland Institute, where he had not been happy, and relocated to San Francisco. He was named the director of the Conservatory and remained in that position until 1930, when the school was running low on funds. He returned to Switzerland, where he composed his "Avodath Hakodesh" ("Sacred Service") before returning to the US in 1939. Bloch joined the music faculty at Berkeley in 1941 and taught there one semester each year until his retirement in 1952. He and his wife lived primarily in the small coastal community of
Agate Beach, Oregon. In 1947 he was among the founders of the
Music Academy of the West summer conservatory. In 1952 he was named a professor emeritus at the University of California, even though he had not been a full-time faculty member. He composed "In Memoriam" that year after the death of Ada Clement. In keeping with a special tradition, his daughter, Lucienne Bloch, and her husband, Steve Dimitroff, prepared several
death masks of Ernest Bloch. This once-common practice was usually undertaken to create a memento or portrait of the deceased, but it is unusual for an immediate family member to make the death mask. The Center for Creative Photography and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music each have a copy of Bloch's death mask. ==Music==