Background
Stires was born in Alexandria, Virginia, to a family of musicians.
Stires was born in Alexandria, Virginia, to a family of musicians.
He was educated first at the Episcopal High School in Alexandria and then at Harvard and Dartmouth, finally graduating from Trinity College in Connecticut.
His jazz-based classical music has been performed both throughout the United States and abroad. After service as a United States. Navy pilot in World World War II, Stires worked as a television advertising executive, first for National Broadcasting Company in California and then later for Columbia Broadcasting System in Boston. Although he had begun improvising jazz on the piano while still a small child, he did not devote himself to music as a career until 1962 when he studied composition with Nicolas Slonimsky and Francis Judd Cooke.
Ernie has three children, Sarah Stires, Ernie Stires and Elizabeth Stires, all of whom share his love of music
He also worked as a volunteer teaching basic music theory and composition to young musicians in his community. Stires" electric guitar concerto, Chat Rooms, was written expressly for Anastasio who premiered it in 2001 with the Vermont Youth Orchestra under Troy Peters, an event covered on national television
In 2004, his violin concerto was premiered at Carnegie Hall in New York in a performance by the Vermont Youth Orchestra with Ruotao Mao, first violinist of the Amabile Quartet, as the soloist. Ernie Stires died in Vermont on May 4, 2008 at the age of 82.
He moved to Vermont in 1967 where he was an administrator for the Vermont Symphony Orchestra and the Bennington Composers Conference and one of the founding members of the Consortium of Vermont Composers. Amongst his students were Trey Anastasio, a member of the band Phish, film composer/guitarist John Kasiewicz, and Jamie Masefield of the Jazz Mandolin Project.