Piano Quintets

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Quintets


First name: Samuel
Last name: Coleridge-Taylor
Dates: 1875-1912
Category: Quintet
Nationality: British
Opus name: Quintet in G minor for piano and strings
Publisher: Accolade
Peculiarities: Soundpost; Accolade http://www.accolade.de/index.php?action=showresult&page=2&db=Datenbank Accolade Musikverlag; http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/dlDisplay.do?vid=OXVU1&docId=oxfaleph015475391
Information: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (15 August 1875 – 1 September 1912) was an English composer who achieved such success that he was once called the "African Mahler". Coleridge-Taylor was born in 1875 in Holborn, London, to Alice Hare Martin, an English woman, and Dr Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, a Sierra Leonean Creole. Coleridge-Taylor was brought up in Croydon by Martin and her father Benjamin Holmans. Martin\'s brother was a professional musician. Taylor studied the violin at the Royal College of Music and composition under Charles Villiers Stanford. He also taught, he was appointed a professor at the Crystal Palace School of Music, and conducted the orchestra at the Croydon Conservatoire. In 1899 Taylor married a fellow student at the RCM, Jessie Walmisley, despite her parents\' objection to his mixed-race parentage. She left the college in 1893. They had a son Hiawatha (1900–1980) and a daughter Avril, born Gwendolyn (1903–1998), who became a conductor-composer in her own right. By 1896, Coleridge-Taylor had earned a reputation as a composer. He was later helped by Edward Elgar, who recommended him to the Three Choirs Festival. There his Ballade in A minor was premièred. His early work was also guided by the influential music editor and critic August Jaeger of music publisher Novello; he told Elgar that Taylor was \"a genius.\" On the strength of Hiawatha\'s Wedding Feast, which was conducted by Stanford at its 1898 premiere and proved to be colossally successful, Coleridge-Taylor made three tours of the United States, which increased his interest in his racial heritage, and at one stage seriously considered migrating there. In 1904, he was received by President Theodore Roosevelt at the White House, a very unusual honour in those days for a man of African descent and appearance. He sought to do for African music what Johannes Brahms did for Hungarian music and Antonín Dvo?ák for Bohemian music. Coleridge-Taylor was sometimes seen as shy, but effective in communicating when conducting. Composers were not handsomely paid for their efforts and often sold the rights to works outright, thereby missing out on royalties that went to publishers who always risked their investments. Hiawatha\'s Wedding Feast sold hundreds of thousands of copies, but Coleridge-Taylor had no conception of how successful it would become, as he had sold it outright for the sum of 15 guineas. After his death in 1912, the fact that he and his family received no royalties from what was one of the most successful and popular works written in the previous 50 years led in part to the formation of the Performing Rights Society. He did, however, receive royalties for other compositions. He was much sought after for adjudicating at festivals. Coleridge-Taylor was 37 when he died of pneumonia a few days after collapsing at West Croydon railway station. He was buried in Bandon Hill Cemetery, Wallington, Surrey (today in the London Borough of Sutton). The inscription on the fine carved headstone includes a quotation from the composition Hiawatha, in words written by his close friend and poet Alfred Noyes: King George V granted his widow a pension of £100, evidence of the high regard in which the composer was held. A memorial concert was held later in 1912 at the Royal Albert Hall and garnered £300. Coleridge-Taylor\'s work was later championed by Malcolm Sargent, who between 1928 and 1939 conducted ten seasons of a costumed ballet version of The Song of Hiawatha at the Royal Albert Hall with the Royal Choral Society (600 to 800 singers) and 200 dancers.