1950 in British music explained
This is a summary of 1950 in music in the United Kingdom.
Events
- 9 March – UK premiere of Britten's Spring Symphony at the Royal Albert Hall, London, conducted by Eduard van Beinum.[1]
- September – Herbert Howells' Hymnus Paradisi receives its première at the Three Choirs Festival; the work had been written in 1938, shortly after the death of the composer's young son.[2]
- 24 September – US musicologist Alan Lomax leaves for a tour of Europe, in the course of which he collects folk music from all over the UK, broadcasts on the BBC, and works with folklorists Peter Douglas Kennedy, Hamish Henderson, and Séamus Ennis,[3] recording among others, Margaret Barry and the songs in Irish of Elizabeth Cronin; Scots ballad singer Jeannie Robertson; and Harry Cox of Norfolk.[4]
- Jazz musician John Dankworth forms the Dankworth Seven, with Jimmy Deuchar (trumpet), Eddie Harvey (trombone), Don Rendell (tenor sax), Bill Le Sage (piano), Eric Dawson (bass) and Tony Kinsey (drums).
- Gracie Fields' radio show transfers from the BBC to Radio Luxembourg, where it is sponsored by Wisk soap powder.
- Pianist Moura Lympany divorces her husband Colin Defries.[5]
- Harrison & Harrison begin work on a 7,866 pipe organ destined for the Royal Festival Hall, working to a design by Ralph Downes.[6]
Classical music: new works
Opera
Film and Incidental music
Musical theatre
Musical films
Births
- 21 January – Billy Ocean (real name Leslie Charles), singer and songwriter
- 12 February – Steve Hackett, English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (Genesis, Quiet World, and GTR)
- 24 February – Howard Griffiths, conductor
- 13 February — Peter Gabriel, singer and songwriter
- 19 February — Andy Powell, musician (Wishbone Ash)
- 9 March – Howard Shelley, pianist and conductor
- 10 March – Stephen Oliver, opera composer (died 1992 in British music)
- 20 April – Ray Hodson (Line Dance Instructor – UK)
- 22 April — Peter Frampton, singer and songwriter
- 3 May — Mary Hopkin, singer
- 13 May – Danny Kirwan, guitarist, singer and songwriter (Fleetwood Mac)
- 22 May — Bernie Taupin, songwriter
- 1 June – Tom Robinson, singer and songwriter
- 5 June – Barbara Gaskin, singer
- 16 June – Andrew Ball, pianist
- 23 June – Nicholas Cleobury, conductor
- 27 August – Neil Murray, bass guitarist
- 14 September – Paul Kossoff, guitarist (Free) (died 1976)[12]
- 26 September – Simon Brint, comedy musician and composer (died 2011)
- 18 November – Graham Parker, singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Rumour)
Deaths
- 14 February – Robert Graham Manson, violinist, pianist and composer, 66[13]
- 26 February – Sir Harry Lauder, singer, comedian and songwriter, 79[14]
- 19 April – Gerald Tyrwhitt-Wilson, 14th Baron Berners, composer, writer and artist, 66
- 13 May – Bruno Siegfried Huhn, organist and composer, 78
- 6 June – Alfred Edward Moffat, composer and collector of music, 86[15]
- 28 June – H. Balfour Gardiner, musician, composer and teacher, 72 (stroke)[16]
- 14 October – Florence Aylward, composer, 88
- 26 October – Evelyn Suart, pianist, 69
- 19 November – Thomas Wood, composer, 57 (heart attack)[17]
- 23 November – Percival Mackey, pianist, composer and bandleader, 56[18]
- 1 December – Ernest John Moeran, composer, 55 (cerebral haemorrhage)[19]
- 23 December – John Rippiner Heath, violinist and composer, 63
- 25 December – Edward d'Evry, organist and composer, 81
- "date unknown" – Kate Carney, singer and comedian, 80
See also
Notes and References
- Mitchell, Donald (ed) (2004). Letters From A Life: Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten, Vol. 3 1946–51. London: Faber and Faber. . p. 533
- Hymnus Paradisi . . 91 . 1291 . 352–353 . 10.2307/935574 . 935574 . September 1950.
- A recent BBC radio program (May 12, 2012), The First LP in Ireland commemorates Ennis and Lomax's Irish collaboration.
- John Szwed, Alan Lomax: The Man Who Recorded the World (New York: Viking, 2010), p. 251.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=BCAKAQAAMAAJ&q=colin+defries+businessman+dies Notable Twentieth Century Pianists by John Gillespie and Anna Gillespie c.1995 p.570
- Web site: Webb . Stanley . Patrick Russill . Ralph Downes . Grove Music Online (subscription access) . . 2007-04-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090106012046/http://grovemusic.com/ . 2009-01-06 . dead.
- http://opera.stanford.edu/composers/C.html Operaglass Opera Composers: C
- http://www.naxos.com/person/Lawrance_Collingwood/30438.htm Naxos bio
- The Musical Times, 91 (1294): pp. 481–482
- http://www.musicweb-international.com/gundry/operas.htm Inglis Gundry, "Some of the operas of Inglis Gundry"
- http://opera.stanford.edu/composers/L.html Operaglass Opera Composers: L
- Book: The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. Palgrave Macmillan. 2011. 9781403939104. 535.
- Obituary: Toronto Star, Thursday, February 16, 1950, page 28:
- Russell, Dave. "Lauder, Sir Henry (1870–1950)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, online edition, January 2011, accessed 27 April 2014
- Who was Who. (1941) London: Adam & Charles Black, 2nd ed. 1967, Vol. IV, 1941–1950, pp. 803–804.
- Book: Stephen Lloyd. H. Balfour Gardiner. Cambridge University Press. 2005. 9780521619226. 211.
- http://www.musicweb-international.com/garlands/woodT.htm Thomas Wood, by Philip Scowcroft
- Web site: MACKEY, Percival. https://web.archive.org/web/20090113202226/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/individual/287010. dead. 13 January 2009. Screenonline. British Film Institute. 23 April 2012.
- "Moeran's Unfinished Symphony", Rhoderick McNeill, The Musical Times, Vol. 121, No. 1654 (Dec 1980), pp. 771-773+775-777