Geoffrey Winters Explained

Geoffrey Walter Horace Winters, (born 17 October 1928) is a British composer and music educationalist. His works span from large-scale orchestral and concertante pieces (including two symphonies and the Violin Concerto), to chamber and instrumental works and pedagogical music for children.[1]

Early life and career

Born in Chingford, Winters is the son of carver and letter designer Leo Hill Winters, and he served a brief apprenticeship with his father from the age of 17. (His brother, Eric Winters, became a sculptor). However, as a child he showed promise as a pianist, and in 1945 he was accepted as a student at the Royal Academy of Music, where his tutors were Felix Swinstead (piano) and Priaulx Rainier (composition), and later Alan Bush. A trio of early works - the Wind Quartet, Op. 1, the symphonic, three movement Yorkshire Suite, Op. 2, and the Toccata for piano, Op. 3, give an indication of his future range as a composer. In 1952 Winters took up the position of music teacher at Larkswood School, Chingford. He continued teaching and lecturing, including spells at Gipsy Hill College and Hertfordshire College of Higher Education, until his retirement in 1977.[1]

During the 1950s Winters became interested in 12 tone music. The Piano Sonata, Op. 12, first performed by Eric Parkin at the Macnaghten Concerts in 1958 - came out of this period.[2] But within a few years - from the Variations for Two Pianos, Op. 19 - he had returned to a more tonal, neo-classical style, with Prokofiev and Shostakovich among the influences. The First Symphony, composed in 1961, was performed by Owain Arwel Hughes with the New Philharmonia Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall on 4 October 1973.[3] It's a very concise work, lasting just 16 minutes. The more expansive Second Symphony was first performed by the Guildhall School of Music Graduate Orchestra in 1978.[4]

Freelance composer

While in Chingford Winters lived at 4, Victoria Road. After retirement from teaching he moved to the village of Semer, near Hadleigh in Suffolk, to concentrate on freelance composition.[5] He has been a regular contributor to local and school music-making there. The Violin Concerto, composed in 1974, received its premiere a decade later in Lavenham Church, on 16 September 1984, performed by Jessie Ridley with the Lavenham Sinfonia Orchestra, conducted by Frederick Marshall.[6] Other works composed in Suffolk include the Studies from a Rainbow for piano, Op. 70, (which also enjoyed success in the US), the Tributaries for solo harp, Op. 79, Mutations for two trumpets (1988) and Summer Songs for chorus, Op. 90.[1]

Winters has also composed many pieces and written course work for educational use, published by Longman, such as Sounds and Music, Books 1-3 and (from the mid-1980s) Listen, Compose, Perform, produced to support the new GCSE Music examination. He is the author of Musical Instruments in the Classroom (1972). He wrote about educational music for Tempo magazine in the 1960s and 1970s.[7]

There has been some revival of interest in his music. The Variations for Two Pianos Op. 19 was given its world premiere by Claire and Antoinette Cann in Cambridge on 2 October 2008, nearly fifty years after it had been composed.[1]

Personal life

Winters met his wife, the pianist Christine Ive, at the Royal Academy, and they married in 1947. There are two sons (Alan, an economist, and John) and a daughter Anne.[8] His wife died in 2006. His memoirs were published in 2008.[4]

Selected works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Martin Entwistle. The Life and Works of Geoffrey Winters (2009), published at MusicWeb International
  2. 'Miscellany', in The Musical Times, Vol. 99, No. 1385 (July 1958), p.391
  3. https://www.jstor.org/stable/943034 'Back Matter', Tempo, No. 106, September 1973
  4. A Life of Loves, Geoffrey Winters Memoirs, Lavenham Press 2008
  5. 'A Man With Music at his Fingertips', Suffolk and Essex Free Press, 10 January 1980, p.20
  6. 'Marshall to conduct world premiere at Lavenham Church', in Suffolk and Essex Free Press, 6 September, 1984
  7. For instance, 'Experimental Music in Schools', in Tempo, 1970 (92), p.43-46
  8. Who's Who in Music, Fifth Edition, (1969), p. 344
  9. Winner of the Harry Danks Prize
  10. Winner of the Clements Prize in 1956
  11. First performance at the Wigmore Hall, 15 October 1978 with John White (viola) and Michal Frayhan (piano). The Times, Issue 60426, 7 October 1978, p. 8