Tag: International Women’s Day

  • Women Composers on Sweetness and Light Radio

    Women Composers on Sweetness and Light Radio

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” for International Women’s Day, we’ll have lighter works by six female composers: (pictured, clockwise from upper left) Peggy Stuart Coolidge, Elisabeth Lutyens, Teresa Carreño, Cécile Chaminade, Katherine Gladney Wells, and Doreen Carwithen – though not necessarily in that order. One was a crotchety avant-gardist who kept food on the table by writing music for sci-fi/horror films. One played for Abraham Lincoln at the White House. One was an heiress of the Seven-Up fortune. I’ll fill you in, as concisely as possible, on “Sweetness and Light.” Cherchez les femmes, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Ethel Smyth: Suffragette Composer

    Ethel Smyth: Suffragette Composer

    It’s International Women’s Day. The global holiday, established to celebrate the cultural, political, and socioeconomic achievements of women, has its roots in the universal female suffrage movement.

    Perhaps the composer most frequently associated with the movement was Dame Ethel Smyth (1858-1944). I am reminded of Sir Thomas Beecham’s recollection of Smyth, already in her 50s, conducting an impromptu chorus of women, gathered in a prison courtyard for exercise, by waving her toothbrush between the bars of her cell.

    Smyth was incarcerated for two months for smashing out the windows of politicians who opposed the female vote. Her “March of the Women” became the anthem of the women’s suffrage movement in England.

    But Smyth was more than just a political firebrand. Unusual for a woman of the time, she was also a composer of some renown. Her opera, “Der Wald” (“The Forest”), would be the only work by a female composer produced at New York’s Metropolitan Opera for over a century. That was in 1903.

    Anticipating the assertion that well-behaved women seldom make history, Smyth was driven to act up from the start. And who could blame her?

    She managed to outmaneuver her father, a major general in the Royal Artillery. When he objected to her pursuit of a career in music, she took the initiative to study privately. An all-out war of wills ensued. Ethel’s stomach proved stronger than her dad’s. In the end, he allowed her to attend the Leipzig Conservatory.

    When the conservatory didn’t measure up to Smyth’s expectations, she sought out Heinrich von Herzogenberg for further polish. Her travels also brought her into contact with Dvořák, Grieg, Tchaikovsky, Clara Schumann, and Herzogenberg’s friend, Johannes Brahms.

    It was at a private performance of Brahms’ Piano Quintet, with the composer in attendance, that Smyth’s St. Bernard mix, Marco, burst through a door, toppling the cellist’s music stand, which, much to everyone’s relief, the notoriously prickly Brahms found hilarious. Later, when Tchaikovsky wrote to Smyth, he never failed to ask after Marco.

    Her first piece to be played in public was her String Quintet in E major (1884).

    Her first orchestral work, the Serenade in D (1889) – written with the encouragement of Tchaikovsky – is better than just about anything composed by Sir Hubert Parry (whose music I happen to enjoy) and much more compelling than the symphonies of Sir Charles Villiers Stanford. Smyth’s serenade is a symphony in all but name, with some pretty good tunes.

    Even so, it was only in 1893, after her Mass in D was favorably received by George Bernard Shaw – he declared the Mass “magnificent” – that her father finally warmed to her chosen career.

    While she met with considerable success in her lifetime, as a woman, she was still often marginalized and had to push for almost everything. In her mid-50s, she began to lose her hearing. Undeterred, she commenced a second career as a writer, producing ten books. She was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1922.

    The next time a music director is looking for an alternative to Elgar (himself not exactly overplayed in this U.S.), he or she could do worse than to consider Ethel Smyth. The overture to “The Wreckers” (1906) would make for a dynamic curtain-raiser.

    Beecham considered “The Wreckers” to be Smyth’s masterpiece. In 2015, the opera was presented at Bard College, in a series of performances under the direction of Leon Botstein. Botstein led a concert performance of the piece at Carnegie Hall in 2007. Happily, the Bard production was filmed.

    Smyth herself conducts the overture here, in a 1930 recording.

    Finally, here’s “March of the Women” (1910), sung with more polish than it would have been in a prison courtyard.


    PHOTO: Smyth rocks the boat

  • Ruth Gipps Centenary Symposium International Women’s Day

    Ruth Gipps Centenary Symposium International Women’s Day

    Somehow, I missed the centenary of the birth of Ruth Gipps (1921-1999), pupil of Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose music I programmed with pleasure while at WWFM. Oh, how I look forward to the day I’ll be allowed back into a studio to put together new shows pertaining to landmark anniversaries. So many of these have slipped by over the Year of Covid.

    Had I a live air shift on February 20, no doubt I would have realized it was Gipps’ 100th birthday. Be that as it may, there is another way to honor her. On Monday – International Women’s Day – scholars and musicians will convene for an online symposium centering on Gipps’ life and works. The hour-long stream will begin at 12:45 pm EST. Registration is required. A donation is suggested. You’ll find more information here:

    https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ruth-gipps-a-centennial-symposium-tickets-141989499415?utm-medium=discovery&utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&aff=esfb&utm-source=fb&utm-term=listing&fbclid=IwAR0H5SFWHlxmNSJKOZK5Xah0Wd7PPr75AHFyZv5kk2r2f3gsenUi4CBzo14

    At 26, Gipps became the youngest English woman ever to receive a doctorate in music. Her mastery of both the oboe and piano suggested a promising future as soloist in virtuoso concert works. However, a shoulder injury, suffered in her early 30s, caused her to shift her focus primarily to composition. Along the way, she also founded two orchestras and directed a choral ensemble.

    Her tone poem, “Knight in Armour,” was performed at the Last Night of the Proms in 1942. Despite early success, she encountered resistance in a field dominated by men. No doubt this contributed to her steely resolve. She was tenacious. Some also found her off-putting.

    In all, she left five symphonies, a respectable number of concertos and concertante works, chamber and instrumental music, and choral pieces. Hopefully, we’ll get to hear more of them soon.

    Register for the symposium. Then take 24 minutes to enjoy Gipps’ multifaceted Symphony No. 2 (1945):

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