Peggy Glanville-Hicks (1912-1990)
Peggy Winsome Glanville-Hicks (1912-1990), composer and music critic, was born on 29 December 1912 at St. Kilda, Melbourne, eldest child of Ernest Glanville Hicks, journalist, and Myrtle, née Barley. Peggy began composing at the age of 7, encouraged by her mother, an amateur singer and artist, and her father, author of The Turn of the Tide and Other Poems (1932). Educated at Milverton, Methodist Ladies’ College and Clyde School, Woodend, she studied composition with Fritz Hart at the Albert Street Conservatorium, in Melbourne. In 1932, following a farewell concert in the Melbourne Town Hall, she left Australia and, over four years at the Royal College of Music, London, supported by scholarships, studied composition (with Ralph Vaughan Williams), conducting (with Sir Malcolm Sargent) and piano (with Arthur Benjamin). Her early works included the opera Caedmon (c.1936), music for film, and the Spanish Suite (c.1935). The Octavia traveling scholarship enabled her to study with Egon Wellesz in Vienna (1936) and Nadia Boulanger in Paris (1937).
After a brief visit to Melbourne in 1938, Glanville-Hicks (who later hyphenated her name) returned to London for the performance of two movements from her suite for female voices, oboe and strings (Choral Suite, 1937) at a concert of the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM). She was the first Australian whose work was performed for the ISCM, and one of the youngest composers represented. Several of her songs were published that year by Louise Dyer’s Editions de l’Oiseau-Lyre in Paris. Dyer’s recording company released the Choral Suite in 1940. On 9 November 1938, at the Kensington register office, Glanville-Hicks married Stanley Richard Henry Bate, an English composer. In 1940 a British Council grant allowed them to travel to Australia; in 1941 they sailed for the United States of America and settled in New York. In 1943-44 she was a member of the League of Composers Committee, which gave concerts of modern music in New York’s Central Park, and she collaborated with Carleton Sprague Smith in founding the International Music Fund, which operated through UNESCO to assist European artists in postwar re-establishment.
When in 1947 Glanville-Hicks reviewed an ISCM festival in Copenhagen for the Musical Courier, she embarked on a career as a respected critic and commentator on modern music. The composer Virgil Thomson, chief critic of the New York Herald Tribune, employed her as a correspondent; the first of five hundred reviews appeared on 27 October 1947. Through the 1940s she also contributed major pieces to Music & Letters (on Paul Bowles), Musical America (on John Cage) and Musical Quarterly (on Thomson). In 1948 she travelled to the ISCM festival in Amsterdam to hear a performance of her Concertino da Camera and in 1950 she embarked on a lecture tour of universities in America’s mid-west. During this period she was engaged in notable activities for the propagation of new music and the encouragement of young composers.
Peggy became an American citizen in 1949, and in the same year obtained a divorce from Bate. On 4 January 1952 she married the journalist Rafael da Costa in a civil ceremony in New York; they divorced the following year.
The 1950s brought Glanville-Hicks to prominence as a composer of 'exotic’ music and as a catalyst for the performance of new music. Her most performed work, a Sonata for Harp, was premièred by Nicanor Zabaleta in Caracas (1951) and New York (1952); in 1953 her Letters from Morocco (1952), conducted by Leopold Stokowski, was featured in one of the concerts she initiated as a member of the junior council of the Museum of Modern Art. Among the works that followed were the Etruscan Concerto (1954, written for the pianist Carlo Bussotti), Concertino Antico (1955, for the harpist Edna Phillips), Concerto Romantico (1956, for the violist Walter Trampler) and The Glittering Gate (1956), based on a story by Lord Dunsany.
In 1951-60 (excepting the 1955-56 season) Glanville-Hicks was director of the New York Composers’ Forum, an enterprise overseen by the most eminent New York composers. She contributed 106 articles on American and Danish composers to the fifth edition of Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1954). Until 1958 she worked for the New York Herald Tribune - from October to April each year - and spent her summers composing and attending festivals in Europe, Jamaica and Australia.
In 1953 Glanville-Hicks won an American Academy of Arts and Letters award, and was offered a commission by the Louisville Philharmonic Society, through the Rockefeller Foundation, to write an opera—the first such offer made to a woman, as per her claim. This opera, The Transposed Heads, based on a story by Thomas Mann, had its première in Louisville (1954) and was staged in New York in 1958. It demonstrated her interest in Indian music and increasing desire to promote a fusion of Eastern and Western compositional methods. In 1956-58 she was supported by Guggenheim Foundation awards for composition.
After a major surgery in 1956, and again in 1959, Glanville-Hicks moved to Athens. In 1960 she was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation grant to 'study the relationships among musical forms in the West, the Middle East and Asia’; furthermore, a Fulbright award (1961) was devoted to research into the traditional music of Greece. Her opera Nausicaa (1960)—with a libretto drawn from Robert Graves’s novel Homer’s Daughter and set in the ninth century BC—was performed at the Athens Festival in August 1961. It was recorded and broadcasted in the USA, reviewed in major publications in several languages, and praised for its lyricism and ingenious orchestration.
Commissioned by the San Francisco Opera (and supported by a Ford Foundation grant), Glanville-Hicks’s next opera, Sappho (1963), derived from a play by Lawrence Durrell, was written to a punishing schedule; it was finally not produced and the composer remained unhappy with it. Her major works of the 1960s were ballets, conceived in conjunction with the New York choreographer John Butler, including Saul and the Witch of Endor (1959) and Jephthah’s Daughter (1966) for CBS TV, and A Season in Hell (1967) for the Harkness Ballet. After years of failing eyesight, in June 1966 she underwent surgery in New York for a brain tumor; further surgery was required in April 1969. As well as depriving her from the ability to compose, the effects of surgery and radiotherapy undermined her health for the rest of her life.
Glanville-Hicks was delicate and slight in appearance, but in character brilliant and articulate. Her works were often modal (demonstrating her interest in folk song), transparent in texture and colorful in instrumentation. She was a major figure in mid-twentieth century music, her profile formed as much by prodigious organizational skills and acumen as by her elegant music.
Compositions
- Caedmon, opera, (c.1933)
- Choral Suite (J. Fletcher), female chorus, oboe, string orchestra - (1937)
- Concertino da camera (1945)
- Letters from Morocco (for tenor and small orchestra) (1952)
- Sinfonia da Pacifica (1952–53)
- The Transposed Heads. A Legend of India, opera after the novel Die vertauschten Köpfe by Thomas Mann, 1953
- Etruscan Concerto (for piano and chamber orchestra) (1956)
- Concerto Romantico for viola and chamber orchestra (1956)
- The Glittering Gate, opera after Lord Dunsany, (1957)
- The Masque of the Wild Man, ballet (1958)
- Nausicaa, opera after Graves: Homer’s Daughter, (1961)
- Saul and the Witch of Endor, television ballet, (1964)
- Sappho, opera, (1963), unproduced
- Tragic Celebration (Jephtha's Daughter), ballet, 1966
- Sonata for Harp - 1951
- “The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers,” edited by Julie Anne Sadie and Rhian Samuel. W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 1995
- "Australian Dictionary of Biography”, Volume 17, by Suzanne Robinson. Edited by Langmore, Diane; Bennet, Darryl. Published by Melbourne University Press, 2007.
- "Peggy Glanville-Hicks: a transposed life”, by Murdoch, James. Published by Pendragon Press, 2002.
- "Mulheres Compositoras – Elenco e Repertório", by Baroncelli, Nilcéia. Published by Instituto Nacional do Livro and Roswitha Kempf Editores, 1987.
- "The Music of Peggy Glanville-Hicks", by Victoria Rogers - University of Western Australia. Published by Ashgate Publishing Ltd. 2009.
- “Drama for Orchestra”, de Peggy Glanville_Hicks (video). Available at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=I46BxEwavto.
- “Tragic Celebration”, de de Peggy Glanville-Hicks (video). Available at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=CL55JSPgSFY.
- “Sonata for Harp”, de Peggy Glanville-Hicks (video). Marshall McGuire (harp). Available at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3rJqdSMCR4.
APRIL 23
GILLIAN WHITEHEAD - NEW ZEALAND
Born 23 April
BIRKE J. BERTELSMEIER - GERMANY
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