Saturday, December 29, 2012

Coweniana (H. F. Cohen) -- the English Schubert.

Speranza

 
Frederic Hymen Cowen
 
Sir Frederic Hymen Cowen (29 January 1852 – 6 October 1935), was a British pianist, conductor and composer.
 

 

 

Cowen was born "Hymen Frederick Cohen" at 90 Duke Street, Kingston, Jamaica, the fifth and last child of Frederick Augustus Cohen and Emily Cohen née Davis.
 
His siblings were Elizabeth Rose Cohen (b. 1843); actress, Henrietta Sophia Cohen (b. 1845); painter, Lionel Jonas Cohen (b. 1847) and Emma Magnay Cohen (b. 1849).
 
At four years old Frederic was brought to England, where his father became treasurer to the opera at Her Majesty's Opera, now Her Majesty's Theatre, and private secretary to William Humble Ward, 11th Lord Ward (1817–1885).
 
The family initially lived at 11 Warwick Crescent, London, in the area known as Little Venice.
 
His first teacher was Henry Russell, and his first published composition, The Minna-waltz, appeared when he was only six years old.
 
Cohen produced his first published operetta, "Garibaldi", at the age of eight.
 
With the help of the Earl of Dudley, Cohen studied the piano with Julius Benedict, and composition with John Goss
 
Cohen's first public appearance as a pianist was as an accompanist in one of his own early songs sung by Mrs Drayton at a concert in Brighton in the early 1860s.
 
Cohen's first genuine public recital was given on 17 December 1863 at the Bijou Theatre of the old Her Majesty's "Opera House", and in the following year he performed Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto in D minor at a concert given at Dudley House, Park Lane, the London home of the Earl of Dudley.
 
At the same venue a year later Cohen premiered his Pianoforte Trio in A major with Joseph Joachim playing the violin part.
 
By the Autumn of 1865 it was the judgment of his instructors, Julius Benedict and John Goss, that they could do little more to further his musical education and recommended that Cohen study in Germany.
 
By coincidence the second competition for the Mendelssohn Scholarship was due to be held that gave its winner three years of tuition at the Leipzig Conservatorium.
 
Cohen attended the examination and won the prize, but his parents intervened, as they were not prepared to give up control of him, as stipulated by the terms of the prize.
 
Instead, they agreed to send him to the same institution, but as an independent student.
 
Swinnerton Heap was awarded the prize in his place.
 
At Leipzig, overseen by Ernst Friedrich Eduard Richter, Cohen studied under Moritz Hauptmann (harmony and counterpoint), Ignaz Moscheles (piano), Carl Reinecke (composition) and Ferdinand David (ensemble work).
 
 Cohen also came into contact with Salomon Jadassohn and Ernst Wenzel, and took some private piano lessons with Louis Plaidy.
 
Cohen's fellow students and companions in Leipzig included Swinnerton Heap, Johan Svendsen, Oscar Beringer and Stephen Adams (aka Maybrick)

 

Returning home on the outbreak of the Austro-Prussian War, Cohen appears as a composer for the orchestra in an Overture in D minor played at Alfred Mellon's Promenade Concerts at Covent Garden on 8 September 1866.
 
In the following autumn Cohen goes to Berlin, where he studied composition under Friedrich Kiel and Carl Taubert, and took piano lessons from Carl Tausig, enrolling at the academy created by Julius Stern, known as the Stern'sches Konservatorium.
 
A symphony (his first in C minor) and a piano concerto (in A minor) were given in St. James's Hall on 9 December 1869, and from that moment Cohen began to be recognized as primarily a composer, his talents as a pianist being subordinate, although his public appearances were numerous for some time afterwards.
 
Cohen's cantata, The Rose Maiden, was given at London in 1870, his Second Symphony in F major by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Society in 1872, and his first festival work, The Corsair, in 1876 at Birmingham.
 
In that year Cohen's opera, Pauline, was given by the Carl Rosa Opera Company with moderate success. 
 
Cohen's most important work, his Symphony No. 3 in C minor, Scandinavian, which was first performed at St. James's Hall in 1880 and went on to establish itself for a decade as one of the most popular symphonic works in the repertoire, brought him some international recognition.
 
Appearing in 1880, it proved to be the most regularly and widely performed British symphony until the arrival of Elgar's First.
 
In 1884 Cohen conducts five concerts of the Philharmonic Society of London, and in 1888, on the resignation of Arthur Sullivan, became the regular conductor of that society.
 
Cohen's employment there came to an abrupt termination in 1892 when he apologised for any shortcomings in the orchestra's performance of Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony before they had rendered it, due to the lack of rehearsal time that he felt he had been given.
 
The directors took umbrage at his remarks and did not renew his contract.
 
In the year of his appointment to the Philharmonic Society, 1888, he went to Melbourne as the conductor of the daily concerts given in connection with the Exhibition there for the unprecedented sum of £5,000.
 
In 1896, Cowen was appointed conductor of the Liverpool Philharmonic Society and of the Hallé Orchestra, succeeding Sir Charles Hallé.
 
He was ousted from the Hallé after three years in favour of Hans Richter.
 
In 1899, he was reappointed conductor of the Philharmonic Society of London.
 
He also conducted the Bradford Festival Choral Society, the Bradford Permanent Orchestra, the Scottish Orchestra (now known as the Royal Scottish National Orchestra) and the Handel Festivals at The Crystal Palace for some years, as well as being a regular attendee at many British music festivals, both as conductor and composer.
 
Cowen’s career, both as composer and conductor, is now almost forgotten -- except among Scott, Speranza, and others -- who LOVE him.
 
Although Cohen regards himself primarily as a symphonist, he was most successful in lighter orchestral pieces when treating fantastic or fairy subjects, where his gifts for graceful melody and colourful orchestration are shown to best advantage.
 
Whether in his cantatas for female voices, his charming Sleeping Beauty, his Water Lily or his pretty overture, The Butterfly's Ball (1901), he succeeds in finding graceful expression for the poetical idea.
 
His dance music, such as is to be found in various orchestral suites, is refined, original and admirably instrumented.
 
Much of his more serious music is commendable rather than inspired and seldom successful in portraying the graver aspects of emotion.
 
Indeed, his choral works, written for the numerous musical festivals around Victorian and Edwardian Britain, typify the public taste of his time.
 
Of his 300 or so "ballads", they encompass everything from the popular parlour or drawing room "bourgeois" ballad to the high art song, the latter of which led him to be described as the 'English Schubert' in 1898.
 
Indeed, the vogue of his semi-sacred songs has been widespread.
 
Cohen received honorary doctorates from Cambridge and Edinburgh in 1900 and 1910 respectively, and was knighted at St. James's Palace on 6 July 1911.
 
Cohen married Frederica Gwendoline Richardson at St. Marylebone Registry Office, London, 23 June 1908.
 
She was 30 years his junior and they had no issue. 
 
Cohen died on 6 October 1935 and was buried at the Jewish Cemetery, Golders Green.
 
His wife died at Hove, Sussex, in 1971.

 

 Operas

Lyceum, London, 1876.
 
Drury Lane, London, 1890
 
in 3 Acts, Teatro dal Verme, Milan, 1893 and later reduced to 2 Acts, Covent Garden, London 1894
 
Covent Garden, London, 1895

Operettas

Garibaldi (1860)
One Too Many (1874)
The Spirit of Carnival (unfinished operetta, 1918?)
Comedy-Opera (unperformed comedy opera, 1921)

Other stage works and incidental music

The Maid of Orleans (incidental music, 1871)
Monica's Blue Boy (pantomime, 1917)
Cupid's Conspiracy (comedy ballet, 1918)
The Enchanted Cottage (incidental music, 1922)

Oratorios

The Deluge (1878)
Ruth (1887)
Jephthah (unfinished, 1900)

Sacred cantatas

St. Ursula (1881)
The Transfiguration (1895)

 Secular cantatas

The Rose Maiden (1870)
The Corsair (1876)
The Sleeping Beauty (1885)
St. Johns Eve (1889)
The Fairies' Spring (female voices, 1891)
The Water Lily (1893)
  • Village Scenes (female voices, 1893)
  • Summer on the River (female voices, 1893)
  • Christmas Scenes (female voices, 1894)
  • The Rose of Life (female vvoices, 1895)
  • A Daughter of the Sea (female voices, 1896)

Other choral works

  • A Song of Thanksgiving (1888)
  • In Memoriam Ode to Carl Rosa (1890)
  • All Hail the Glorious Reign (1897)
  • Ode to the Passions (1898)
  • Coronation Ode (1902)
  • John Gilpin (1904)
  • He Giveth His Belovèd Sleep (1907)
  • The Veil (1910)
  • What shall we Dance? (1914)

[edit] Works for soloist and orchestra

  • The Dream of Endymion (1897)

[edit] Symphonies

  • Symphony No. 1 in C minor (1869)
  • Symphony No. 2 in F major (1872)
  • Symphony No. 3 in C minor, Scandinavian (1880)
  • Symphony No. 4 in B flat minor, The Welsh (1884)
  • Symphony No. 5 in F major (1887)
  • Symphony No. 6 in E major, Idyllic (1897)

[edit] Orchestral works

  • Overture in D minor (1866)
  • Festival Overture (for Norwich Festival) (1872)
  • The Language of Flowers, Suite de ballet, Set 1 (1880)
  • Sinfonietta in A major (1881)
  • Niagara, Characteristic Overture in C major (1881)
  • In the Olden Time, Suite in D major for Strings (1883)
  • Barbaric March (1883)
  • Deux Morceaux (1883)
  • March (for Folkestone Exhibition) (1886)
  • Overture in D major (for Liverpool Exhibition) (1886)
  • In Fairyland, Suite de ballet (1896)
  • Four English Dances in the Olden Style, Set 1 (1896)
  • The Butterfly's Ball, Concert Overture (1901)
  • A Phantasy of Life and Love (1901)
  • Coronation March (1902)
  • Indian Rhapsody (1903)
  • Two Pieces (for small orchestra) (1903)
  • Reverie (1903)
  • Suite of Old English Dances, Set 2 (1905)
  • The Months (1912)
  • The Language of Flowers, Suite de ballet, Set 2 (1914)
  • The Magic Goblet -- The Luck of Edenhall (1934)
  • Miniature Variations (1934)

[edit] Concertos

  • Piano Concerto in A minor (1869)
  • Concertstück, a fantasia for piano and orchestra written for and played by Paderewski (1900)

[edit] Chamber music

  • Piano Trio No. 1 in A major (1865)
  • Piano Trio No. 2 in A minor (1868)
  • String Quartet in C minor (1866)

[edit] BALLADS

The following are among the over 300 songs written by Cowen:[4]

The Border Ballad

 will give you Rest

Buttercups and Daisies

When the Worlds is Fair

The Voice of the Father

The Swallows

Promise of Life

The Chimney Corner

The Reaper and the Flowers

The Better Land

Spinning

It was a Dream

Notes

^ Winston James Baltzell, Complete History of Music. For Schools, Clubs, and Private Reading., pg. 500, Adamant Media Corporation (2001), ISBN 0-543-90739-2
^ Lionel Carley, Edvard Grieg in England, pg. 88, Boydell Press (2006), ISBN 1-84383-207-0
 
^ Michael Kennedy, The Hallé tradition: a century of music, pg. 110, Manchester University Press, (1960), ISBN 0-7190-0213-3
 
^ These songs are advertised on the back cover of songs published by Boosey & Co in 1899 and 1900

[edit] References



[edit] External links

 
 
 
 

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