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Peter Dickinson (musician)

Peter Dickinson (15 November 1934 – 16 June 2023) was an English composer, musicologist, author, and pianist.[1][2]

Biography edit

Dickinson was born in Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, and studied organ at Queens' College, Cambridge, where he was a student of Philip Radcliffe.[3] In 1958 he became a student at the Juilliard School in New York City, and studied with Bernard Wagenaar, and encountered the works of experimental composers such as Cowell, Cage, and Edgard Varèse. Returning to England in 1962, he established courses in improvisation and experimental music at the College of St. Mark and St. John, Chelsea. After a lectureship at Birmingham (1966–1970), he became the first professor of music at Keele University in 1974, where he created an important centre for the study of American music. He held that position until 1984.[1] He served as chairman of music at Goldsmiths College, University of London from 1991 to 1997, and in 1996 became a Fellow and head of music at the Institute of United States Studies in London.

In July 1964, he married Bridget Jane Tomkinson. Their marriage produced two sons.[4] As a pianist, he often performed works by Charles Ives with his sister, mezzo-soprano Meriel Dickinson, reflecting his affinity for that composer. He also accompanied several acclaimed instrumentalists, such as violinist Ralph Holmes and oboist Sarah Francis. He also made several international lecture-recital tours.

In 1980, Dickinson became a founding member of the Association of Professional Composers and was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts a year later. He was a board member of Trinity College of Music and a member of the Royal Society of Musicians.[5] He was also chair of the Bernarr Rainbow Trust, a charity set up in 1997 for the benefit of music education.[6]

Dickinson died on 16 June 2023, at the age of 88. His widow Bridget and their two sons survive him.[7]

Music edit

His musical compositions include experimental and aleatoric elements, and are compared to works by Stravinsky, Ives and Satie.[3] Other influences include the music of John Cage,[8] as well as ragtime, blues, and jazz.[9] He layers both serious and popular musical styles together to create what he calls a style modulation.[9] The composer explained his interest in combining musical styles: "Ever since hearing live performances of Charles Ives in New York in the late 1950s and first meeting John Cage there, I have been interested in the effect of hearing different types of music simultaneously."[10] His layering is achieved in a different manner to William Bolcom's "aggressively parodic and deconstructive manner", using more of a "genuine warmth of enthusiasm for the material he is exploiting which suggests something closer to a homage.",[8]

Dickinson composed three concertos, for organ, piano and violin.[11] The Organ Concerto was written for the 1971 Three Choirs Festival. The Piano Concerto (dedicated to the soloist Howard Shelley) was commissioned by the Cheltenham Festival and first performed on July 22, 1984, at Cheltenham Town Hall, with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Edward Downes.[12] The Violin Concerto was commissioned by the BBC and first performed and broadcast on 27 March 1987 by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, soloist Ernst Kovacic, conducted by Bryden Thomson.[13] It was recorded for the first time by the BBC in 2014 to mark the composer's 80th birthday by Chloe Hanslip with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Clark Rundell.[14] All three are concentrated works, in single movement form and (like much of Dickinson's music) all three have connections with popular music. The Organ Concerto includes a blues song, there's a rag in the Piano Concerto, and the Violin Concerto's opening theme combines Beethoven with a waltz and a 1930s popular song.[15]

His instrumental compositions are for a great variety of musical ensembles, from full orchestra to a single instrument, and there are many keyboard works. He has also composed many songs for solo voice and pieces for various choral ensembles. His modern works for historical instruments are notable. He has composed for better-known historical instruments such as recorder and harpsichord, as well as for less-familiar ones, such as the clavichord and baryton. In contrast to the use of these instruments, he has also added electronic sounds to some works.

Writing edit

A prolific writer, he had often shown his varied interests in American music. He wrote a series of articles on improvisation in 1964, and more recently has discussed postmodernism, coining the term 'style modulation' to describe the weaving together of serious and popular or past and present music. The term can be applied to his own music, which adds a mix of ragtime, jazz, serial music, and even electronic playback to more traditional types of instrumental musical forms.

Musical compositions edit

Vocal music

Stage works

  • The Judas Tree (music theatre, T. Blackburn), actors, 2 T, chorus, brass, perc, str, 1965

Choral works

  • 'Jesus Christ is Risen [Born] Today', SATB, 1955
  • Mag and Nunc, unison chorus, organ, 1963
  • 2 Motets (Blackburn): John, Mark, ATB, 1963, rev. SATB, 1990
  • Christmas is Coming, SATB, 1964
  • 4 Poems (Gerard Manly Hopkins), Bar soloists, chorus, org, 1964
  • Mass, SATB, 1965
  • When I was a Sailor, chorus, 2 insts, perc, 1965
  • For the Nativity, SATB, 1966
  • Martin of Tours (Blackburn), T, Bar, chorus 2vv, chbr org, pf duet, 1966
  • 3 Complaints, unison chorus, insts, perc, 1966
  • The Dry Heart (A. Porter), SATB, 1967
  • Communion Service, 2 pt chorus, org, 1968
  • Outcry (W. Blake, J. Clare, T. Hardy), A, SATB, orch, 1968
  • Late Afternoon in November (Dickinson), 16 solo vv, 1975
  • A Mass of the Apocalypse, SATB, spkr, perc, pf, 1984
  • Tiananmen 1989, double SATB, tubular bells, 1990

Solo vocal

  • Four Songs (W. H. Auden), S, pf, 1956
  • A Dylan Thomas Cycle, Bar, pf, 1959
  • Let the Florid Music, T, pf, 1960
  • Three Comic Songs (W. H. Auden), T, pf, 1960, rev. 1972
  • An e. e. cummings cycle, Mez, pf, 1965
  • somewhere i have never travelled (W. H. Auden)Mez, pf, 1965
  • Elegy (Swinburne), Ct, vc, hpd, 1966
  • A Red, Red Rose (Burns), Mez, pf, 1967 [from Songs in Blue]
  • 4 Poems (A. Porter), Ct, hpd, 1967
  • Extravaganzas (G. Corso), Mez, pf, 1970
  • So We'll go no more A-Roving (Byron), Mez, pf, 1971 [in Songs in Blue];
  • Winter Afternoons (Emily Dickinson), 6 solo vv, db, 1971
  • Surrealist Landscape (Lord Berners), Ct/Mez, pf, tape
  • Lust (St. Augustine, Dickinson), 6 solo vv, 1974
  • A Memory of David Munrow (wordless), 2 Ct, 2 rec, va da gamba, hpd, 1977
  • Schubert in Blue (William Shakespeare), Mez, pf, 1977 [after Franz Schubert; in Songs in Blue]
  • Songs in Blue, med voice, pf, 1977
  • Reminiscences, Mez, sax, pf, 1978
  • The Unicorns (J. Heath-Stubbs), S, brass band, 1982
  • Stevie's Tunes (S. Smith), Mez, pf, 1984
  • Larkin's Jazz, spkr/Bar, fl + a fl, cl + b cl + E cl, s sax, tpt, vc, pf, perc, 1989
  • Summoned by Mother (J. Betjeman), Mez, hp, 1991
  • Three Carols, SSA, 1997

Instrumental works

Orchestral works

  • Vitalitas, 1959/1960[16]
  • Monologue, strings, 1959
  • Five Diversions, 1969
  • Satie Transformations (based on Trois Gnossiennes), 1970
  • Concerto for strings, percussion, and Electronic organ, 1971 [withdrawn]
  • Organ Concerto, 1971
  • A Birthday Surprise (Three variations on Happy Birthday to You), 1979
  • Piano Concerto, 1984
  • Violin Concerto, 1986
  • Jigsaws, chamber orchestra, 1988
  • Merseyside Echoes, 1988

Chamber and solo instrumental

  • Fantasy, cl, pf, 1956;
  • Threnody, vc, pf, 1956
  • String Quartet no. 1, 1958
  • Air, fl, 1959
  • Fantasia, vn, 1959
  • 3 Juilliard Dances, fl, cl, bn, tpt, trombones, perc, pf, vc, 1959
  • Sonata, vn, pf, 1961
  • Baroque Trio, fl, ob, hpd, 1962
  • 4 Duos, fl/ob, vc, 1962
  • Music for Oboe and Chamber Organ, 1962
  • Sonatina, solo bassoon, 1966
  • Fanfares and Elegies, 3 tpt, 3 trombones, org, 1967
  • Metamorphosis, fl, 1971
  • Translations, recorder, bass viol, harpsichord, 1971
  • Recorder Music, recorder, tape, 1973
  • String Quartet no.2, with tape/pf, 1975
  • Solo for Baryton, tape/b viol/baryton, 1976
  • Aria, ob, cl, bn, hn, 1977
  • Lullaby, ob/cl, pf, 1982
  • The Unicorns, brass band, 1984 [arr. of vocal work], 1982–1984
  • American Trio (Hymns, Rags and Blues), vn, cl, pf, 1985
  • London Rags, 2 tpt, hn, trombones, tuba, 1986
  • Auden Studies, ob, pf, 1988
  • Cellars Clough Duo, 2 guitars, 1988
  • 5 Explorations, guitar, 1989
  • Suffolk Variations, guitar, 1992
  • Swansongs, vc, pf, 1993
  • Celebration Trio, vn, cl, pf, 2009
  • Bach in Blue, vn, cl, pf, 2012
  • Three Early Pieces, arr. recorder, piano, 2012

Keyboard

  • A Cambridge Postlude, organ, 1953
  • Postlude on Adeste Fideles, organ, 1954
  • Toccata, organ, 1955
  • Vitalitas Variations, piano, 1957, orchestrated for ballet, 1959
  • Variations on a French Folk Tune, harpsichord, 1957
  • Meditation on Murder in the Cathedral, organ, 1958
  • Study in Pianissimo, organ, 1959[17]
  • Paraphrase 1, organ, 1967
  • Paraphrase 2, piano, 1967
  • Satie Transformations, piano, 1970
  • Suite for the Centenary of Lord Berners, clavichord, 1972
  • Conc. Rag, piano, 1973, rev. 1984
  • Piano Blues, 1973
  • Quartet Rag, piano, 1975
  • Blue Rose, piano, 1979
  • Hymn-Tune Rag, piano, 1985
  • Wild Rose Rag, piano, 1985
  • Blue Rose Variations, organ, 1985
  • Patriotic Rag, piano, 1986
  • Sonatas for piano, piano & tape playback, 1987
  • A Millennium Fanfare, organ, 1999
  • Bach in Blue, piano, 2004

Written publications edit

  • 'Charles Ives 1874–1954', MT, cv (1964), 347–9[18]
  • 'Improvisation', MT, cv (1964), 294–5, 377–8, 538–9, 612–13, 688–9, 766–7
  • 'John Cage', Music and Musicians, xiv/3 (1965–66), 32–4, 54 only, 56 only
  • 'Erik Satie (1866–1925)', MR, xxviii (1967), 139–46
  • 'A New Perspective for Ives', MT, cxv (1974), 836–8
  • ed.: American Music: Keele 1975
  • ed.: Twenty British Composers (London, 1975) [incl. ‘Transformations of Erik Satie’, p. 47]
  • 'A Note on Some Recent Works', MT, cxviii (1977), 559 only [on Dickinson's works]
  • 'Recent Research on American Musical Traditions', IMSCR XII: Berkeley 1977, 353–82[19]
  • ‘The Achievement of Ragtime: an Introductory Study with some Implications for British Research in Popular Music’, PRMA, cv (1978–79), 63–76
  • ‘Lord Berners, 1883–1950’, MT, cxxiv (1983), 669–72
  • ‘William Schumann: an American Symphonist at 75’, MT, cxxvi (1985), 457–8
  • ‘Stein, Satie, Cummings, Thomson, Berners, Cage: Toward a Context for the Music of Virgil Thomson’, MQ, lxxii (1986), 394–409[20]
  • ‘Directors of a Decade’, MT, cxxviii (1987), 15–17
  • The Music of Lennox Berkeley (London, 1988; 2nd enlarged edition Woodbridge, 2003)[1]
  • ‘The American Concerto’, A Companion to the Concerto, ed. R. Layton (New York, 1989), 305–325
  • ‘Style-Modulation: an Approach to Stylistic Pluralism’, MT, cxxx (1989), 208–11
  • ‘Virgil Thomson (1896–1989)’, MT, cxxxi (1990), 31 only
  • ‘Nationalism is Not Enough: a Composer's Perspective’, Music and Nationalism in 20th-Century Great Britain and Finland, ed. T. Mäkelä (Hamburg, 1997), 27–34
  • Marigold: the Music of Billy Mayerl (Oxford, 1999)
  • Copland Connotations: Studies and Interviews (Woodbridge, 2002)
  • CageTalk: Dialogues with & about John Cage (Rochester, NY, 2006)
  • Lord Berners: Composer, writer, Painter (Woodbridge, 2008)
  • Samuel Barber Remembered (Rochester, NY, 2010)
  • Lennox Berkeley and Friends: Writings, Letters and Interviews (Woodbridge, 2012)
  • Words and Music (Woodbridge, 2016)
  • Many other articles and reviews in the Musical Times, Music and Letters, The Musical Quarterly, The Independent, The Times Literary Supplement, Musical Opinion and The Times Higher Education Supplement[21]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c Baker's 20th Century Composers, p. 317
  2. ^ "Peter Dickinson, composer, writer and teacher, has died". Gramophone.co.uk. 19 June 2023. Retrieved 29 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b Grove online
  4. ^ Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 224
  5. ^ Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 225.
  6. ^ Peter Dickinson's web site
  7. ^ "Peter Dickinson (1934-2023)". Wisemusiclassical.com. 19 June 2023. Retrieved 29 June 2023.
  8. ^ a b Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 227
  9. ^ a b Baker's Biographical 20th Century, p. 317
  10. ^ Quoted in Morton, Contomporary Composers, p. 226
  11. ^ "Peter Dickinson: notes to Toccata TOCC0538 (2020)" (PDF). D2vhizysjb6bpn.cloudfront.net. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  12. ^ "BBC Programme Index". Genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. 22 July 1984. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  13. ^ "BBC Programme Index". Genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. 27 March 1987. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  14. ^ "Peter Dickinson: Three Concertos & Merseyside Echoes". Prestomusic.com. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  15. ^ "Violin Concerto | Peter Dickinson". Wisemusicclassical.com. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  16. ^ Mentioned in Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 225
  17. ^ Most of these earlier keyboard works are listed in Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 225
  18. ^ MT refers to The Musical Times
  19. ^ International Musicological Society Congress Report
  20. ^ The Musical Quarterly
  21. ^ Morton, Contemporary Composers, p. 226

References edit

Further reading edit

peter, dickinson, musician, other, people, named, peter, dickinson, peter, dickinson, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, ch. For other people named Peter Dickinson see Peter Dickinson disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Peter Dickinson musician news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Peter Dickinson 15 November 1934 16 June 2023 was an English composer musicologist author and pianist 1 2 Contents 1 Biography 2 Music 3 Writing 4 Musical compositions 5 Written publications 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Further readingBiography editDickinson was born in Lytham St Annes Lancashire and studied organ at Queens College Cambridge where he was a student of Philip Radcliffe 3 In 1958 he became a student at the Juilliard School in New York City and studied with Bernard Wagenaar and encountered the works of experimental composers such as Cowell Cage and Edgard Varese Returning to England in 1962 he established courses in improvisation and experimental music at the College of St Mark and St John Chelsea After a lectureship at Birmingham 1966 1970 he became the first professor of music at Keele University in 1974 where he created an important centre for the study of American music He held that position until 1984 1 He served as chairman of music at Goldsmiths College University of London from 1991 to 1997 and in 1996 became a Fellow and head of music at the Institute of United States Studies in London In July 1964 he married Bridget Jane Tomkinson Their marriage produced two sons 4 As a pianist he often performed works by Charles Ives with his sister mezzo soprano Meriel Dickinson reflecting his affinity for that composer He also accompanied several acclaimed instrumentalists such as violinist Ralph Holmes and oboist Sarah Francis He also made several international lecture recital tours In 1980 Dickinson became a founding member of the Association of Professional Composers and was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts a year later He was a board member of Trinity College of Music and a member of the Royal Society of Musicians 5 He was also chair of the Bernarr Rainbow Trust a charity set up in 1997 for the benefit of music education 6 Dickinson died on 16 June 2023 at the age of 88 His widow Bridget and their two sons survive him 7 Music editHis musical compositions include experimental and aleatoric elements and are compared to works by Stravinsky Ives and Satie 3 Other influences include the music of John Cage 8 as well as ragtime blues and jazz 9 He layers both serious and popular musical styles together to create what he calls a style modulation 9 The composer explained his interest in combining musical styles Ever since hearing live performances of Charles Ives in New York in the late 1950s and first meeting John Cage there I have been interested in the effect of hearing different types of music simultaneously 10 His layering is achieved in a different manner to William Bolcom s aggressively parodic and deconstructive manner using more of a genuine warmth of enthusiasm for the material he is exploiting which suggests something closer to a homage 8 Dickinson composed three concertos for organ piano and violin 11 The Organ Concerto was written for the 1971 Three Choirs Festival The Piano Concerto dedicated to the soloist Howard Shelley was commissioned by the Cheltenham Festival and first performed on July 22 1984 at Cheltenham Town Hall with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Edward Downes 12 The Violin Concerto was commissioned by the BBC and first performed and broadcast on 27 March 1987 by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra soloist Ernst Kovacic conducted by Bryden Thomson 13 It was recorded for the first time by the BBC in 2014 to mark the composer s 80th birthday by Chloe Hanslip with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Clark Rundell 14 All three are concentrated works in single movement form and like much of Dickinson s music all three have connections with popular music The Organ Concerto includes a blues song there s a rag in the Piano Concerto and the Violin Concerto s opening theme combines Beethoven with a waltz and a 1930s popular song 15 His instrumental compositions are for a great variety of musical ensembles from full orchestra to a single instrument and there are many keyboard works He has also composed many songs for solo voice and pieces for various choral ensembles His modern works for historical instruments are notable He has composed for better known historical instruments such as recorder and harpsichord as well as for less familiar ones such as the clavichord and baryton In contrast to the use of these instruments he has also added electronic sounds to some works Writing editA prolific writer he had often shown his varied interests in American music He wrote a series of articles on improvisation in 1964 and more recently has discussed postmodernism coining the term style modulation to describe the weaving together of serious and popular or past and present music The term can be applied to his own music which adds a mix of ragtime jazz serial music and even electronic playback to more traditional types of instrumental musical forms Musical compositions editVocal musicStage works The Judas Tree music theatre T Blackburn actors 2 T chorus brass perc str 1965Choral works Jesus Christ is Risen Born Today SATB 1955 Mag and Nunc unison chorus organ 1963 2 Motets Blackburn John Mark ATB 1963 rev SATB 1990 Christmas is Coming SATB 1964 4 Poems Gerard Manly Hopkins Bar soloists chorus org 1964 Mass SATB 1965 When I was a Sailor chorus 2 insts perc 1965 For the Nativity SATB 1966 Martin of Tours Blackburn T Bar chorus 2vv chbr org pf duet 1966 3 Complaints unison chorus insts perc 1966 The Dry Heart A Porter SATB 1967 Communion Service 2 pt chorus org 1968 Outcry W Blake J Clare T Hardy A SATB orch 1968 Late Afternoon in November Dickinson 16 solo vv 1975 A Mass of the Apocalypse SATB spkr perc pf 1984 Tiananmen 1989 double SATB tubular bells 1990Solo vocal Four Songs W H Auden S pf 1956 A Dylan Thomas Cycle Bar pf 1959 Let the Florid Music T pf 1960 Three Comic Songs W H Auden T pf 1960 rev 1972 An e e cummings cycle Mez pf 1965 somewhere i have never travelled W H Auden Mez pf 1965 Elegy Swinburne Ct vc hpd 1966 A Red Red Rose Burns Mez pf 1967 from Songs in Blue 4 Poems A Porter Ct hpd 1967 Extravaganzas G Corso Mez pf 1970 So We ll go no more A Roving Byron Mez pf 1971 in Songs in Blue Winter Afternoons Emily Dickinson 6 solo vv db 1971 Surrealist Landscape Lord Berners Ct Mez pf tape Lust St Augustine Dickinson 6 solo vv 1974 A Memory of David Munrow wordless 2 Ct 2 rec va da gamba hpd 1977 Schubert in Blue William Shakespeare Mez pf 1977 after Franz Schubert in Songs in Blue Songs in Blue med voice pf 1977 Reminiscences Mez sax pf 1978 The Unicorns J Heath Stubbs S brass band 1982 Stevie s Tunes S Smith Mez pf 1984 Larkin s Jazz spkr Bar fl a fl cl b cl E cl s sax tpt vc pf perc 1989 Summoned by Mother J Betjeman Mez hp 1991 Three Carols SSA 1997Instrumental worksOrchestral works Vitalitas 1959 1960 16 Monologue strings 1959 Five Diversions 1969 Satie Transformations based on Trois Gnossiennes 1970 Concerto for strings percussion and Electronic organ 1971 withdrawn Organ Concerto 1971 A Birthday Surprise Three variations on Happy Birthday to You 1979 Piano Concerto 1984 Violin Concerto 1986 Jigsaws chamber orchestra 1988 Merseyside Echoes 1988Chamber and solo instrumental Fantasy cl pf 1956 Threnody vc pf 1956 String Quartet no 1 1958 Air fl 1959 Fantasia vn 1959 3 Juilliard Dances fl cl bn tpt trombones perc pf vc 1959 Sonata vn pf 1961 Baroque Trio fl ob hpd 1962 4 Duos fl ob vc 1962 Music for Oboe and Chamber Organ 1962 Sonatina solo bassoon 1966 Fanfares and Elegies 3 tpt 3 trombones org 1967 Metamorphosis fl 1971 Translations recorder bass viol harpsichord 1971 Recorder Music recorder tape 1973 String Quartet no 2 with tape pf 1975 Solo for Baryton tape b viol baryton 1976 Aria ob cl bn hn 1977 Lullaby ob cl pf 1982 The Unicorns brass band 1984 arr of vocal work 1982 1984 American Trio Hymns Rags and Blues vn cl pf 1985 London Rags 2 tpt hn trombones tuba 1986 Auden Studies ob pf 1988 Cellars Clough Duo 2 guitars 1988 5 Explorations guitar 1989 Suffolk Variations guitar 1992 Swansongs vc pf 1993 Celebration Trio vn cl pf 2009 Bach in Blue vn cl pf 2012 Three Early Pieces arr recorder piano 2012Keyboard A Cambridge Postlude organ 1953 Postlude on Adeste Fideles organ 1954 Toccata organ 1955 Vitalitas Variations piano 1957 orchestrated for ballet 1959 Variations on a French Folk Tune harpsichord 1957 Meditation on Murder in the Cathedral organ 1958 Study in Pianissimo organ 1959 17 Paraphrase 1 organ 1967 Paraphrase 2 piano 1967 Satie Transformations piano 1970 Suite for the Centenary of Lord Berners clavichord 1972 Conc Rag piano 1973 rev 1984 Piano Blues 1973 Quartet Rag piano 1975 Blue Rose piano 1979 Hymn Tune Rag piano 1985 Wild Rose Rag piano 1985 Blue Rose Variations organ 1985 Patriotic Rag piano 1986 Sonatas for piano piano amp tape playback 1987 A Millennium Fanfare organ 1999 Bach in Blue piano 2004Written publications edit Charles Ives 1874 1954 MT cv 1964 347 9 18 Improvisation MT cv 1964 294 5 377 8 538 9 612 13 688 9 766 7 John Cage Music and Musicians xiv 3 1965 66 32 4 54 only 56 only Erik Satie 1866 1925 MR xxviii 1967 139 46 A New Perspective for Ives MT cxv 1974 836 8 ed American Music Keele 1975 ed Twenty British Composers London 1975 incl Transformations of Erik Satie p 47 A Note on Some Recent Works MT cxviii 1977 559 only on Dickinson s works Recent Research on American Musical Traditions IMSCR XII Berkeley 1977 353 82 19 The Achievement of Ragtime an Introductory Study with some Implications for British Research in Popular Music PRMA cv 1978 79 63 76 Lord Berners 1883 1950 MT cxxiv 1983 669 72 William Schumann an American Symphonist at 75 MT cxxvi 1985 457 8 Stein Satie Cummings Thomson Berners Cage Toward a Context for the Music of Virgil Thomson MQ lxxii 1986 394 409 20 Directors of a Decade MT cxxviii 1987 15 17 The Music of Lennox Berkeley London 1988 2nd enlarged edition Woodbridge 2003 1 The American Concerto A Companion to the Concerto ed R Layton New York 1989 305 325 Style Modulation an Approach to Stylistic Pluralism MT cxxx 1989 208 11 Virgil Thomson 1896 1989 MT cxxxi 1990 31 only Nationalism is Not Enough a Composer s Perspective Music and Nationalism in 20th Century Great Britain and Finland ed T Makela Hamburg 1997 27 34 Marigold the Music of Billy Mayerl Oxford 1999 Copland Connotations Studies and Interviews Woodbridge 2002 CageTalk Dialogues with amp about John Cage Rochester NY 2006 Lord Berners Composer writer Painter Woodbridge 2008 Samuel Barber Remembered Rochester NY 2010 Lennox Berkeley and Friends Writings Letters and Interviews Woodbridge 2012 Words and Music Woodbridge 2016 Many other articles and reviews in the Musical Times Music and Letters The Musical Quarterly The Independent The Times Literary Supplement Musical Opinion and The Times Higher Education Supplement 21 Footnotes edit a b c Baker s 20th Century Composers p 317 Peter Dickinson composer writer and teacher has died Gramophone co uk 19 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 a b Grove online Morton Contemporary Composers p 224 Morton Contemporary Composers p 225 Peter Dickinson s web site Peter Dickinson 1934 2023 Wisemusiclassical com 19 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 a b Morton Contemporary Composers p 227 a b Baker s Biographical 20th Century p 317 Quoted in Morton Contomporary Composers p 226 Peter Dickinson notes to Toccata TOCC0538 2020 PDF D2vhizysjb6bpn cloudfront net Retrieved 11 August 2023 BBC Programme Index Genome ch bbc co uk 22 July 1984 Retrieved 11 August 2023 BBC Programme Index Genome ch bbc co uk 27 March 1987 Retrieved 11 August 2023 Peter Dickinson Three Concertos amp Merseyside Echoes Prestomusic com Retrieved 11 August 2023 Violin Concerto Peter Dickinson Wisemusicclassical com Retrieved 11 August 2023 Mentioned in Morton Contemporary Composers p 225 Most of these earlier keyboard works are listed in Morton Contemporary Composers p 225 MT refers to The Musical Times International Musicological Society Congress Report The Musical Quarterly Morton Contemporary Composers p 226References editCole Hugo amp Miller Malcolm 2001 Dickinson Peter In Sadie Stanley amp Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Peter Dickinson s Webpage Morton Brian 1992 Dickinson Peter in Morton Brian and Pamela Collins ed Contemporary Composers Chicago and London St James Press pp 224 227 ISBN 1 55862 085 0 Slonimsky Peter 1997 Dickinson Peter in Kuhn Laura ed Baker s Biographical Dictionary of 20th Century Classical Musicians New York Schirmer Books pp 317 ISBN 0 02 871271 4 Further reading editPayne Anthony August 1971 Peter Dickinson The Musical Times 112 1542 Musical Times Publications Ltd 755 756 doi 10 2307 954597 JSTOR 954597 Peter Dickinson discography at Discogs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Dickinson musician amp oldid 1210795767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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