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Richard Terry (musicologist)

Sir Richard Runciman Terry (3 January 1864[1] – 18 April 1938) was an English organist, choir director, composer and musicologist. He is noted for his pioneering revival of Tudor liturgical music.[2]

Early years edit

Richard Terry was born in 1864[3] in Ellington, Northumberland. At the age of 11 he started playing the organ at the local church. Educated at various schools in South Shields, St Albans and London. In 1881 Terry was living in Jarrow[4] and working as a Pupil Teacher. Terry then spent seventeen months as a non-collegiate person at Oxford (October 1887 to May 1889)[5] and two years at Cambridge (1888–90), where he went as a non-collegiate student but became a choral scholar at King's College, Cambridge.[6] There he also became a music critic for The Cambridge Review. At Cambridge, he was much influenced by the Professor of Music, Charles Villiers Stanford and the King's Chapel organist Arthur Henry Mann who taught him the techniques of choral singing and the training of boys' voices.[7]

Career in church music edit

Terry left Cambridge in 1890 without taking a degree. He was appointed School Master: Teacher of Music, Organist and School Choir Master[8] at Bedford County School,[9] (renamed Elstow School in 1907[10]) Kempston, Bedfordshire. Then organist at St. John's Cathedral, Antigua in 1892. Terry then taught and was Director of Music at Highgate School from September 1895 to December 1895. Terry became a Catholic in 1896, the year he was appointed organist and director of music at the Roman Catholic Benedictine Downside School in Somerset. It was here where he began the massively important work of reviving the Latin music of Tudor English composers such as William Byrd and Thomas Tallis. He was greatly inspired by the revival of Gregorian chant by Dom Prosper Guéranger at Solesmes Abbey in France, which was to be an important part of the Downside musical repertoire.[11]

In 1899 Terry took his Downside choir to Ealing, for the opening of the new Benedictine church, where they sang William Byrd's Mass for Five Voices and motets by Palestrina, Philips and Allegri. The archbishop of Westminster, cardinal Herbert Vaughan, was the preacher on the occasion and he decided that he would have Terry as his Master of Music at the newly built Westminster Cathedral.[12]

Terry's time at Westminster Cathedral was marked by admiration and praise, as well as frustrations. In 1911, he received a honoris causa degree of Doctor of Music at Durham University, and in the same year, during the International Music Congress, a special session was held in the Cathedral of early English church music, sung by the Cathedral Choir.[13]

While Terry's relation with Cardinal Vaughan was excellent, it was less so with his successor, Cardinal Francis Bourne. Bourne's different view on church music, a continual shortage of financial means to support the choir, the decrease in the number of lay clerks during and after the World War I, together with Terry's engagements in other things outside the Cathedral led to a prolonged period of tension.[2]

Terry was forced to resign from the Cathedral in 1924, after coming under increasing criticism for his erratic behaviour and neglect of duty (including neglecting administrative work, taking off without leave for weeks at a time, cancelling choir rehearsals without notice, dismissing Lay Clerks without proper procedure, taking on too many engagements outside his Cathedral work and tensions due to his inconsistent approach to congregational singing at the Cathedral).[14] Nonetheless, during this time he was able to establish a choral tradition of great merit at the Cathedral, developing a repertoire of both Gregorian chant and polyphonic music. The choir's particular focus on renaissance polyphony is believed to have influenced the emerging school of 20th century English composers and the performance of church music in England.[2]

Contribution to music edit

The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians credits Terry with the revival of much English church music, including Peter Philips' Cantiones sacrae, Byrd's three and five part masses and Gradualia and Cantiones sacrae, Tallis' mass and lamentations, William Mundy's Mass Upon the Square and many motets by Thomas Morley, Christopher Tye and others. Much of this work resulted in his editing and publishing performing editions of this music including 24 motets in Novello's series of Tudor motets. He also published the first modern editions of Calvin's first psalter of 1539 and the Scottish Psalter of 1635. In 1912 he edited the Westminster Hymnal.

In 1921, in an obvious departure from his church music, he edited the Curwen edition of 'The Shanty Book (Part 1)'. The foreword was written by Sir Walter Runciman, acknowledging that the time of the shanty was over, along with sail-powered merchant ships. Terry's 'Introduction' gives an excellent insight into the shanty as the sailor's work song, deferring to the well-known shanty collection by Capt. W.B Whall 'Sea Songs, Ships and Shanties' (1910 & 1912), above other accounts written between 1887 and 1920. The collection of 30 shanties also includes explanations for their use at sea, and his extensive comments give us a deal of valuable information about a particular aspect of social and maritime history.

Following his resignation from Westminster Cathedral he went on to work as a musical editor, journalist and academic. He was the initial editor of the Oxford University Press series Tudor Church Music, although by the time this series was completed he had been ousted from the editorship. He was awarded a knighthood for his services to music in the 1922 Dissolution Honours.

Composer edit

Terry was also a composer of church music, most notably of hymn tunes, several of which are in use today. These include Highwood (to the words 'Hark, what a sound'), Billing (setting 'Praise to the holiest in the height'), and many carols, including the popular Myn Lyking, one of a set of 12 original carols published in 1912. Terry was a central figure in the revival of the carol, establishing regular carol singing at Westminster Cathedral and publishing more of his own carols in the 1920s, including the Three Cradle Songs (published in 1924, though dating from 1905-1907).[11]

All of his original compositions are choral, and include anthems, motets and masses. His largest single composition was the four-part Mass of St. Gregory for choir and organ, composed in 1896. The motet Tu es Petrus, written for the Cardiff Catholic Choral Society in 1914, was his last substantial composition.[11]

Select bibliography edit

  • Catholic Church Music, 1907 (enlarged in 1931 as The Music of the Roman Rite)
  • Still More Old Rhymes with New Tunes, Longmans, Green & Co, 1912 (illustrated by Gabriel Pippet)
  • Westminster Hymnal,1912
  • On Music's Borders, 1927
  • Two Hundred Folk Carols, 1933
  • Voodooism in Music and Other Essays, a collection published in 1934

References edit

  1. ^ Name: Richard Runciman Terry Gender: Male Baptism Date:31 Jan 1864 Baptism Place:Cresswell, Northumberland, England Father: Thomas Terry Mother: Marion Terry FHL Film Number:1564658 Reference ID: item 6 p 32
  2. ^ a b c Hilda Andrews.Westminster Retrospect: a Memoir of Sir Richard Terry, OUP (1948)
  3. ^ The date of birth for Richard Runciman Terry is frequently given as 1865 but the Births, Marriages and Deaths Index gives the January Quarter of 1864 as the year of registration. Name:Richard Runciman Terry Registration Year: 1864 Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar Registration district: Morpeth Inferred County: Northumberland Volume: 10b Page: 298
  4. ^ 1881 England Census for Richard Terry, 36 Albermarle Street; Durham Westoe District 16; Page 21 of 88
  5. ^ England, Oxford Men and Their Colleges, 1880-1892, 2 Volumes Page 367 of 848 Retrieved from ancestry.co.uk [Terry, Richard Runciman, born at Ellington, Northumberland, 1864; NON-COLLEGIATE, matric. 22 Oct., 87, aged 23; migrated 9 May, 89, to King;s coll., Cambridge]
  6. ^ "Richard Runciman Terry". Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
  7. ^ Patrick Rogers, Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History, London, 2012, p. 164
  8. ^ 1891 England Census for Richard Runciman Terry; Bedfordshire Kempston; District; Bedford County School
  9. ^ Census of England and Wales 1891, Registration District:- Bedford; Registration Sub-district:- Bedford and Kempston. Enumeration Book for the Undermentioned Institution. Name: Bedford County School; Description: Boarding School; Where Situated: in the parish of Kempston, Beds. [Postal Address, County School, Bedford]
  10. ^ "The Bedfordshire Middle Class Public School". 21 June 2019.
  11. ^ a b c George Sharman. 'Sir R.R. Terry', in British Music, Vol. 24 (2002), pp. 57-73
  12. ^ Peter Doyle, Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995, London, 1995, p.53
  13. ^ Patrick Rogers, op. cit., p.166
  14. ^ Peter Doyle, op. cit., pp. 57–58

External links edit

richard, terry, musicologist, richard, runciman, terry, january, 1864, april, 1938, english, organist, choir, director, composer, musicologist, noted, pioneering, revival, tudor, liturgical, music, contents, early, years, career, church, music, contribution, m. Sir Richard Runciman Terry 3 January 1864 1 18 April 1938 was an English organist choir director composer and musicologist He is noted for his pioneering revival of Tudor liturgical music 2 Contents 1 Early years 2 Career in church music 3 Contribution to music 4 Composer 5 Select bibliography 6 References 7 External linksEarly years editRichard Terry was born in 1864 3 in Ellington Northumberland At the age of 11 he started playing the organ at the local church Educated at various schools in South Shields St Albans and London In 1881 Terry was living in Jarrow 4 and working as a Pupil Teacher Terry then spent seventeen months as a non collegiate person at Oxford October 1887 to May 1889 5 and two years at Cambridge 1888 90 where he went as a non collegiate student but became a choral scholar at King s College Cambridge 6 There he also became a music critic for The Cambridge Review At Cambridge he was much influenced by the Professor of Music Charles Villiers Stanford and the King s Chapel organist Arthur Henry Mann who taught him the techniques of choral singing and the training of boys voices 7 Career in church music editTerry left Cambridge in 1890 without taking a degree He was appointed School Master Teacher of Music Organist and School Choir Master 8 at Bedford County School 9 renamed Elstow School in 1907 10 Kempston Bedfordshire Then organist at St John s Cathedral Antigua in 1892 Terry then taught and was Director of Music at Highgate School from September 1895 to December 1895 Terry became a Catholic in 1896 the year he was appointed organist and director of music at the Roman Catholic Benedictine Downside School in Somerset It was here where he began the massively important work of reviving the Latin music of Tudor English composers such as William Byrd and Thomas Tallis He was greatly inspired by the revival of Gregorian chant by Dom Prosper Gueranger at Solesmes Abbey in France which was to be an important part of the Downside musical repertoire 11 In 1899 Terry took his Downside choir to Ealing for the opening of the new Benedictine church where they sang William Byrd s Mass for Five Voices and motets by Palestrina Philips and Allegri The archbishop of Westminster cardinal Herbert Vaughan was the preacher on the occasion and he decided that he would have Terry as his Master of Music at the newly built Westminster Cathedral 12 Terry s time at Westminster Cathedral was marked by admiration and praise as well as frustrations In 1911 he received a honoris causa degree of Doctor of Music at Durham University and in the same year during the International Music Congress a special session was held in the Cathedral of early English church music sung by the Cathedral Choir 13 While Terry s relation with Cardinal Vaughan was excellent it was less so with his successor Cardinal Francis Bourne Bourne s different view on church music a continual shortage of financial means to support the choir the decrease in the number of lay clerks during and after the World War I together with Terry s engagements in other things outside the Cathedral led to a prolonged period of tension 2 Terry was forced to resign from the Cathedral in 1924 after coming under increasing criticism for his erratic behaviour and neglect of duty including neglecting administrative work taking off without leave for weeks at a time cancelling choir rehearsals without notice dismissing Lay Clerks without proper procedure taking on too many engagements outside his Cathedral work and tensions due to his inconsistent approach to congregational singing at the Cathedral 14 Nonetheless during this time he was able to establish a choral tradition of great merit at the Cathedral developing a repertoire of both Gregorian chant and polyphonic music The choir s particular focus on renaissance polyphony is believed to have influenced the emerging school of 20th century English composers and the performance of church music in England 2 Contribution to music editThe Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians credits Terry with the revival of much English church music including Peter Philips Cantiones sacrae Byrd s three and five part masses and Gradualia and Cantiones sacrae Tallis mass and lamentations William Mundy s Mass Upon the Square and many motets by Thomas Morley Christopher Tye and others Much of this work resulted in his editing and publishing performing editions of this music including 24 motets in Novello s series of Tudor motets He also published the first modern editions of Calvin s first psalter of 1539 and the Scottish Psalter of 1635 In 1912 he edited the Westminster Hymnal In 1921 in an obvious departure from his church music he edited the Curwen edition of The Shanty Book Part 1 The foreword was written by Sir Walter Runciman acknowledging that the time of the shanty was over along with sail powered merchant ships Terry s Introduction gives an excellent insight into the shanty as the sailor s work song deferring to the well known shanty collection by Capt W B Whall Sea Songs Ships and Shanties 1910 amp 1912 above other accounts written between 1887 and 1920 The collection of 30 shanties also includes explanations for their use at sea and his extensive comments give us a deal of valuable information about a particular aspect of social and maritime history Following his resignation from Westminster Cathedral he went on to work as a musical editor journalist and academic He was the initial editor of the Oxford University Press series Tudor Church Music although by the time this series was completed he had been ousted from the editorship He was awarded a knighthood for his services to music in the 1922 Dissolution Honours Composer editTerry was also a composer of church music most notably of hymn tunes several of which are in use today These include Highwood to the words Hark what a sound Billing setting Praise to the holiest in the height and many carols including the popular Myn Lyking one of a set of 12 original carols published in 1912 Terry was a central figure in the revival of the carol establishing regular carol singing at Westminster Cathedral and publishing more of his own carols in the 1920s including the Three Cradle Songs published in 1924 though dating from 1905 1907 11 All of his original compositions are choral and include anthems motets and masses His largest single composition was the four part Mass of St Gregory for choir and organ composed in 1896 The motet Tu es Petrus written for the Cardiff Catholic Choral Society in 1914 was his last substantial composition 11 Select bibliography editCatholic Church Music 1907 enlarged in 1931 as The Music of the Roman Rite Still More Old Rhymes with New Tunes Longmans Green amp Co 1912 illustrated by Gabriel Pippet Westminster Hymnal 1912 On Music s Borders 1927 Two Hundred Folk Carols 1933 Voodooism in Music and Other Essays a collection published in 1934References edit Name Richard Runciman Terry Gender Male Baptism Date 31 Jan 1864 Baptism Place Cresswell Northumberland England Father Thomas Terry Mother Marion Terry FHL Film Number 1564658 Reference ID item 6 p 32 a b c Hilda Andrews Westminster Retrospect a Memoir of Sir Richard Terry OUP 1948 The date of birth for Richard Runciman Terry is frequently given as 1865 but the Births Marriages and Deaths Index gives the January Quarter of 1864 as the year of registration Name Richard Runciman Terry Registration Year 1864 Registration Quarter Jan Feb Mar Registration district Morpeth Inferred County Northumberland Volume 10b Page 298 1881 England Census for Richard Terry 36 Albermarle Street Durham Westoe District 16 Page 21 of 88 England Oxford Men and Their Colleges 1880 1892 2 Volumes Page 367 of 848 Retrieved from ancestry co uk Terry Richard Runciman born at Ellington Northumberland 1864 NON COLLEGIATE matric 22 Oct 87 aged 23 migrated 9 May 89 to King s coll Cambridge Richard Runciman Terry Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology Retrieved 5 June 2016 Patrick Rogers Westminster Cathedral An Illustrated History London 2012 p 164 1891 England Census for Richard Runciman Terry Bedfordshire Kempston District Bedford County School Census of England and Wales 1891 Registration District Bedford Registration Sub district Bedford and Kempston Enumeration Book for the Undermentioned Institution Name Bedford County School Description Boarding School Where Situated in the parish of Kempston Beds Postal Address County School Bedford The Bedfordshire Middle Class Public School 21 June 2019 a b c George Sharman Sir R R Terry in British Music Vol 24 2002 pp 57 73 Peter Doyle Westminster Cathedral 1895 1995 London 1995 p 53 Patrick Rogers op cit p 166 Peter Doyle op cit pp 57 58External links editWorks by Richard Runciman Terry at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Richard Terry at Internet Archive The Shanty Book Part I Sailor Shanties by Richard Runciman Terry at Project Gutenberg Free scores by Richard Terry musicologist in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores by Richard Terry musicologist at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Terry musicologist amp oldid 1217998736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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