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Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (15 August 1875 – 1 September 1912) was a British composer and conductor.

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor in 1905
Born
Samuel Coleridge Taylor

(1875-08-15)15 August 1875
Holborn, London, England
Died1 September 1912(1912-09-01) (aged 37)
Croydon, Surrey, England
Occupation(s)Classical composer and musician
SpouseJessie Walmisley
ChildrenHiawatha and Avril Coleridge-Taylor

Of mixed-race birth, Coleridge-Taylor achieved such success that he was referred to by white New York musicians as the "African Mahler" when he had three tours of the United States in the early 1900s.[1] He was particularly known for his three cantatas on the epic 1855 poem The Song of Hiawatha by American Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Coleridge-Taylor premiered the first section in 1898, when he was 22.

He married a British woman, Jessie Walmisley, and both their children had musical careers.[2] Their son Hiawatha adapted his father's music for a variety of performances. Their daughter Avril Coleridge-Taylor became a composer-conductor.

Early life and education

 
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor c. 1893

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born at 15 Theobalds Road in Holborn, London,[3] to Alice Hare Martin (1856–1953),[4] an Englishwoman, and Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, a Krio man from Sierra Leone who had studied medicine in London and later became an administrator in West Africa. They were not married, and Daniel had returned to Africa without learning that Alice was pregnant. (Alice's parents had not been married at her birth, either.)[5] Alice named her son Samuel Coleridge Taylor (without a hyphen), after the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.[6]

Alice lived with her father, Benjamin Holmans, and his family after Samuel was born. Holmans was a skilled farrier and was married to a woman who was not Alice's mother, with whom he had four daughters and at least one son. Alice and her father called her son Coleridge. In 1887 she married George Evans, a railway worker, and lived in Croydon on a street adjoining the railway line.[7]

There were numerous musicians on Taylor's mother's side, and her father played the violin, teaching it to his grandson from an early age. Taylor's musical ability quickly became apparent, and his grandfather paid for him to have violin lessons. The extended family arranged for Taylor to study at the Royal College of Music from the age of 15. He changed from the violin to composition, working under Charles Villiers Stanford. After completing his degree, he became a professional musician; he was appointed a professor at the Crystal Palace School of Music and began conducting the orchestra at the Croydon Conservatoire.

He later used the name "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor", with a hyphen, said to be following a printer's typographical error.[8]

In 1894 Taylor's father was appointed a coroner in the colony of Gambia.[9]

Marriage

 
Christmas greeting card displaying the Coleridge-Taylor family, 1912

In 1899 Coleridge-Taylor married Jessie Walmisley, whom he had met as a fellow student at the Royal College of Music. Six years older than he, Jessie had left the college in 1893. Her parents objected to the marriage because Taylor was of mixed-race parentage, but relented and attended the wedding. The couple had a son, named Hiawatha (1900–1980) after a Native American immortalised in poetry, and a daughter Gwendolen Avril (1903–1998). Both had careers in music: Hiawatha adapted his father's works.[10] Gwendolen started composing music early in life, and also became a conductor-composer; she used the professional name of Avril Coleridge-Taylor.

Career

By 1896, Coleridge-Taylor was already earning a reputation as a composer. He was later helped by Edward Elgar, who recommended him to the Three Choirs Festival. His "Ballade in A minor" was premiered there. His early work was also guided by the influential music editor and critic August Jaeger of music publisher Novello; he told Elgar that Taylor was "a genius".

On the strength of Hiawatha's Wedding Feast, which was conducted by Professor Charles Villiers Stanford at its 1898 premiere and proved to be highly popular, Coleridge-Taylor made three tours of the United States in 1904, 1906, and 1910.[11] In the United States, he became increasingly interested in his paternal racial heritage. Coleridge-Taylor participated as the youngest delegate at the 1900 First Pan-African Conference held in London, and met leading Americans through this connection, including poet Paul Laurence Dunbar and scholar and activist W. E. B. Du Bois.[11]

Coleridge-Taylor's father Daniel Taylor was descended from African-American slaves who were freed by the British and evacuated from the colonies at the end of the American War of Independence; some 3,000 of these Black Loyalists were resettled in Nova Scotia. Others were resettled in London and the Caribbean. In 1792 some 1200 blacks from Nova Scotia chose to leave what they considered a hostile climate and society, and moved to Sierra Leone, which the British had established as a colony for free blacks. The Black Loyalists joined free blacks (some of whom were also African Americans) from London, and were joined by maroons from Jamaica, and slaves liberated at sea from illegal slave ships by the British navy. At one stage Coleridge-Taylor seriously considered emigrating to the United States, as he was intrigued by his father's family's past there.

In 1904, on his first tour to the United States, Coleridge-Taylor was received by President Theodore Roosevelt at the White House, a rare event in those days for a man of African descent. His music was widely performed and he had great support among African Americans. Coleridge-Taylor sought to draw from traditional African music and integrate it into the classical tradition, which he considered Johannes Brahms to have done with Hungarian music and Antonín Dvořák with Bohemian music. Having met the African-American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar in London, Taylor set some of his poems to music. A joint recital between Taylor and Dunbar was arranged in London, under the patronage of US Ambassador John Milton Hay. It was organised by Henry Francis Downing, an African-American playwright and London resident.[12] Dunbar and other black people encouraged Coleridge-Taylor to draw from his Sierra Leonean ancestry and the music of the African continent.[citation needed]

Due to his success, Coleridge-Taylor was invited to be one of the judges at music festivals. He was said to be personally shy but was still effective as a conductor.[citation needed]

Composers were not handsomely paid for their music, and they often sold the rights to works outright in order to make immediate income. This caused them to lose the royalties earned by the publishers who had invested in the music distribution through publication. The popular Hiawatha's Wedding Feast sold hundreds of thousands of copies, but Coleridge-Taylor had sold the music outright for the sum of 15 guineas, so did not benefit directly.[13][14][15] He learned to retain his rights and earned royalties for other compositions after achieving wide renown but always struggled financially.[citation needed]

Death

Coleridge-Taylor was 37 when he died of pneumonia. His death is often attributed to the stress of his financial situation.[16] He was buried in Bandon Hill Cemetery, Wallington, Surrey (today in the London Borough of Sutton).

Honours

  • The inscription on Coleridge-Taylor's carved headstone includes four bars of music from the composer's best-known work, Hiawatha, and a tribute from his close friend, the poet Alfred Noyes, that includes these words:

Too young to die: his great simplicity, his happy courage in an alien world, his gentleness, made all that knew him love him.

  • King George V granted Jessie Coleridge-Taylor, the young widow, an annual pension of £100, evidence of the high regard in which the composer was held.[17]
  • In 1912 a memorial concert was held at the Royal Albert Hall and garnered over £1400 for the composer's family.
  • After Coleridge-Taylor's death in 1912, musicians were concerned that he and his family had received no royalties from his Song of Hiawatha, which was one of the most successful and popular works written in the previous 50 years. (He had sold the rights early in order to get income.) His case contributed to their formation of the Performing Right Society, an effort to gain revenues for musicians through performance as well as publication and distribution of music.[4]

Coleridge-Taylor's work continued to be popular. He was later championed by conductor Malcolm Sargent. Between 1928 and 1939, Sargent conducted ten seasons of a large costumed ballet version of The Song of Hiawatha at the Royal Albert Hall, performed by the Royal Choral Society (600 to 800 singers) and 200 dancers.

Legacy

 
 
Plaques honouring Samuel Coleridge-Taylor in Dagnall Park, Selhurst (top) and South Norwood, United Kingdom (bottom)

Coleridge-Taylor's greatest success was undoubtedly his cantata Hiawatha's Wedding Feast, which was widely performed by choral groups in England during Coleridge-Taylor's lifetime and in the decades after his death. Its popularity was rivalled only by the choral standards Handel's Messiah and Mendelssohn's Elijah.[18] The composer soon followed Hiawatha's Wedding Feast with two other cantatas about Hiawatha, The Death of Minnehaha and Hiawatha's Departure. All three were published together, along with an Overture, as The Song of Hiawatha, Op. 30. The tremendously popular Hiawatha seasons at the Royal Albert Hall, which continued until 1939, were conducted by Sargent and involved hundreds of choristers, and scenery covering the organ loft. Hiawatha's Wedding Feast is still occasionally revived.

Coleridge-Taylor also composed chamber music, anthems, and the African Dances for violin, among other works. The Petite Suite de Concert is still regularly played.[19] He set one poem by his namesake Samuel Taylor Coleridge, "The Legend of Kubla Khan".

Coleridge-Taylor was greatly admired by African Americans; in 1901, a 200-voice African-American chorus was founded in Washington, D.C., named the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Society. He visited the United States three times in the early 1900s, receiving great acclaim, and earned the title "the African Mahler" from the white orchestral musicians in New York in 1910.[1] Public schools were named after him in Louisville, Kentucky, and in Baltimore, Maryland.

Coleridge-Taylor composed a violin concerto for the American violinist Maud Powell. The American performance of the work was subject to rewriting because the parts were lost en route—not, as legend has it, on the RMS Titanic but on another ship.[11] The concerto has been recorded by Philippe Graffin and the Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra under Michael Hankinson (nominated "Editor's Choice" in Gramophone magazine), Anthony Marwood and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Martyn Brabbins (on Hyperion Records), and Lorraine McAslan and the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Nicholas Braithwaite (on the Lyrita label). It was also performed at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre in the autumn of 1998 by John McLaughlin Williams and William Thomas, as part of the 100th-anniversary celebration of the composition of Hiawatha's Wedding Feast.

Lists of Coleridge-Taylor's compositions and recordings of his work and of the many articles, papers and books about Coleridge-Taylor's life and legacy are available through the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation and the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Network.[20]

There are two blue plaques in his memory, one in Dagnall Park, South Norwood,[21] and the other in St Leonards Road, Croydon, at the house where he died. A metal figure in the likeness of Coleridge-Taylor has been installed in Charles Street, Croydon.[22]

A two-hour documentary, Samuel Coleridge Taylor and His Music in America, 1900–1912 (2013), was made about him and includes a performance of several of his pieces, as well as information about him and his prominent place in music. It was written and directed by Charles Kaufmann, and produced by The Longfellow Chorus.[23]

A feature animation, The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story (2013), was made about him, written and directed by Jason Young. It was screened as part of Southwark Black History Month[24] and Croydon Black History Month in 2020.[25]

On 26 August 2021 Coleridge-Taylor's Symphony in A minor received its Proms premiere by the Chineke! Orchestra with Kalena Bovell.[26]

Posthumous publishing

 
A 1912 obituary in the African Methodist Episcopal Church Review

In 1999, freelance music editor Patrick Meadows identified three important chamber works by Coleridge-Taylor that had never been printed or made widely available to musicians. A handwritten performing parts edition of the Piano Quintet, from the original in the Royal College of Music (RCM) Library, had been prepared earlier by violinist Martin Anthony Burrage of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. The first modern performance of the Piano Quintet was given on 7 November 2001 by Burrage's chamber music group, Ensemble Liverpool / Live-A-Music in Liverpool Philharmonic Hall. The lunchtime recital included the Fantasiestücke. Live recordings of this performance are lodged with the RCM and the British Library.[6] The artists were Andrew Berridge (violin), Martin Anthony (Tony) Burrage (violin), Joanna Lacey (viola), Michael Parrott (cello) and John Peace (piano).

After receiving copies of the work from the RCM in London, Patrick Meadows made printed playing editions of the Nonet, Piano Quintet and Piano Trio. The works were performed in Meadows's regular chamber music festival on the island of Majorca, and were well received by the public as well as the performers. The first modern performances of some of these works were done in the early 1990s by the Boston, Massachusetts-based Coleridge Ensemble, led by William Thomas of Phillips Academy, Andover. This group subsequently made world premiere recordings of the Nonet, Fantasiestücke for string quartet and Six Negro Folksongs for piano trio, which were released in 1998 by Afka Records. Thomas, a champion of lost works by black composers, also revived Coleridge's Hiawatha's Wedding Feast in a performance commemorating the composition's 100th anniversary with the Cambridge Community Chorus at Harvard's Sanders Theatre in the spring of 1998.[27]

The Nash Ensemble's recording of the Piano Quintet was released in 2007.

In 2006, Meadows finished engraving the first edition of Coleridge-Taylor's Symphony in A minor. Meadows has also transcribed from the RCM manuscript the Haytian Dances, a work virtually identical to the Noveletten but with a fifth movement inserted by Coleridge-Taylor, based on the Scherzo of the symphony. This work is for string orchestra, tambourine and triangle.

Thelma, the missing opera

Coleridge-Taylor's only large-scale operatic work, Thelma, was long believed to have been lost. As recently as 1995, Geoffrey Self in his biography of Coleridge-Taylor, The Hiawatha Man, stated that the manuscript of Thelma had not been located, and that the piece may have been destroyed by its creator. While researching for a PhD on the life and music of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Catherine Carr unearthed the manuscripts of Thelma in the British Library. She assembled a libretto and catalogued the opera in her thesis, presenting a first critical examination of the work by a thorough investigation of the discovered manuscripts (including copious typeset examples).[28] The work subsequently appeared as such on the catalogue of the British Library.

Thelma is a saga of deceit, magic, retribution and the triumph of love over wickedness. The composer followed Richard Wagner's manner in eschewing the established "numbers" opera format, preferring to blend recitative, aria and ensemble into a seamless whole. It is possible that he had read Marie Corelli's 1887 "Nordic" novel Thelma (it appears that the name "Thelma" may have been created by Corelli for her heroine). Coleridge-Taylor composed Thelma between 1907 and 1909; it is alternatively entitled The Amulet.

The full score and vocal score in the British Library are both in the composer's hand – the full score is unbound but complete (save that the vocal parts do not have the words after the first few folios) but the vocal score is bound (in three volumes) and complete with words. Patrick Meadows and Lionel Harrison prepared a type-set full score, vocal score and libretto (the librettist is uncredited and may be Coleridge-Taylor himself). As to the heroine of the title, the composer changed her name to "Freda" in both full and vocal scores (although in the full score he occasionally forgets himself and writes "Thelma" instead of "Freda"). Perhaps Coleridge-Taylor changed the name of his heroine (and might have changed the name of the opera, had it been produced) to avoid creating the assumption that his work was a treatment of Corelli's then very popular novel. Since that precaution is scarcely necessary today, Meadows and Harrison decided to revert to the original Thelma.

There are minor discrepancies between the full score and the vocal score (the occasional passage occurring in different keys in the two, for example), but nothing that would inhibit the production of a complete, staged performance.

Thelma received its world première in Croydon's Ashcroft Theatre in February 2012, the centenary year of the composer's death, performed by Surrey Opera, using an edition prepared by Stephen Anthony Brown.[29] It was conducted by Jonathan Butcher, directed by Christopher Cowell and designed by Bridget Kimak. Joanna Weeks sang the title role, with Alberto Sousa as Eric and Håkan Vramsmo as Carl.

List of compositions

With opus number

  • Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 1 – 1893
  • Nonet in F minor for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, violin, viola, cello, contrabass and piano, Op. 2 – 1894
  • Suite for Violin and Organ (or piano), Op. 3 (Suite de Piêces) – 1893
  • Ballade in D minor, Op. 4 – 1895
  • Five Fantasiestücke, Op. 5 – 1896
  • Little Songs for Little Folks, Op. 6 – 1898
  • Zara's Earrings, Op. 7 – 1895
  • Symphony in A minor, Op. 8 – 1896
  • Two Romantic Pieces, Op. 9 – 1896
  • Quintet in F sharp minor for clarinet and strings, Op. 10 – 1895
  • Southern Love Songs, Op. 12 – 1896
  • String Quartet in D minor, Op. 13 – 1896 (lost)
  • Legend (Concertstück), Op. 14
  • Land of the Sun, Op. 15 – 1897
  • Three Hiawatha Sketches for violin and piano, Op. 16 – 1897
  • African Romances (P. L. Dunbar) Op. 17 – 1897
  • Morning and Evening Service in F, Op. 18 – 1899
  • Two Moorish Tone-Pictures, Op. 19 – 1897
  • Gypsy Suite, Op. 20 – 1898
  • Part Songs, Op. 21 – 1898
  • Four Characteristic Waltzes, Op. 22 – 1899
  • Valse-Caprice, Op. 23 – 1898
  • In Memoriam, three rhapsodies for low voice and piano, Op. 24 – 1898
  • Dream Lovers, Operatic Romance, Op. 25 – 1898
  • The Gitanos, cantata-operetta, Op. 26 – 1898
  • Violin Sonata in D minor, Op. 28 – ?1898 (pub. 1917)
  • Three Songs, Op. 29 – 1898
  • The Song of Hiawatha, Op. 30 ("Overture to The Song of Hiawatha", 1899; "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast", 1898; "The Death of Minnehaha", 1899; "Hiawatha's Departure", 1900)
  • Three Humoresques, Op. 31 – 1898
  • Ballade in A minor, Op. 33 – 1898
  • African Suite, Op. 35 – 1899
  • Six Songs, Op. 37
  • Three Silhouettes, Op. 38 – 1904
  • Romance in G, Op. 39 – 1900
  • Solemn Prelude, Op. 40 – 1899
  • Scenes From An Everyday Romance, Op. 41 – 1900
  • The Soul's Expression, four sonnets, Op. 42 – 1900
  • The Blind Girl of Castél-Cuillé, Op. 43
  • Idyll, Op. 44 – 1901
  • Six American Lyrics, Op. 45 – 1903
  • Concert Overture, Toussaint L'Ouverture, Op. 46 – 1901
  • Hemo Dance, scherzo, Op. 47(1) – 1902
  • Herod, incidental music, Op. 47(2) – 1901
  • Meg Blane, Rhapsody of the Sea, Op. 48 – 1902
  • Ullyses, incidental music, Op. 49 – 1902
  • Three Song Poems, Op. 50 – 1904
  • Ethiopia Saluting the Colours, march, Op. 51 – 1902
  • Four Novelletten for string orchestra, Op. 52 – 1903
  • The Atonement, sacred cantata, Op. 53 – 1903
  • Five Choral Ballads, Op. 54 – 1904
  • Moorish Dance, Op. 55 – 1904
  • Three Cameos for Piano, Op. 56 – 1904
  • Six Sorrow Songs, Op. 57 – 1904
  • Four African Dances, Op. 58 – 1904
  • Twenty-Four Negro Melodies, Op. 59(1) – 1905
  • Romance, Op. 59(2) – 1904
  • Kubla Khan, rhapsody, Op. 61 – 1905
  • Nero, incidental music, Op. 62 – 1906
  • Symphonic Variations on an African Air, Op. 63 – 1906
  • Scenes de Ballet, Op. 64 – 1906
  • Endymion's Dream, one-act opera, Op. 65 – 1910
  • Forest Scenes, Op. 66 – 1907
  • Part Songs, Op. 67 – 1905
  • Bon-Bon Suite, Op. 68 – 1908
  • Sea Drift, Op. 69 – 1908
  • Faust, incidental music, Op. 70 – 1908
  • Valse Suite: "Three fours", Op. 71 – 1909
  • Thelma, opera in three acts, Op. 72 – 1907–09
  • Ballade in C minor, Op. 73 – 1909
  • Forest of Wild Thyme, incidental music, Op. 74 (five numbers) – 1911–25
  • Rhapsodic Dance, The Bamboula, Op. 75 – 1911
  • A Tale of Old Japan, Op. 76 – 1911
  • Petite Suite de Concert, Op. 77 – 1911
  • Three Impromptus, Op. 78 – 1911
  • Othello, incidental music, Op. 79 – 1911
  • Violin Concerto in G minor, Op. 80 – 1912
  • Two Songs for Baritone Voice, Op. 81 – 1913
  • Hiawatha Ballet in five scenes, Op. 82 – 1920[30]

Without opus number

  • Trio in E minor (1893)
  • The Lee Shore
  • Eulalie
  • Variations for Cello and Piano

Recordings

  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Special Limited First Recording, November 2001, Liverpool Philharmonic Hall: inc. first performance in more than a century of the Quintet for Piano & Strings in G min. Op. 1 [realised for performance from the original score by Martin Anthony Burrage, and performed by him and RLPO colleagues], plus Fantasiestucke for String Quartet Op.5
  • Ballade in A minor, op. 33, Symphonic Variations on an African Air, op. 63 - Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Grant Llewellyn, Argo Records 436 401-2
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Chamber MusicHawthorne String Quartet. Label: Koch International 3-7056-2
  • Heart & Hereafter - Collected Songs, Elizabeth Llewellyn (soprano), Simon Lepper (piano). Label: Orchid Classics ORC100164 (2021)
  • HiawathaWelsh National Opera, – conductor Kenneth Alwyn, soloist Bryn Terfel. Label: Decca 458 591–2
  • Piano & Clarinet QuintetsNash Ensemble. Label: Hyperion CDA67590
  • Violin Sonata; African Dances; Hiawathan Sketches; Petite Suite de Concert – David Juritz (violin), Michael Dussek (piano). Label: Epoch CDLX 7127
  • Sir Malcolm Sargent conducts British Music includes "Othello Suite" – New Symphony Orchestra. Label: Beulah 1PD13
  • The Romantic Violin Concerto Volume 5 includes "Violin Concerto in G minor, Op. 80" – Anthony Marwood (violin), BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (conductor). Label: Hyperion CDA67420
  • Symphony, Op. 8, Aarhus Symphony Orchestra, Douglas Bostock (conductor), in The British Symphonic Collection, Vol. 15. Classico label by Olufsen Records
  • 2nd of the Three Impromptus, Op. 78 for organ, on Now Let Us Sing!, 2013 recording by the Choir of Worcester Cathedral, played by Christopher Allsop.
  • Fantasiestücke in Dvořák: String Quartet Op 106; Coleridge-Taylor: Fantasiestücke by the Takács Quartet, Hyperion Records, July 2023.

References

  1. ^ a b Stewart, Earl; Duran, Jane (1999). (PDF). Newsletter on Philosophy and the Black Experience. American Philosophical Association. 99 (1): 6–8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 November 2005. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
  2. ^ Kay, Charles (2001). "The Marriage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Jessie Walmisley". Black Music Research Journal. 21 (2): 159–178. doi:10.2307/3181601. JSTOR 3181601.
  3. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor". Online Gallery Black Europeans. The British Library. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  4. ^ a b Phillips, Mike. "Black Europeans: Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)" (PDF). British Library.
  5. ^ Greenwell, Bill. . Lost Lives. Archived from the original on 25 September 2014.
  6. ^ a b "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912), Britain's Foremost Black Classical Composer: The Centenary Legacy". hilaryburrage.com. 1 September 2012.
  7. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Composer". jeffreygreen.co.uk. 14 October 2009.
  8. ^ Clements, Robert (18 September 1997). "African Romances - Samuel Coleridge Taylor". thompsonian.info.
  9. ^ "Celebrating the life of Sierra Leone's ingenious classical music composer – Samuel Coleridge-Taylor". 29 January 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  10. ^ Kay, Charles (2001). "The Marriage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Jessie Walmisley". Black Music Research Journal. 21 (2): 159–178. doi:10.2307/3181601. JSTOR 3181601.
  11. ^ a b c Green, Jeffrey (19 June 2009). "Do we really know Samuel Coleridge-Taylor?" (PDF). Black & Asian Studies Association.
  12. ^ Roberts, Brian (2012). "A London Legacy of Ira Aldridge: Henry Francis Downing and the Paratheatrical Poetics of Plot and Cast(e)". Modern Drama. 55 (3): 396–397. doi:10.3138/md.55.3.386. S2CID 162466396.
  13. ^ Elford, Charles. "The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story". Black Mahler.
  14. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's Hiawatha's Wedding Feast". Cambridge Community Chorus.
  15. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor". Classical Archives.
  16. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor". BBC Music.
  17. ^ "Along the Color Line: Art & Music". The Crisis. The Crisis Publishing Company, Inc. 6 (5): 219. September 1913. ISSN 0011-1422 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ De Lerma, Dominique-René. "African Heritage Symphonic Series, Vol. I". Database of Recorded American Music.
  19. ^ 'Favourite Orchestral Classics', Somm Ariadne 5012, reviewed at MusicWeb International
  20. ^ Burrage, Hilary (26 January 2012). "Dominique-Rene de Lerma donation of Coleridge-Taylor bibliography and list of works to the SCTF website". Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation.
  21. ^ "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor blue plaque". openplaques.org.
  22. ^ Williamson, Hannah (18 June 2013). . Croydon Guardian. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014.
  23. ^ LongfellowChorus (18 September 2015). "Samuel Coleridge Taylor and His Music in America, 1900–1912". YouTube. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  24. ^ "The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story". www.southwark.gov.uk. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
  25. ^ "The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story". nowcroydon.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  26. ^ "Chineke! Orchestra".
  27. ^ . Harvard University Gazette. 15 October 1998. Archived from the original on 27 August 2007. Retrieved 8 February 2008.
  28. ^ Carr, Catherine (2005). The Music of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912): A Critical and Analytical Study (PDF) (Thesis). University of Durham. pp. 160 to 198.
  29. ^ . Surrey Opera.org. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2011.
  30. ^ Coleridge-Taylor, Avril, The Heritage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, London: Dobson, 1979, pp. 145–154.

Sources and further reading

  • Coleridge-Taylor, Avril (1979). The Heritage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. London: Dennis Dobson. ISBN 0-234-77089-9.
  • Coleridge-Taylor, J. F. (1943). A Memory Sketch, or Personal Reminiscences of My Husband: Genius and Musician: S. Coleridge Taylor 1875–1912. London: John Crowther. Bobby & Co., London (n.d)
  • Coleridge-Taylor, J. F. (1943). Genius and Musician: S. Coleridge Taylor 1875–1912; A Memory Sketch or Personal Reminiscences of My Husband. London: John Crowther., personal printing
  • Elford, Charles (2008). Black Mahler: The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story. London: Grosvenor House Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-906210-78-6.
  • Green, Jeffrey (2011). Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, a Musical Life. London: Pickering & Chatto. ISBN 978-1848931619.
  • Reid, Charles (1968). Malcolm Sargent: a biography. London: Hamish Hamilton Ltd. ISBN 0-241-91316-0.
  • Sayers, W. C. Berwick (1927). Samuel Coleridge-Taylor – Musician. His Life and Letters. London: Augener.
  • Self, Geoffrey (1995). The Hiawatha Man: the Life & Work of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Aldershot, England: Scolar Press. ISBN 0-85967-983-7.

External links

  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation
  • Songs by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor at The Art Song Project
  • "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912)", AfriClassical.com
  • "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912)", Composer of the Week, BBC Radio 3
  • "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912)" at BBC Music
  • "Who Was Samuel Coleridge-Taylor? (He's Not to Be Confused with Samuel Taylor Coleridge)", Londonist, 19 May 2017.
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and His Music in America, 1900–1912 The full Longfellow Chorus documentary on YouTube
  • Samuel Coleridge Taylor. Melody (1898). Andrew Pink (2021) 'Exordia ad missam'.

Scores

  • The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Collection at the Irving S. Gilmore Music Library, Yale University
  • Four characteristic waltzes. Op. 22 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • "Five and twenty sailormen" at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Concerto in G minor for violin & orchestra, op. 80 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Organ music, Selections at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Sonata in D minor for violin and piano, op. 28 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Variations in B minor for violoncello & piano at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Liner Notes for the Hyperion recording of the Violin Concerto Op. 80
  • Free scores by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Free scores by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)

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This article is about the composer For the poet see Samuel Taylor Coleridge For other uses see Coleridge Taylor disambiguation Samuel Coleridge Taylor 15 August 1875 1 September 1912 was a British composer and conductor Samuel Coleridge TaylorSamuel Coleridge Taylor in 1905BornSamuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 08 15 15 August 1875Holborn London EnglandDied1 September 1912 1912 09 01 aged 37 Croydon Surrey EnglandOccupation s Classical composer and musicianSpouseJessie WalmisleyChildrenHiawatha and Avril Coleridge TaylorOf mixed race birth Coleridge Taylor achieved such success that he was referred to by white New York musicians as the African Mahler when he had three tours of the United States in the early 1900s 1 He was particularly known for his three cantatas on the epic 1855 poem The Song of Hiawatha by American Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Coleridge Taylor premiered the first section in 1898 when he was 22 He married a British woman Jessie Walmisley and both their children had musical careers 2 Their son Hiawatha adapted his father s music for a variety of performances Their daughter Avril Coleridge Taylor became a composer conductor Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Marriage 3 Career 4 Death 5 Honours 6 Legacy 7 Posthumous publishing 7 1 Thelma the missing opera 8 List of compositions 8 1 With opus number 8 2 Without opus number 9 Recordings 10 References 11 Sources and further reading 12 External links 12 1 ScoresEarly life and education Edit Samuel Coleridge Taylor c 1893Samuel Coleridge Taylor was born at 15 Theobalds Road in Holborn London 3 to Alice Hare Martin 1856 1953 4 an Englishwoman and Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor a Krio man from Sierra Leone who had studied medicine in London and later became an administrator in West Africa They were not married and Daniel had returned to Africa without learning that Alice was pregnant Alice s parents had not been married at her birth either 5 Alice named her son Samuel Coleridge Taylor without a hyphen after the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge 6 Alice lived with her father Benjamin Holmans and his family after Samuel was born Holmans was a skilled farrier and was married to a woman who was not Alice s mother with whom he had four daughters and at least one son Alice and her father called her son Coleridge In 1887 she married George Evans a railway worker and lived in Croydon on a street adjoining the railway line 7 There were numerous musicians on Taylor s mother s side and her father played the violin teaching it to his grandson from an early age Taylor s musical ability quickly became apparent and his grandfather paid for him to have violin lessons The extended family arranged for Taylor to study at the Royal College of Music from the age of 15 He changed from the violin to composition working under Charles Villiers Stanford After completing his degree he became a professional musician he was appointed a professor at the Crystal Palace School of Music and began conducting the orchestra at the Croydon Conservatoire He later used the name Samuel Coleridge Taylor with a hyphen said to be following a printer s typographical error 8 In 1894 Taylor s father was appointed a coroner in the colony of Gambia 9 Marriage Edit Christmas greeting card displaying the Coleridge Taylor family 1912In 1899 Coleridge Taylor married Jessie Walmisley whom he had met as a fellow student at the Royal College of Music Six years older than he Jessie had left the college in 1893 Her parents objected to the marriage because Taylor was of mixed race parentage but relented and attended the wedding The couple had a son named Hiawatha 1900 1980 after a Native American immortalised in poetry and a daughter Gwendolen Avril 1903 1998 Both had careers in music Hiawatha adapted his father s works 10 Gwendolen started composing music early in life and also became a conductor composer she used the professional name of Avril Coleridge Taylor Career EditBy 1896 Coleridge Taylor was already earning a reputation as a composer He was later helped by Edward Elgar who recommended him to the Three Choirs Festival His Ballade in A minor was premiered there His early work was also guided by the influential music editor and critic August Jaeger of music publisher Novello he told Elgar that Taylor was a genius On the strength of Hiawatha s Wedding Feast which was conducted by Professor Charles Villiers Stanford at its 1898 premiere and proved to be highly popular Coleridge Taylor made three tours of the United States in 1904 1906 and 1910 11 In the United States he became increasingly interested in his paternal racial heritage Coleridge Taylor participated as the youngest delegate at the 1900 First Pan African Conference held in London and met leading Americans through this connection including poet Paul Laurence Dunbar and scholar and activist W E B Du Bois 11 Coleridge Taylor s father Daniel Taylor was descended from African American slaves who were freed by the British and evacuated from the colonies at the end of the American War of Independence some 3 000 of these Black Loyalists were resettled in Nova Scotia Others were resettled in London and the Caribbean In 1792 some 1200 blacks from Nova Scotia chose to leave what they considered a hostile climate and society and moved to Sierra Leone which the British had established as a colony for free blacks The Black Loyalists joined free blacks some of whom were also African Americans from London and were joined by maroons from Jamaica and slaves liberated at sea from illegal slave ships by the British navy At one stage Coleridge Taylor seriously considered emigrating to the United States as he was intrigued by his father s family s past there This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1904 on his first tour to the United States Coleridge Taylor was received by President Theodore Roosevelt at the White House a rare event in those days for a man of African descent His music was widely performed and he had great support among African Americans Coleridge Taylor sought to draw from traditional African music and integrate it into the classical tradition which he considered Johannes Brahms to have done with Hungarian music and Antonin Dvorak with Bohemian music Having met the African American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar in London Taylor set some of his poems to music A joint recital between Taylor and Dunbar was arranged in London under the patronage of US Ambassador John Milton Hay It was organised by Henry Francis Downing an African American playwright and London resident 12 Dunbar and other black people encouraged Coleridge Taylor to draw from his Sierra Leonean ancestry and the music of the African continent citation needed Due to his success Coleridge Taylor was invited to be one of the judges at music festivals He was said to be personally shy but was still effective as a conductor citation needed Composers were not handsomely paid for their music and they often sold the rights to works outright in order to make immediate income This caused them to lose the royalties earned by the publishers who had invested in the music distribution through publication The popular Hiawatha s Wedding Feast sold hundreds of thousands of copies but Coleridge Taylor had sold the music outright for the sum of 15 guineas so did not benefit directly 13 14 15 He learned to retain his rights and earned royalties for other compositions after achieving wide renown but always struggled financially citation needed Death EditColeridge Taylor was 37 when he died of pneumonia His death is often attributed to the stress of his financial situation 16 He was buried in Bandon Hill Cemetery Wallington Surrey today in the London Borough of Sutton Honours EditThe inscription on Coleridge Taylor s carved headstone includes four bars of music from the composer s best known work Hiawatha and a tribute from his close friend the poet Alfred Noyes that includes these words Too young to die his great simplicity his happy courage in an alien world his gentleness made all that knew him love him King George V granted Jessie Coleridge Taylor the young widow an annual pension of 100 evidence of the high regard in which the composer was held 17 In 1912 a memorial concert was held at the Royal Albert Hall and garnered over 1400 for the composer s family After Coleridge Taylor s death in 1912 musicians were concerned that he and his family had received no royalties from his Song of Hiawatha which was one of the most successful and popular works written in the previous 50 years He had sold the rights early in order to get income His case contributed to their formation of the Performing Right Society an effort to gain revenues for musicians through performance as well as publication and distribution of music 4 Coleridge Taylor s work continued to be popular He was later championed by conductor Malcolm Sargent Between 1928 and 1939 Sargent conducted ten seasons of a large costumed ballet version of The Song of Hiawatha at the Royal Albert Hall performed by the Royal Choral Society 600 to 800 singers and 200 dancers Legacy Edit Plaques honouring Samuel Coleridge Taylor in Dagnall Park Selhurst top and South Norwood United Kingdom bottom Coleridge Taylor s greatest success was undoubtedly his cantata Hiawatha s Wedding Feast which was widely performed by choral groups in England during Coleridge Taylor s lifetime and in the decades after his death Its popularity was rivalled only by the choral standards Handel s Messiah and Mendelssohn s Elijah 18 The composer soon followed Hiawatha s Wedding Feast with two other cantatas about Hiawatha The Death of Minnehaha and Hiawatha s Departure All three were published together along with an Overture as The Song of Hiawatha Op 30 The tremendously popular Hiawatha seasons at the Royal Albert Hall which continued until 1939 were conducted by Sargent and involved hundreds of choristers and scenery covering the organ loft Hiawatha s Wedding Feast is still occasionally revived Coleridge Taylor also composed chamber music anthems and the African Dances for violin among other works The Petite Suite de Concert is still regularly played 19 He set one poem by his namesake Samuel Taylor Coleridge The Legend of Kubla Khan Coleridge Taylor was greatly admired by African Americans in 1901 a 200 voice African American chorus was founded in Washington D C named the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Society He visited the United States three times in the early 1900s receiving great acclaim and earned the title the African Mahler from the white orchestral musicians in New York in 1910 1 Public schools were named after him in Louisville Kentucky and in Baltimore Maryland Coleridge Taylor composed a violin concerto for the American violinist Maud Powell The American performance of the work was subject to rewriting because the parts were lost en route not as legend has it on the RMS Titanic but on another ship 11 The concerto has been recorded by Philippe Graffin and the Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra under Michael Hankinson nominated Editor s Choice in Gramophone magazine Anthony Marwood and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Martyn Brabbins on Hyperion Records and Lorraine McAslan and the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Nicholas Braithwaite on the Lyrita label It was also performed at Harvard University s Sanders Theatre in the autumn of 1998 by John McLaughlin Williams and William Thomas as part of the 100th anniversary celebration of the composition of Hiawatha s Wedding Feast Lists of Coleridge Taylor s compositions and recordings of his work and of the many articles papers and books about Coleridge Taylor s life and legacy are available through the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Foundation and the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Network 20 There are two blue plaques in his memory one in Dagnall Park South Norwood 21 and the other in St Leonards Road Croydon at the house where he died A metal figure in the likeness of Coleridge Taylor has been installed in Charles Street Croydon 22 A two hour documentary Samuel Coleridge Taylor and His Music in America 1900 1912 2013 was made about him and includes a performance of several of his pieces as well as information about him and his prominent place in music It was written and directed by Charles Kaufmann and produced by The Longfellow Chorus 23 A feature animation The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Story 2013 was made about him written and directed by Jason Young It was screened as part of Southwark Black History Month 24 and Croydon Black History Month in 2020 25 On 26 August 2021 Coleridge Taylor s Symphony in A minor received its Proms premiere by the Chineke Orchestra with Kalena Bovell 26 Posthumous publishing Edit A 1912 obituary in the African Methodist Episcopal Church ReviewIn 1999 freelance music editor Patrick Meadows identified three important chamber works by Coleridge Taylor that had never been printed or made widely available to musicians A handwritten performing parts edition of the Piano Quintet from the original in the Royal College of Music RCM Library had been prepared earlier by violinist Martin Anthony Burrage of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra The first modern performance of the Piano Quintet was given on 7 November 2001 by Burrage s chamber music group Ensemble Liverpool Live A Music in Liverpool Philharmonic Hall The lunchtime recital included the Fantasiestucke Live recordings of this performance are lodged with the RCM and the British Library 6 The artists were Andrew Berridge violin Martin Anthony Tony Burrage violin Joanna Lacey viola Michael Parrott cello and John Peace piano After receiving copies of the work from the RCM in London Patrick Meadows made printed playing editions of the Nonet Piano Quintet and Piano Trio The works were performed in Meadows s regular chamber music festival on the island of Majorca and were well received by the public as well as the performers The first modern performances of some of these works were done in the early 1990s by the Boston Massachusetts based Coleridge Ensemble led by William Thomas of Phillips Academy Andover This group subsequently made world premiere recordings of the Nonet Fantasiestucke for string quartet and Six Negro Folksongs for piano trio which were released in 1998 by Afka Records Thomas a champion of lost works by black composers also revived Coleridge s Hiawatha s Wedding Feast in a performance commemorating the composition s 100th anniversary with the Cambridge Community Chorus at Harvard s Sanders Theatre in the spring of 1998 27 The Nash Ensemble s recording of the Piano Quintet was released in 2007 In 2006 Meadows finished engraving the first edition of Coleridge Taylor s Symphony in A minor Meadows has also transcribed from the RCM manuscript the Haytian Dances a work virtually identical to the Noveletten but with a fifth movement inserted by Coleridge Taylor based on the Scherzo of the symphony This work is for string orchestra tambourine and triangle Thelma the missing opera Edit Coleridge Taylor s only large scale operatic work Thelma was long believed to have been lost As recently as 1995 Geoffrey Self in his biography of Coleridge Taylor The Hiawatha Man stated that the manuscript of Thelma had not been located and that the piece may have been destroyed by its creator While researching for a PhD on the life and music of Samuel Coleridge Taylor Catherine Carr unearthed the manuscripts of Thelma in the British Library She assembled a libretto and catalogued the opera in her thesis presenting a first critical examination of the work by a thorough investigation of the discovered manuscripts including copious typeset examples 28 The work subsequently appeared as such on the catalogue of the British Library Thelma is a saga of deceit magic retribution and the triumph of love over wickedness The composer followed Richard Wagner s manner in eschewing the established numbers opera format preferring to blend recitative aria and ensemble into a seamless whole It is possible that he had read Marie Corelli s 1887 Nordic novel Thelma it appears that the name Thelma may have been created by Corelli for her heroine Coleridge Taylor composed Thelma between 1907 and 1909 it is alternatively entitled The Amulet The full score and vocal score in the British Library are both in the composer s hand the full score is unbound but complete save that the vocal parts do not have the words after the first few folios but the vocal score is bound in three volumes and complete with words Patrick Meadows and Lionel Harrison prepared a type set full score vocal score and libretto the librettist is uncredited and may be Coleridge Taylor himself As to the heroine of the title the composer changed her name to Freda in both full and vocal scores although in the full score he occasionally forgets himself and writes Thelma instead of Freda Perhaps Coleridge Taylor changed the name of his heroine and might have changed the name of the opera had it been produced to avoid creating the assumption that his work was a treatment of Corelli s then very popular novel Since that precaution is scarcely necessary today Meadows and Harrison decided to revert to the original Thelma There are minor discrepancies between the full score and the vocal score the occasional passage occurring in different keys in the two for example but nothing that would inhibit the production of a complete staged performance Thelma received its world premiere in Croydon s Ashcroft Theatre in February 2012 the centenary year of the composer s death performed by Surrey Opera using an edition prepared by Stephen Anthony Brown 29 It was conducted by Jonathan Butcher directed by Christopher Cowell and designed by Bridget Kimak Joanna Weeks sang the title role with Alberto Sousa as Eric and Hakan Vramsmo as Carl List of compositions EditWith opus number Edit Piano Quintet in G minor Op 1 1893 Nonet in F minor for oboe clarinet bassoon horn violin viola cello contrabass and piano Op 2 1894 Suite for Violin and Organ or piano Op 3 Suite de Pieces 1893 Ballade in D minor Op 4 1895 Five Fantasiestucke Op 5 1896 Little Songs for Little Folks Op 6 1898 Zara s Earrings Op 7 1895 Symphony in A minor Op 8 1896 Two Romantic Pieces Op 9 1896 Quintet in F sharp minor for clarinet and strings Op 10 1895 Southern Love Songs Op 12 1896 String Quartet in D minor Op 13 1896 lost Legend Concertstuck Op 14 Land of the Sun Op 15 1897 Three Hiawatha Sketches for violin and piano Op 16 1897 African Romances P L Dunbar Op 17 1897 Morning and Evening Service in F Op 18 1899 Two Moorish Tone Pictures Op 19 1897 Gypsy Suite Op 20 1898 Part Songs Op 21 1898 Four Characteristic Waltzes Op 22 1899 Valse Caprice Op 23 1898 In Memoriam three rhapsodies for low voice and piano Op 24 1898 Dream Lovers Operatic Romance Op 25 1898 The Gitanos cantata operetta Op 26 1898 Violin Sonata in D minor Op 28 1898 pub 1917 Three Songs Op 29 1898 The Song of Hiawatha Op 30 Overture to The Song of Hiawatha 1899 Hiawatha s Wedding Feast 1898 The Death of Minnehaha 1899 Hiawatha s Departure 1900 Three Humoresques Op 31 1898 Ballade in A minor Op 33 1898 African Suite Op 35 1899 Six Songs Op 37 Three Silhouettes Op 38 1904 Romance in G Op 39 1900 Solemn Prelude Op 40 1899 Scenes From An Everyday Romance Op 41 1900 The Soul s Expression four sonnets Op 42 1900 The Blind Girl of Castel Cuille Op 43 Idyll Op 44 1901 Six American Lyrics Op 45 1903 Concert Overture Toussaint L Ouverture Op 46 1901 Hemo Dance scherzo Op 47 1 1902 Herod incidental music Op 47 2 1901 Meg Blane Rhapsody of the Sea Op 48 1902 Ullyses incidental music Op 49 1902 Three Song Poems Op 50 1904 Ethiopia Saluting the Colours march Op 51 1902 Four Novelletten for string orchestra Op 52 1903 The Atonement sacred cantata Op 53 1903 Five Choral Ballads Op 54 1904 Moorish Dance Op 55 1904 Three Cameos for Piano Op 56 1904 Six Sorrow Songs Op 57 1904 Four African Dances Op 58 1904 Twenty Four Negro Melodies Op 59 1 1905 Romance Op 59 2 1904 Kubla Khan rhapsody Op 61 1905 Nero incidental music Op 62 1906 Symphonic Variations on an African Air Op 63 1906 Scenes de Ballet Op 64 1906 Endymion s Dream one act opera Op 65 1910 Forest Scenes Op 66 1907 Part Songs Op 67 1905 Bon Bon Suite Op 68 1908 Sea Drift Op 69 1908 Faust incidental music Op 70 1908 Valse Suite Three fours Op 71 1909 Thelma opera in three acts Op 72 1907 09 Ballade in C minor Op 73 1909 Forest of Wild Thyme incidental music Op 74 five numbers 1911 25 Rhapsodic Dance The Bamboula Op 75 1911 A Tale of Old Japan Op 76 1911 Petite Suite de Concert Op 77 1911 Three Impromptus Op 78 1911 Othello incidental music Op 79 1911 Violin Concerto in G minor Op 80 1912 Two Songs for Baritone Voice Op 81 1913 Hiawatha Ballet in five scenes Op 82 1920 30 Without opus number Edit Trio in E minor 1893 The Lee Shore Eulalie Variations for Cello and PianoRecordings EditSamuel Coleridge Taylor Special Limited First Recording November 2001 Liverpool Philharmonic Hall inc first performance in more than a century of the Quintet for Piano amp Strings in G min Op 1 realised for performance from the original score by Martin Anthony Burrage and performed by him and RLPO colleagues plus Fantasiestucke for String Quartet Op 5 Ballade in A minor op 33 Symphonic Variations on an African Air op 63 Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Grant Llewellyn Argo Records 436 401 2 Samuel Coleridge Taylor Chamber Music Hawthorne String Quartet Label Koch International 3 7056 2 Heart amp Hereafter Collected Songs Elizabeth Llewellyn soprano Simon Lepper piano Label Orchid Classics ORC100164 2021 Hiawatha Welsh National Opera conductor Kenneth Alwyn soloist Bryn Terfel Label Decca 458 591 2 Piano amp Clarinet Quintets Nash Ensemble Label Hyperion CDA67590 Violin Sonata African Dances Hiawathan Sketches Petite Suite de Concert David Juritz violin Michael Dussek piano Label Epoch CDLX 7127 Sir Malcolm Sargent conducts British Music includes Othello Suite New Symphony Orchestra Label Beulah 1PD13 The Romantic Violin Concerto Volume 5 includes Violin Concerto in G minor Op 80 Anthony Marwood violin BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Martyn Brabbins conductor Label Hyperion CDA67420 Symphony Op 8 Aarhus Symphony Orchestra Douglas Bostock conductor in The British Symphonic Collection Vol 15 Classico label by Olufsen Records 2nd of the Three Impromptus Op 78 for organ on Now Let Us Sing 2013 recording by the Choir of Worcester Cathedral played by Christopher Allsop Fantasiestucke in Dvorak String Quartet Op 106 Coleridge Taylor Fantasiestucke by the Takacs Quartet Hyperion Records July 2023 References Edit a b Stewart Earl Duran Jane 1999 Coleridge Taylor Concatenationism and Essentialism in an Anglo African Composer PDF Newsletter on Philosophy and the Black Experience American Philosophical Association 99 1 6 8 Archived from the original PDF on 8 November 2005 Retrieved 24 February 2011 Kay Charles 2001 The Marriage of Samuel Coleridge Taylor and Jessie Walmisley Black Music Research Journal 21 2 159 178 doi 10 2307 3181601 JSTOR 3181601 Samuel Coleridge Taylor Online Gallery Black Europeans The British Library Retrieved 17 February 2022 a b Phillips Mike Black Europeans Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 PDF British Library Greenwell Bill Coleridge Taylor Lost Lives Archived from the original on 25 September 2014 a b Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 Britain s Foremost Black Classical Composer The Centenary Legacy hilaryburrage com 1 September 2012 Samuel Coleridge Taylor Composer jeffreygreen co uk 14 October 2009 Clements Robert 18 September 1997 African Romances Samuel Coleridge Taylor thompsonian info Celebrating the life of Sierra Leone s ingenious classical music composer Samuel Coleridge Taylor 29 January 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Kay Charles 2001 The Marriage of Samuel Coleridge Taylor and Jessie Walmisley Black Music Research Journal 21 2 159 178 doi 10 2307 3181601 JSTOR 3181601 a b c Green Jeffrey 19 June 2009 Do we really know Samuel Coleridge Taylor PDF Black amp Asian Studies Association Roberts Brian 2012 A London Legacy of Ira Aldridge Henry Francis Downing and the Paratheatrical Poetics of Plot and Cast e Modern Drama 55 3 396 397 doi 10 3138 md 55 3 386 S2CID 162466396 Elford Charles The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Story Black Mahler Samuel Coleridge Taylor s Hiawatha s Wedding Feast Cambridge Community Chorus Samuel Coleridge Taylor Classical Archives Samuel Coleridge Taylor BBC Music Along the Color Line Art amp Music The Crisis The Crisis Publishing Company Inc 6 5 219 September 1913 ISSN 0011 1422 via Google Books De Lerma Dominique Rene African Heritage Symphonic Series Vol I Database of Recorded American Music Favourite Orchestral Classics Somm Ariadne 5012 reviewed at MusicWeb International Burrage Hilary 26 January 2012 Dominique Rene de Lerma donation of Coleridge Taylor bibliography and list of works to the SCTF website Samuel Coleridge Taylor Foundation Samuel Coleridge Taylor blue plaque openplaques org Williamson Hannah 18 June 2013 Ronnie Corbett Samuel Coleridge Taylor and Peggy Ashcroft immortalised on bench in Charles Street Croydon Croydon Guardian Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 LongfellowChorus 18 September 2015 Samuel Coleridge Taylor and His Music in America 1900 1912 YouTube Retrieved 16 February 2018 The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Story www southwark gov uk Retrieved 27 October 2020 The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Story nowcroydon uk Retrieved 28 November 2020 Chineke Orchestra Concert to Feature Centennial Performance of Work by Composer Samuel Coleridge Taylor Harvard University Gazette 15 October 1998 Archived from the original on 27 August 2007 Retrieved 8 February 2008 Carr Catherine 2005 The Music of Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 A Critical and Analytical Study PDF Thesis University of Durham pp 160 to 198 Thelma by Samuel Coleridge Taylor Surrey Opera org Archived from the original on 1 April 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2011 Coleridge Taylor Avril The Heritage of Samuel Coleridge Taylor London Dobson 1979 pp 145 154 Sources and further reading EditColeridge Taylor Avril 1979 The Heritage of Samuel Coleridge Taylor London Dennis Dobson ISBN 0 234 77089 9 Coleridge Taylor J F 1943 A Memory Sketch or Personal Reminiscences of My Husband Genius and Musician S Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 London John Crowther Bobby amp Co London n d Coleridge Taylor J F 1943 Genius and Musician S Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 A Memory Sketch or Personal Reminiscences of My Husband London John Crowther personal printing Elford Charles 2008 Black Mahler The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Story London Grosvenor House Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 906210 78 6 Green Jeffrey 2011 Samuel Coleridge Taylor a Musical Life London Pickering amp Chatto ISBN 978 1848931619 Reid Charles 1968 Malcolm Sargent a biography London Hamish Hamilton Ltd ISBN 0 241 91316 0 Sayers W C Berwick 1927 Samuel Coleridge Taylor Musician His Life and Letters London Augener Self Geoffrey 1995 The Hiawatha Man the Life amp Work of Samuel Coleridge Taylor Aldershot England Scolar Press ISBN 0 85967 983 7 External links Edit Biography portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samuel Coleridge Taylor Wikisource has original works by or about Samuel Coleridge Taylor Samuel Coleridge Taylor Foundation Songs by Samuel Coleridge Taylor at The Art Song Project Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 AfriClassical com Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 Composer of the Week BBC Radio 3 Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 at BBC Music Who Was Samuel Coleridge Taylor He s Not to Be Confused with Samuel Taylor Coleridge Londonist 19 May 2017 Samuel Coleridge Taylor and His Music in America 1900 1912 The full Longfellow Chorus documentary on YouTube Samuel Coleridge Taylor Melody 1898 Andrew Pink 2021 Exordia ad missam Scores Edit The Samuel Coleridge Taylor Collection at the Irving S Gilmore Music Library Yale University Four characteristic waltzes Op 22 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Five and twenty sailormen at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Concerto in G minor for violin amp orchestra op 80 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Organ music Selections at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Sonata in D minor for violin and piano op 28 at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Variations in B minor for violoncello amp piano at the Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Liner Notes for the Hyperion recording of the Violin Concerto Op 80 Free scores by Samuel Coleridge Taylor at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Samuel Coleridge Taylor in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Coleridge Taylor amp oldid 1169969329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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