Granville Bantock Explained

Sir Granville Bantock (7 August 1868  - 16 October 1946), was a British composer of classical music.

Granville Ransome Bantock[1] was born in London. He was intended by his parents (his father was a Scottish doctor)[2] for the Indian Civil Service but was compulsively drawn into the musical world. His first teacher was Dr Gordon Saunders at Trinity College of Music. Later he studied with Frederick Corder at the Royal Academy of Music. There he won the Macfarren Prize in the first year of its operation. Early conducting engagements took him around the world with a musical comedy troupe. He founded a music magazine, The New Quarterly Music Review[2] , but this lasted only a few years. In 1897, he became conductor at the New Brighton Tower concerts[2] , where he pioneered the works of Joseph Holbrooke, Frederic Hymen Cowen, Charles Steggall, Edward German, Hubert Parry, Charles Villiers Stanford, Corder and others, frequently devoting whole concerts to a single composer. He was also conductor of the Liverpool Orchestral Society with which he premièred Delius's Brigg Fair on 18 January 1908. He became Principal of the Birmingham and Midland Institute school of music in 1900[2] . He was a close friend of fellow composer Havergal Brian. He was Peyton Professor of Music at the University of Birmingham from 1908 to 1934 (in which post he succeeded Sir Edward Elgar)[2] [3] . In 1934, he was elected Chairman of the Corporation of Trinity College of Music in London. He was knighted in 1930[2] .

His music was influenced by folk song of the Hebrides (as in the 1915 Hebridean Symphony) and the works of Richard Wagner. Many of his works have an "exotic" element, including the choral epic Omar Khayyám (1906 - 09). Among his other better-known works are the overture The Pierrot of the Minute (1908) and the Pagan Symphony (1928). Many of his works have been commercially recorded since the early 1990s.

He was influential in the founding of the City of Birmingham orchestra (later the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra), whose first performance in September 1920 was of his overture Saul. Bantock's Hebridean Symphony was recorded by the CBO on 28 January 1928 at Riley Hall, Constitution Hill, Birmingham. This acoustic version conducted by Adrian Boult was never released.

A Bantock Society was established shortly after the composer's death in London. Its first president was Jean Sibelius, a composer whose music was championed by Bantock during the early years of the century. Sibelius dedicated his Third Symphony to Bantock.

Edward Elgar dedicated the second of his Pomp and Circumstance Marches to Bantock.

Select List of Works

Opera

Choral

Choral Unaccompanied

Male Voice

Solo Voice and Orchestra

Symphony

Concerto

Tone Poem

Orchestra

Brass Band

Incidental Music

Chamber

Piano

Song

Songs of the East (Helena Bantock) and many others

Discography

References

  1. http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/b/bantock.html The Lied and Art Song Texts Page
  2. Keith Anderton, slevenotes, Hebridean Symphony, Naxos 8.555473, 1989
  3. http://www.download.bham.ac.uk/buzz/issue21/story3.htm

External links