Henry Balfour Gardiner: Difference between revisions
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==Life== | ==Life== | ||
'''Born:''' 18 December 1877 | '''Born:''' 18 December 1877 | ||
'''Died:''' 22 October 1950 | '''Died:''' 22 October 1950 | ||
'''Biography''' | |||
Henry Balfour Gardiner | Henry Balfour Gardiner was an English musician, composer, and teacher. Between his conventional education at Charterhouse School and New College, Oxford, where he obtained only a pass degree, Gardiner was a piano student at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt where he was taught by Knorr and Uzielli, who had been a pupil of Clara Schumann. Gardiner taught music briefly at Winchester College (1907), collected English folk music (1905-1906), and composed. His works included compositions in a variety of genres, including two symphonies, but many of his scores are lost and only a very limited amount of his music survives. In part because Gardiner gave up composing in 1925, largely because he was intensely self-critical, and much of his lost music was probably destroyed by him. | ||
His best-known work Evening Hymn (or Te lucis ante terminum) (1908) is a lush, romantic work for 8 part choir and organ, of dense harmonies. For most of the time, it sits in four parts, though the Treble, Alto, Tenor and Bass parts all sub-divide at various points during its duration. It is not explicitly eight part though, such as Charles Woods' 'Hail Gladdening Light' arrangement from a similar time period. It is considered a classic of the English choral repertoire. It is still regularly performed as an anthem at evensong in Anglican churches. | His best-known work Evening Hymn (or Te lucis ante terminum) (1908) is a lush, romantic work for 8 part choir and organ, of dense harmonies. For most of the time, it sits in four parts, though the Treble, Alto, Tenor and Bass parts all sub-divide at various points during its duration. It is not explicitly eight part though, such as Charles Woods' 'Hail Gladdening Light' arrangement from a similar time period. It is considered a classic of the English choral repertoire. It is still regularly performed as an anthem at evensong in Anglican churches. | ||
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==List of choral works== | ==List of choral works== | ||
{{Legend}} | |||
*''Evening Hymn'' | |||
[http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Special:Whatlinksher77Henry_Balfour_Gardiner Click here to search for composer on ChoralWiki] | [http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Special:Whatlinksher77Henry_Balfour_Gardiner Click here to search for composer on ChoralWiki] | ||
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
''add web links here'' | |||
[[Category:1835 births|Gardiner, Henry Balfour]] | [[Category:1835 births|Gardiner, Henry Balfour]] |
Revision as of 05:00, 12 December 2007
Some or all of the works by this composer are subject to copyright, and not available on CPDL. You may be able to buy scores from Sheet Music Plus, which provides CPDL up to 8% of every sale we refer. This helps with the costs of running CPDL's web site. |
Life
Born: 18 December 1877
Died: 22 October 1950
Biography
Henry Balfour Gardiner was an English musician, composer, and teacher. Between his conventional education at Charterhouse School and New College, Oxford, where he obtained only a pass degree, Gardiner was a piano student at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt where he was taught by Knorr and Uzielli, who had been a pupil of Clara Schumann. Gardiner taught music briefly at Winchester College (1907), collected English folk music (1905-1906), and composed. His works included compositions in a variety of genres, including two symphonies, but many of his scores are lost and only a very limited amount of his music survives. In part because Gardiner gave up composing in 1925, largely because he was intensely self-critical, and much of his lost music was probably destroyed by him.
His best-known work Evening Hymn (or Te lucis ante terminum) (1908) is a lush, romantic work for 8 part choir and organ, of dense harmonies. For most of the time, it sits in four parts, though the Treble, Alto, Tenor and Bass parts all sub-divide at various points during its duration. It is not explicitly eight part though, such as Charles Woods' 'Hail Gladdening Light' arrangement from a similar time period. It is considered a classic of the English choral repertoire. It is still regularly performed as an anthem at evensong in Anglican churches.
(Above is from Wikipedia... for whole biography use link below.)
View the Wikipedia article on Henry Balfour Gardiner.
List of choral works
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- Evening Hymn
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Publications
External links
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