1908 in British music
Events
- 26 March – The first public performance of York Bowen's Viola Concerto is given by Lionel Tertis at the Wigmore Hall.[1]
- 31 July – Frederick Septimus Kelly wins a gold medal for Great Britain as a member of the winning crew in the eights at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London.[2]
- 3 December – Edward Elgar's Symphony No. 1 receives its première at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester, performed by the Hallé Orchestra and conducted by Hans Richter.[3]
- 7 December – Four days after its première, Elgar's Symphony No. 1 is performed at the Queen's Hall by the London Symphony Orchestra, again conducted by Hans Richter.[4]
- date unknown – Alexander Mackenzie becomes President of the International Musical Society.[5]
Popular music
- "Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?" ("Kelly from the Isle of Man") by Clarence Wainwright Murphy & Will Letters
- "I Hear You Calling Me" by Harold Lake & Charles Marshall[6]
- "The Outlaw" by William Wallace
Classical music: new works
- York Bowen – Viola Concerto in C minor
- Henry Walford Davies – Solemn Melody for organ
- Harry Evans – Dafydd ap Gwilym (cantata)[7]
- Hamilton Harty – Violin Concerto
- Joseph Hinton – L'allegro
- Alice Verne-Bredt – Phantasie Piano Trio and Phantasie Piano Quartet
Opera
Musical theatre
- 25 April – Havana, with book by George Grossmith, Jr. and Graham Hill, music by Leslie Stuart, lyrics by Adrian Ross and additional lyrics by George Arthurs, opens at the Gaiety Theatre, London, starring Evie Greene, W. H. Berry, Lawrence Grossmith and Mabel Philipson.[9]
- 3 September – King of Cadonia, with book by Frederick Lonsdale, lyrics by Adrian Ross and Arthur Wimperis and music by Sidney Jones and Frederick Rosse, opens at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London, where it runs for 333 performances.[10]
Births
- 12 January – Joan Mary Last, music educator, author and composer (died 2002)[11]
- 28 January – Jimmy Shand, accordionist and bandleader (died 2000)
- 29 February – A. L. Lloyd, folk song collector (died 1982)
- 25 March – Bridget D'Oyly Carte, head of D'Oyly Carte Opera Company (died 1985)
- 10 July – Donald Peers, singer (died 1973)
- 18 July – Barry Gray, TV composer (died 1984)
- 19 October
- Spike Hughes, jazz musician, composer and music journalist (died 1987)[12]
- Sydney MacEwan, singer and priest (died 1991)
- 21 October – Howard Ferguson, composer and musicologist (died 1999)
- 17 December – William Brocklesby Wordsworth, English/Scottish composer and pianist (died 1988)
- date unknown – Jeannie Robertson, folk singer (died 1975)
Deaths
- 2 March – Walter Slaughter, conductor and composer, 48
- 12 March – Clara Novello, soprano, 89
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See also
References
- John France (10 February 2007). "York Bowen Viola Concerto (1907) The Centenary of a Minor Masterpiece". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- Frederick Kelly Archived 1 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Sports Reference Olympic Sports
- Reed, W H. Elgar, J M Dent and Sons Ltd, London, 1943. p 97
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- Kennedy, Michael. Elgar Orchestral Music. BBC Publications, London, 1970. p 53.
- "Mackenzie, Sir Alexander Campbell", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, 2007, accessed 28 September 2009
- Western Daily Press, "Romance and Tears of a Famous Ballad, Author of 'Hear You Calling Me' Dead", 5 Aug 1933, p. 9
- Lecture on Harry Evans (Merseyside Welsh Heritage Society, November 12th 2011), by Professor Huw Rees, President, Liverpool Welsh Choral Union
- Savoy Theatre. "A Welsh Sunset", The Times, 18 July 1908, p. 10
- Cast and productions details at The Play Pictorial website (1902–1910) of the Templeman Library at the University of Kent at Canterbury
- Synopsis, list of roles and list of musical numbers
- Sadie, Julie Anne; Samuel, Rhian (1994). The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers (Digitized online by GoogleBooks). Retrieved 30 December 2010.
- Spike Hughes, Opening Bars – Beginning an Autobiography (Pilot Press Ltd, London, 1946)
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