Amy Upham Thomson McKean

Amy Upham Thomson-McKean (b. 22 February 1893 d. 1972) was an American pianist, songwriter and composer. Amy Thomson's father, Ralph E. emigrated from Glasgow in Scotland as a young man. Her mother was Anna J. Thomson and she had one brother Robert Stanley Thomson.[1] She married Alexander Mathew McKean Sept. 17, 1917 at Lafayette Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, and had a daughter, Elaine (May 4, 1924) and son, Robert Alexander (September 25, 1918).

Amy Thomson attended high school in Boston where she studied with Felix Fox at the Fox-Buonamici School of Pianoforte at 403 Marlborough Street. She began to write compositions,[2] and studied with Bainbridge Christ and went on to publish songs and short works for violin and piano under both the names Amy Upham Thomson and Amy Thomson-McKean.[3][4] Thomson-McKean appeared on concert and recital programs in Brooklyn in the 1910s - 1930s.[5] She broadcast on Margaret Speaks on WOR NY in the 1920s.

Her papers are archived by her great-niece, artist Jamieson Thomas of Winter Park, Florida.

Selected works

  • "The Throstle" (text by Tennyson)
  • "A Day in June"
  • "Liebislied"
  • "Tone Poem"
  • "Bolero"
  • "Chason du Soir"
  • "Little Boy Blue"
  • "Forever"
  • "Dream in Town"
  • "At Sunset"
  • "Four Leaf Clover"
  • "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes"
  • "Soul of Mine"
  • "Memory"
  • "Dream of Maytime"
  • "June Rain"
  • "In the Young World"
  • "Love Song"
  • "In Venice"
  • "Prelude in C Minor"
  • "Waltz in D Flat"[6]

References

  1. "Thomson Obit", Fitchburg Sentinel, p. 5, 14 September 1934, retrieved 4 June 2016
  2. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York, 14 December 1919, p. 84, retrieved 4 June 2016
  3. The Song World, The Writer's Magazine, February 1914, p. 183, retrieved 4 June 2016
  4. The Music News, 2 January 1913, p. 32, retrieved 4 June 2016
  5. Brooklyn Life, 11 December 1920, p. 16, retrieved 4 June 2016
  6. "Brooklyn Musicians Give Works of Amy Thomson McKean", Musical America, 31, p. 9, 27 December 1919, retrieved 4 June 2016
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