George Malcolm (musician)

George John Malcolm CBE KSG (28 February 1917  10 October 1997) was an English pianist, organist, composer, harpsichordist, and conductor.

George Malcolm

Malcolm's first instrument was the piano, and his first teacher was a nun who recognised his talent and recommended him to the Royal College of Music at the age of seven, where he studied under Kathleen McQuitty FRCM until he was 19. He attended Wimbledon College, and went on to study at Balliol College, Oxford in the 1930s.[1]

During the Second World War he had a musical role with the RAF becoming a bandleader. After the War he completed his musical studies with Herbert Fryer. He bought a harpsichord at auction and went on to develop a career as a harpsichordist. He continued to make occasional appearances as a pianist in chamber music, notably with the Dennis Brain Wind Ensemble. He left few recordings of his piano playing (one interesting example is the first performance of the Gordon Jacob Sextet, written for the group).

Harpsichord career

Like Wanda Landowska, he favoured rather large 'revival' harpsichords with pedals, built in a modern style, that now are seen as "unauthentic" for Baroque music.[2] While aspects of his interpretations may seem outdated by the standards of today's "historically informed performance practice", his recordings and live performances introduced many people to the harpsichord and influenced a number of today's musicians.

As well as Baroque works, he played modern harpsichord repertoire. His own composition "Bach before the Mast" (a humorous set of variations on The Sailor's Hornpipe in the style of Johann Sebastian Bach) was written as a B side for a cover version of the Alec Templeton number Bach goes to town which he released in the 1950s.[3] He also wrote "Variations on a Theme of Mozart".

In the 1950s he participated in annual concerts featuring four harpsichordists, the three others being Thurston Dart, Denis Vaughan and Eileen Joyce. In 1957 this group also recorded two of Vivaldi's Concertos for Four Harpsichords, one in a Bach arrangement, with the Pro Arte Orchestra under Boris Ord. Malcolm, Dart and Joyce also recorded Bach's Concerto in C for Three Harpsichords. In 1967, he appeared with Eileen Joyce, Geoffrey Parsons and Simon Preston in a four-harpsichord concert with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields under Neville Marriner in the Royal Festival Hall.[4] In 1967, he recorded The Complete Harpsichord Works of Rameau (Argo Record Co, London).

Organist and choir-master

He also pursued a notable career as an organist and choir-trainer. After serving as organist-choirmaster of St Mary's Roman Catholic Church in Clapham, he was Master of Music of Westminster Cathedral for 12 years (1947–1959). He developed the choir's forthright, full-throated tone—often, but rather vacuously described as "continental"—which contrasted with that of Anglican choirs at the time. Benjamin Britten praised the choir's 'staggering brilliance and authority', and proposed to write a piece for them. This resulted in the Missa Brevis (1959). Its first performance was one of Malcolm's last services at Westminster Cathedral before he retired on 1 September 1959.[5] He continued to play the organ, recording the Handel organ concertos for example.[6] Malcolm was founding patron of Spode Music Week, an annual residential music school that places particular emphasis on the music of the Roman Catholic liturgy. Malcolm also composed for voices, a well-known piece being his Palm Sunday introit Ingrediente Domino. His setting of Psalm 51 Miserere mei (composed in 1950, presumed lost but rediscovered in the Cathedral archives in 2011) is reminiscent of Ivor Atkins' 1951 version of Gregorio Allegri's Miserere.

A devout Roman Catholic, Malcolm was awarded papal honours for his services as Master of Music at Westminster Cathedral.

Conducting

Benjamin Britten engaged Malcolm in 1960 to conduct the second and third performances of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.[7] In later life Malcolm developed a career as a conductor, forging long-standing relationships with ensembles such as the English Chamber Orchestra and the Northern Sinfonia orchestra. The pianist András Schiff, who left Hungary to study with Malcolm, was a frequent concerto soloist under his baton, and the two recorded Mozart's complete works for piano duet together on the composer's own piano.[1]

Burial and legacy

Malcolm was born and died in London. He is interred in the graveyard at Saintbury Church, Gloucestershire.[8]

Malcolm's centenary was marked by Balliol College in 2017.[7]

gollark: LyricLy leaked staff messages and randomly banned heavpoot.
gollark: It's OBVIOUSLY you.
gollark: > except I clearly won't randomly punish themYou JUST showed that you WOULD randomly punish heavpoot.
gollark: There is NOTHING STOPPING YOU.
gollark: You CAN UNBAN HIM.

See also

Notes

  1. Obituary. The Catholic Herald. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  2. Rather than the Pleyel instruments favoured by Landowska, Malcolm preferred a later generation of instruments by makers like Thomas Goff.
  3. The Faber Pocket Guide to Bach
  4. Eileen Joyce (1908–1991) profile Archived 18 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine, callawaymedia.arts.uwa.edu.au. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  5. J. O'Donnell, George Malcolm CBE KSG (1917–1997) – An Appreciation. Article in: Oremus, The Monthly Bulletin of Westminster Cathedral, December 1997, p. 10-11.
  6. "CLIP AND SAVE: JOHN BARKER'S BEST-OF-HANDEL LIST.(RHYTHM)". The Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI). McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. April 2008. Accessed via HighBeam Research. 28 October 2014 (subscription required).
  7. "George Malcolm, CBE, KSG (1917-1997) Balliol's musician of genius". 6 April 2018.
  8. Amis, John. "Obituary from The Independent". Retrieved 31 October 2014.
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