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HUBERT PARRY

'Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, 1st Baronet' (February 27, 1848October 7, 1918) was an English composer, probably best known for his setting of William Blake's poem, ''Jerusalem'', the coronation anthem ''I was glad'' and the hymn tune ''Repton,'' which sets the words ''Dear Lord and Father of Mankind''.

Contents
Family
Career
Media
Bibliography
External links

Family


Born in Bournemouth, Hampshire, and brought up at Highnam Court, Gloucestershire, he was the son of artist and collector Thomas Gambier Parry. He was educated at Eton and Exeter College, Oxford. He married a daughter of the statesman, Baron Sidney Herbert of Lea.

Career


He studied with the English-born composer Henry Hugo Pierson in Stuttgart, and with William Sterndale Bennett and the pianist Edward Dannreuther in London. His first major works appeared in 1880: a piano concerto and a choral setting of scenes from Shelley's ''Prometheus Unbound''. The first performance of the latter has often been held to mark the start of a "renaissance" in English classical music. He wrote music to accompany the 1883 Cambridge Greek Play 'The Birds' by Aristophanes, a production which starred the brilliant mediaevalist and ghost-story writer, M.R. James. Parry scored a greater contemporary success, however, with the ode ''Blest Pair of Sirens'' (1887) which established him as the leading English choral composer of his day. Among the most successful of a long series of similar works were the ''Ode on Saint Cecilia's Day'' (1889), the oratorios ''Judith'' (1888) and ''Job'' (1892), the psalm-setting ''De Profundis'' (1891) and ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin'' (1905). His orchestral works from this period include four symphonies, a set of Symphonic Variations in E minor, the ''Overture to an Unwritten Tragedy'' (1893) and the ''Elegy for Brahms'' (1897).
Parry joined the staff of the Royal College of Music in 1884 and was appointed its director in 1894, a post he held until his death. In 1900 he succeeded John Stainer as professor of music at Oxford University. His later music includes a series of six "ethical cantatas", experimental works in which he hoped to supersede the traditional oratorio and cantata forms. They were generally unsuccessful with the public, though Elgar admired ''The Vision of Life'' (1907) and ''The Soul's Ransom'' (1906) has had several modern performances. He resigned his Oxford appointment on doctor's advice in 1908 and in the last decade of his life produced some of his finest works, including the ''Symphonic Fantasia '1912' (also called ''Symphony No. 5''), the ''Ode on the Nativity'' (1912), ''Jerusalem'' (1916) and the ''Songs of Farewell'' (1916–1918).
Influenced as a composer principally by Bach and Brahms, Parry evolved a powerful diatonic style which itself greatly influenced future English composers such as Elgar and Vaughan Williams. His own full development as a composer was almost certainly hampered by the immense amount of work he took on, but his energy and charisma, not to mention his abilities as a teacher and administrator, helped establish art music at the centre of English cultural life. He collaborated with the poet Robert Bridges, and was responsible for many books on music, including ''The Evolution of the Art of Music'' (1896), the third volume of the ''Oxford History of Music'' (1907) and a study of Bach (1909).
The site of his house in Richmond Hill, Bournemouth, next door to The Square is marked with a blue plaque.
He was created a knight, and the first Baronet of Highnam in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom in 1902.

Media


Bibliography



The Parrys of the Golden Vale, , Anthony, Boden, Thames Publishing, 1998, (family history)

External links





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