Royal College of Music
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The Royal College of Music is a prestigious music school located in Kensington, London.
Founded in 1882 as a successor to the National Training School for Music by the then-Prince of Wales (later Edward VII), the school opened in 1883 with George Grove as its director. It moved to its present location in the Albertopolis cultural quarter, next to Imperial College London and opposite the Royal Albert Hall in 1894. In the same year Hubert Parry became director, remaining until 1918.
The college teaches all aspects of western classical music from undergraduate to doctorate level. There is a Junior Department, where 300 children aged 8 to 18 are educated on Saturdays. It also has an extensive museum of musical instruments which is open to the public.
Famous students of the RCM have included:
- Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872 - 1958), composer
- Gustav Holst (1874 - 1934), composer
- Rutland Boughton (1878 - 1960), composer
- John Ireland (1879 - 1962), composer and pianist
- Leopold Stokowski (1882 - 1977), conductor
- George Butterworth (1885 - 1916), composer
- Arthur Bliss (1891 - 1975), composer
- Eugène Goossens (1893 - 1962), conductor
- Noel Gay (1898 - 1954), songwriter
- Constant Lambert (1905 - 1951), composer and critic
- Michael Tippett (1905 - 1998), composer
- Peter Pears (1910 - 1986), singer
- Benjamin Britten (1913 - 1976), composer
- Charles Groves (1915 - 1992), conductor
- Thurston Dart (1921 - 1971), performer and musicologist
- Malcolm Arnold (1921-2006), composer
- Neville Marriner (born 1924), conductor
- Joan Sutherland (born 1926), singer
- Colin Davis (born 1927), conductor
- Julian Bream (born 1933), guitarist and lutenist
- James Galway (born 1939), flautist
- John Williams (born 1941), guitarist
- Thomas Allen (born 1944), singer
- Andrew Davis (born 1944), conductor
- John Lill (born 1944), pianist
- Trevor Pinnock (born 1946), harpsichordist and conductor
- David Helfgott (born 1947), pianist
- Andrew Lloyd Webber (born 1948), composer
- Mark-Anthony Turnage (born 1960), composer
[edit] Museum of instruments
The College's Museum of Instruments has a collection of 800 items, mainly Western, but including some from Africa and Asia. It is housed in purpose built premises dating from 1970 and is open to the public two afternoons a week. It includes about a dozen Stradivarius violins. Stefano Blumberg, Jake Howarth and Tim Lambourne are also donors to this exceptional collection, having contributed hundreds of examples of their families' old sheet music.
[edit] Other collections
The College's loan and reference collections number several hundred thousand items. There are numerous manuscripts including some by composers such as Mozart and Haydn, and many letters, including a substantial Beethoven collection. There are tens of thousands of pieces of early printed music. The modern printed music is available for hire when not needed by the College. There are also thousands of recordings, and an extensive library, including sets of several hundred music journals.
The Department of Portraits and Performance History has a collections of 340 original portraits and 10,000 prints and photographs; a collection of 600,000 concert programmes from 1720 to the present day; and extensive holdings relating to opera, instrument, title-page and concert-hall design.