Ernest Austin
Ernest Austin (31 December 1874 – 24 July 1947) was an English composer.
Biography
He started composing in 1907 after a career in business, and was self-taught. He was the brother of baritone and composer Frederic Austin (1878–1951). {problem requires resolution: Entry for his brother Frederic Austin specifies his years of birth and death as 1872 - 1952.}
Little-remembered today (he does not even have an entry in the comprehensive New Grove dictionary),[1] his orchestral music enjoyed some success in its own time, including performances at the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts. He was a prolific composer of songs, covering a wide spectrum of mood, from serious Shakespearean settings to ballads of both sentimental and robust natures. He also made piano transcriptions of the work of other composers, a particularly common practice of the time.
The Pilgrim's Progress by Ernest Austin
Part of 12th movement: trumpet fanfares on the organ and choir singing. Played by Kevin Bowyer
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His best-known work is probably The Pilgrim's Progress, a 12-section narrative tone poem setting for solo organ of the work by John Bunyan; it takes about 2¾ hours to perform. There is a text which explains what is happening at each stage of the music which can be read by a narrator, and in the 12th movement, there are optional parts for choir (SSATTB), bells, and solo violin.[2] It was revived in November 1988 at St. Michael's, Cornhill, London, by organist Kevin Bowyer, who continues to perform it on occasion.[3][4]
Selected works
Organ
- The Pilgrim's Progress, Op.41; 12-movement narrative tone poem in 4 parts, with optional choir (SSATTB), bells, solo violin and narrator (1912–1920).
Chamber
- 5 Piano Trios, in part based on traditional melodies (before 1914)
- In Field and Forest, for flute, French horn, and piano
- Lyric Sonata, for violin and piano
Orchestra
- Variations on The Vicar of Bray, Op.35, for string orchestra (1910, played at the Proms)
- Stella Mary Dances, Op.58, orchestral suite (1918, played at the Proms)
- Sweet Night, for flute, clarinet, cornet, and string orchestra
- Symphony
Piano
- Suites: 6 Dream Themes; 4 English Pastorals; To Music (7 movements); Under Blue Skies; around 25 Tone Stanzas (1908–1924)
- 2 books of Preludes, Op.56
- Indian Pipe Dance (1921)
- 14 Sonatinas for children, on English folk-songs
- Through the Eyes of Youth
- Sonatas
- Transcriptions of songs, Sevillana, and Mot d'Amour, by Edward Elgar (1926)
Songs
- Song-cycles: Songs from the Highway; A Sheaf of Songs (5)
- Single songs: Aspiration; Fountain Song; I Made Thee Mine; The Infinite Voice; Life; Sigh No More Ladies; April Wears a Smiling Face; Tony the Turtle; Cradle Song; Sea Dogs; Sleep Little Rose; Sweet Night; The Woodland Tailor; A Song of Folly; Thoughts (vocal setting of Brahms's waltz, op.39 no.15)
Choral
- With orchestra: Hymn of Apollo; Ode to a Grecian Urn
- Female voices: The Dream Maker
- Male voices: Home on the Range (cowboy song)
- Unison songs for children
Books
- The Story of the Art of Music Printing (1913)
- The Fairyland of Music, described as 'a fairy tale with music' (1922)
Sources
- Philip L. Scowcroft: British Light Music Composers (ISBN 0903413884)
- ↑ As of 2007-06-10; http://www.grovemusic.com/
- ↑ Kevin Bowyer: 20th Century European Organ Music: A Toast, in The IAO Millennium Book, ed. P. Hale, ISBN 0-9538711-0-X
- ↑ Kevin Bowyer's performance of 'The Pilgrim's Progress' in Glasgow, 16 June 2007
- ↑ Glasgow International Organ Festival: he performed the complete Pilgrim's Progress at the 2007 festival
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