Sam Hartley Braithwaite

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Sam Hartley Braithwaite (20 July 1883 – 13 January 1947) was a British composer and artist.

Braithwaite was born in Egremont, Cumberland. He trained at the Royal Academy of Music, studying piano, organ and clarinet, as well as composition with Frederick Corder[1] An exact contemporary there was Arnold Bax. They became close friends and Bax dedicated his piano piece Apple Blossom Time (1915) to Braithwaite.[2][3] While still in his twenties he began teaching piano at the RAM, where his pupils included Eric Coates, only three years his junior.[4] He was musical director of the Passmore Edwards Settlement (Mary Ward Centre) in London from 1910 to 1913, succeeding Holst.[3] Braithwaite lived most of his life in Bournemouth and many of his works were performed there, often conducted by him.[5][6] Later in life he shifted his activities towards etching, painting and printmaking.

Two of his works - the characteristically pictorial Snow Picture for orchestra (1924) and the Elegy for orchestra (1927) - won Carnegie Trust awards and were published as part of the Carnegie Collection of British Music.[7] (There's an arrangement of Snow Picture for keyboard, two players by Leslie Woodgate).[8] His Overture for military band was written for a Pageant of Empire at the Crystal Palace. The 14 minute long orchestral scherzo A Night By Dalegarth Bridge was performed for the first time in Bournemouth in 1921,[9] and repeated the following year.[10] There is currently only one modern recording of his music, the Pastoral Lullaby for horn and organ [11]

As an artist Braithwaite made etchings of landscapes in Dorset and Lancashire. He exhibited with the New Forest Group formed in 1923[12] and was a member of the Lake Artists Society in the 1940s.[13] Some of his paintings, such as Foxtrot and Pavan (both exhibited at the Arlington Gallery, Old Bond Street, London in 1927)[14] were more abstract with musical themes. He died in Arnside, Westmorland, aged 64.[5]

List of Works[]

  • By the Hot Lake, scherzo for orchestra
  • Chopinesque – mazurka for piano duet (1937)
  • Elegy for orchestra (pub. 1927)
  • Elfin Fountain, for piano (1923)
  • English Dance, piano
  • Fantasia in C minor, for piano (1917)
  • The Fighting Temeraire, overture for orchestra
  • Idyll for orchestra
  • Invention for piano or harpsichord (pub. 1951)
  • Musical Box with two tunes (pub. 1940)
  • Near an Eastern Bazaar for orchestra
  • A Night By Dalegarth Bridge, symphonic scherzo for orchestra (1921)
  • Nocturne for piano (1944)
  • Oriental Fragment for orchestra
  • Overture for military band (1911)
  • Pastorale for piano duet (pub. 1937)
  • Pastoral Lullaby for horn and organ (pub. 1949)
  • Prelude in the style of the 18th Century, for piano duet (pub. 1937)
  • Prelude to a Drama (1940)
  • Serenade for piano (1944)
  • Snow Picture for orchestra (pub. 1924)
  • Suite of Ancient Dances for piano

References[]

  1. ^ Nenshaw, W.B. Biographical Dictionary of Organists (2003)
  2. ^ Score at IMSLP
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Foreman, Lewis. Bax: A Composer and His Times (1983) p 124-5
  4. ^ Payne, Michael. The Life and Music of Eric Coates (2016)
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Scowcroft, Philip. An 89th Garland of British Light Music Composers (2000)
  6. ^ Godfrey, Dan. Memories and Music: Thirty Five Years of Conducting (1924), p 200
  7. ^ Leach, Gerald. British Composer Profiles (3rd edition, 2012) p 37
  8. ^ British Music Collection
  9. ^ 'Music in the Provinces: Bournemouth' in Musical Times, 1 February 1921, p 123
  10. ^ 'Bournemouth: The End of the Season' in Musical News and Herald, 27 May 1922
  11. ^ Ifor, James and Bleicher, S.J. Meditations for Horn and Organ, EBS (1996)
  12. ^ 'The New Forest Painters' in The Times, 2 September 1924, p 13
  13. ^ Aberystwyth University School of Art
  14. ^ 'Art Exhibitions' in The Times, 17 February 1927, p 12

External links[]

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