Yet this is an unfair estimation
of a great musician who was a composer, teacher, administrator, and historian.
Along with Charles Villiers Stanford and Alexander Mackenzie, he played a
significant role in the English Musical Renaissance towards the end of the long
19th century.
Another side of Parry’s career was his dedication to teaching. The list of his pupils is impressive and reads like a roll call of late Victorian/early 20th century music: Hamish McCunn, Arthur Somervell, Walford Davies, William Hurlstone, Samuel Colridge Taylor, Gustav Holst, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Frank Bridge and John Ireland.
Parry was also a practiced author with sundry important books to his credit. These included The Evolution of the Art of Music (1896), J.S. Bach: The Story of the Development of a Great Personality (1909), Style in Musical Art (1911) as well as articles for Grove’s Dictionary.
Brief Biography
- Charles Hubert Hastings Parry was born at 2 Richmond Terrace, Bournemouth on 27 February 1848.
- Attended preparatory school in Malvern between 1856 and 1858.
- In 1861 he went up to Eton College.
- Studied law and history at Exeter College, Oxford from 1867.
- From 1870-1877 Parry was an underwriter at Lloyds in London.
- Further studies with William Sterndale Bennett and Edward Dannreuther in London and Henry Hugo Pierson in Stuttgart
- Breakthrough with his Piano Concerto in F sharp (1878-79) and his Scenes from Shelley's "Prometheus Unbound" for contralto, tenor, bass, chorus & orchestra (1880)
- Moved to Knightscroft House, Sea Lane, Rustington in 1881.
- Appointed choragus (festival director) during 1883.
- During 1883, Parry began to teach at the Royal College of Music (RCM).
- Appointed director of the RCM in 1895, holding the post until his death.
- Succeeded John Stainer as Professor of Music at Oxford University in 1900.
- Wrote his best-known piece, Jerusalem in 1916.
- Hubert Parry died at his home, in Rustington on 7 October 1918.
Twelve Selected Works
- Sonata in A major for cello and piano (pub. 1883)
- Trio in G major for violin, cello & pianoforte c. 1884–90
- Overture to an Unwritten Tragedy (c.1893)
- Lady Radnor’s Suite for strings (c.1894, pub.1902)
- Symphony No.4 in E minor (c.1899)
- Anthem "I was glad" (c.1902, pub 1903)
- Ode on the Nativity for Soprano solo, chorus, and orchestra (1912)
- Symphony Fantasy (Symphony No. 5) in B minor (c.1912, pub. 1922)
- Shulbrede Tunes for piano, (pub.1914)
- Six Motets: Songs of Farewell (1916-18)
- Toccata and Fugue in G major and E minor, "The Wanderer" (posthumous) (pub. 1921)
- An English Suite for strings (posthumous), (pub. 1921)
More recent volumes include Parry’s
Creative Process by Michael Allis (2010), and Hubert Parry - A Life in
Photographs by Michael Trott (2018).
A previous generation produced
two important texts - J Fuller Maitland’s short The Music of Parry and
Stanford: An Essay in Comparative Criticism (1934) and Charles L.
Graves’ hagiographical Hubert Parry (1926) in two volumes.
Apart from articles in the musical press, a diverse collection of reviews and
the odd hard to obtain thesis or dissertation that is about it.
If you can only hear one CD…
Much of Hubert Parry’s music has
been recorded. This includes most of the orchestral works including all the
symphonies, the complete organ music, ongoing cycles of the piano works and
solo song. There are several CDs devoted to the chamber music, including the
Cello Sonata, the Piano Trios, and String Quartet. The vocal music has not been
ignored, with recordings of Blest Pair of Sirens and a recent production
of Scenes from Shelley's "Prometheus Unbound." Although not a
conventional Christian, Parry wrote much music suitable for “quires and places
where they sing.” A great deal of this is available on CD.
An excellent introduction to Parry’s music is Sir Adrian Boult’s account of the Symphony No.5, Blest Pair of Sirens, the Symphonic Variations, and an Elegy for Brahms released by EMI on CDM 5 65107 2. Blest Pair of Sirens is one of the enduring masterpieces from the late nineteenth-century. It was premiered in London on 17 May 1887, to considerable acclaim. It sets words from John Milton’s At a Solemn Musick.
Rob Barnett (MusicWeb
International, 7 September 2007) that “Parry's overture-length Elegy
for Brahms in fact had to wait until 1918 for its premiere. At
that stage it had been revised by Stanford who conducted it at the Parry
Memorial Concert at the RCM on 8 November 1918. Boult makes this Elegy shine in
a golden aureole which celebrates Brahms rather than laments him.”
Finally, the wonderful Symphonic
Variations (1897) are worth exploring. It is based on a simple, but virile folksong-like
theme that Parry masterfully weaves through a series of Brahmsian inventions.
This is not an academic set of variations, but a resourceful composition with
echoes of Brahms, Dvorak, and Elgar. It should be in the orchestral repertoire.
The original title was Symphony
in four linked movements in B minor, 1912. However, at the second
performance it was called the ‘Fifth Symphony’ and finally, the printed score
is entitled Symphonic Fantasia in B minor “1912” with ‘Symphony’ as a
subtitle.
It is presented in four
interconnected movements, each with titles: Stress, Love, Play
and Now. The Symphony is still satisfying if these designations are
ignored. The work is cyclic with the opening material appearing in various
guises throughout.
The musicologist Michael Pope
(Liner Notes CDM 5 65107 2) has advocated that “the first movement Stress
indicates revolt against the tragedy of life. The slow movement suggests that
in human love, calling and answering, lies the true hope of healing. The Scherzo
represents inextinguishable instinct of humanity for fun and humour. The Finale
is particularly notable for the beautiful first subject representing
hopefulness. This is later extinguished by tragedy, which is then transformed
into the major key, and, in the light of love, becomes a token of healing.”
The entire work consists of an
emotional journey, and benefits from the composer’s mastery of orchestration.
The London Philharmonic Orchestra
under Matthias Bamert’s account of Charles Hubert Hastings Parry's Symphony
No.5 in B minor can be heard on YouTube
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