Scottish composer John Blackwood McEwen
(1868-1948) is rather like the district of Galloway in Scotland - an
undiscovered country. Most folk hurry through heading for the Highlands. Both
deserve to be much better known. Born in the Border town of Hawick on 13 April 1868,
he studied at Glasgow University, gaining an M.A. McEwen had an interest in
singing - he was choirmaster at St James' Free Church in Glasgow and
subsequently Lanark Parish Church. He had a period of training with the great
names of the day, at the Royal Academy of Music: Ebenezer Prout, Tobias Matthay
and Frederick Corder. In 1893 McEwen returned to Scotland and became
choirmaster at South Parish Church in Greenock. He taught piano, harmony and
composition at the Athenaeum School of Music in Glasgow.
Five years later, he headed back
down South where he joined the staff at the Royal Academy of Music as a
professor of harmony and composition. McEwen later became Principal of that
organisation in 1924, succeeding Sir Alexander Campbell Mackenzie. He received
a knighthood in 1931. John Blackwood McEwen died on 14 June 1948.
McEwen’s best-known orchestral work is almost certainly his Solway Symphony: it was revived by Chandos in 1995. He also wrote a fine series of tone poems, including Grey Galloway and Coronach. However, it is McEwen’s chamber music that best epitomises his musical style and achievement. Of a very large catalogue, the nineteen string quartets are the bedrock.
On 1 October 1922 (p.651) a short letter appeared in the Musical Times. It is self-explanatory – after a fashion:
The following month (Musical Times, October 1922, p.726) the 54 year old composer and Professor of harmony and composition at the Royal Academy of Music gave his witty reply:
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