Arnold Bax
Arnold Bax
Arnold Bax
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Arnold Bax
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Arnold Edward Trevor Bax, KCVO (8 November 1883 3 October 1953) was an English composer and poet. His musical style blended elements of romanticism and impressionism, often with influences from Irish literature and landscape. His orchestral scores are noted for their complexity and colourful instrumentation. Bax's poetry and stories, which he wrote under the pseudonym of Dermot OByrne, reflect his profound affinity with Irish poet W. B. Yeats and are largely written in the tradition of the Irish Literary Revival.
Contents
1 Life 1.1 Early years 1.2 Bax discovers Ireland 1.3 Conglomerate of influences 1.4 Rathgar circle 1.5 Alienation, conflict and success 1.6 Morar period 1.7 Peter Pan of composers 1.8 Ireland reaches out 2 Research and scholarship 3 Reception and recordings 4 List of works 4.1 Ballets 4.2 Orchestral 4.2.1 Symphonies 4.2.2 Tone poems 4.2.3 Other orchestral works 4.3 Concertante 4.4 Chamber 4.4.1 One player 4.4.2 Two players 4.4.3 Three players 4.4.4 Four players 4.4.5 Five players 4.4.6 Six or more players 4.5 Piano 4.5.1 One piano 4.6 Two pianos 4.7 Film music 4.8 Vocal 4.8.1 Choral 4.8.2 Songs with orchestra 4.8.3 Songs with chamber ensemble 4.8.4 Songs with piano 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External links
Bax in 1922
1 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Life
Early years
Bax was born in Pendennis Road, Streatham, London, into a Victorian upper-middle-class family of Dutch descent. He grew up in Ivy Bank, a mansion on top of Haverstock Hill, Hampstead, where he attended Heath Mount School.[1] In Bax, A Composer and His Times (2007), Lewis Foreman suggests that, because of the family affluence, Bax never had to take a paid position and was free to pursue most of his interests. From an early age, he showed that he had a powerful intellect and great musical talent, especially at the keyboard. He often enjoyed playing the Wagner operas on piano. One of his first intimate meetings with art music was through Tristan und Isolde and its influence is seen in many of his later works, Tintagel for example. Bax was taught at home, but received his first formal musical education at age 16 from Cecil Sharp and others at the Hampstead Conservatoire. He was accepted to the Royal Academy of Music in 1900, where he remained until 1905. At the Academy, he was taught composition by Frederick Corder, the piano by Tobias Matthay and the clarinet by Egerton. In his composition classes, Corder emphasized the examples of Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner and pointed to their liberal approach to classical form, which led Bax to develop a similar attitude. He had an exceptional ability to sight-read and play complex orchestral scores at the piano, which won him several medals at the Academy and he also won prizes for best musical composition, including the Battison-Haynes prize and the competitive Charles Lucas Medal.
Conglomerate of influences
The Irish influence is only one of many found in Bax's music. An early affinity with Norway and the literature of Bjrnstjerne Bjrnson brought themes and moods from the Nordic countries into his music. From 1905 to 1911, Bax constantly alternated between using Nordic and Celtic themes in his compositions. He even attempted to teach himself some Norwegian and, in the song The Flute (1907) for voice and piano, he successfully set an original poem by Bjrnson to music. Later examples of Baxs Nordic affinity include
2 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Hardanger for two pianos (1927) and the orchestral tone-poem The Tale the Pine-Trees Knew (1931). In 1910, a youthful fling with a Ukrainian girl, Natalia Skarginska, brought Bax to St. Petersburg, Moscow and Lubny, near Kiev, which led to a fascination for Russian and Slavonic themes. The relationship with Skarginska resulted in an emotional agony from which he never completely recovered. His conflicting feelings are perhaps reflected in the First Piano Sonata in F sharp (1910, revised 1917-20). The Russian and Ukrainian influence can also be heard in two works for solo piano from 1912, NocturneMay Night in the Ukraine and Gopak (Russian dance).
In 1915 appeared In a Vodka Shop also for solo piano. In 1919, Bax was one of four British composers to be commissioned to write orchestral music to serve as interludes at Sergei Diaghilevs Ballets Russes in London. For the commission, he incorporated the three above-mentioned piano works of Russian themes into Russian Suite for orchestra. In 1920, he wrote incidental music to J. M. Barries whimsical play The Truth About the Russian Dancers, his last work based on a clearly Russian theme. The Russian influence may be found in many of Bax's other scores and is especially predominant in his first three symphonies.
Rathgar circle
In January 1911, not long after he returned to Britain, Bax married Elsita Sobrino, a childhood friend. They settled in Bushy Park Road, Rathgar, Dublin. Here Baxs brother Clifford introduced them to the intellectual circle which met at the house of the poet, painter and mystic George William Russell. Bax had already had some of his poems and short stories published in Dublin and to the circle he was simply known by the pseudonym Dermot OByrne (the name was possibly inspired by a renowned family of traditional musicians in Donegal). As Dermot OByrne, he was specifically noted for Seafoam and Firelight, published in London by the Orpheus Press in 1909 and numerous short stories and poems published in different media in Dublin. It was at Russells house where Bax one night met Irish Republican Patrick Pearse. According to Bax, they got on very well and, although they met only once, the execution of Pearse following the Easter Rebellion in 1916 prompted him to compose several laments, the most noted being In Memoriam Patric Pearse (1916), which contains the dedication I gCuimhne ar Phdraig Mac Piarais.
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
However, the opening of Harriet Cohen's private papers and the research into them by scholars, such as the Norwegian musicologist Thomas Elnaes, indicates that such a link is at best speculative. Bax's works from this time reflect deep psychological conflicts that point forward to the passionate yet deeply troubled First Symphony in E flat, completed in 1922. After the war, British music was in demand as never before in England; and Bax won considerable fame with his works, which were widely performed.
Morar period
From 1928 onwards, Bax ceased to travel to Glencolumbkille and instead began his annual migration to Morar, in the west Scottish Highlands, to work. He would sketch his compositions in London and take them to the Station Hotel at Morar for the winter, in order to orchestrate them. At this time, he found a new love in Mary Gleaves; and she accompanied him to Scotland. In the Morar period, which lasted until the outbreak of World War II, Bax rediscovered his interest in Norway and the Nordic countries, and found a new musical hero in Sibelius. At Morar, he orchestrated Symphonies Nos. 3 to 7 and several of his finest orchestral works, including the three Northern Ballads (No. 5 is actually dedicated to Sibelius and shares something of his stylistic austerity). All seven of Bax's symphonies were composed within a relatively short span of time (192239) and are perhaps the most coherent cycle of symphonies by any composer. They reflect his many influences and are profound works of art with a deep psychological dimension tied to evocations of scenery. The symphonies earned Bax a reputation as the successor to Elgar, as Vaughan Williams, for instance, had only completed four symphonies by the time Bax had completed his seventh (Vaughan Williams's fourth is actually dedicated to Bax).
4 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Baxs first visit to Cork marked the beginning of a 24-year friendship with the Fleischmann family. As performances of Baxs music grew increasingly rare in Britain, Tilly Fleischmann demonstrated to Bax that his music had wide appeal in Ireland. Bax, however, did little to act on this, or to support further efforts; and his music was not heard nationwide in Ireland until Aloys Fleischmann began conducting his orchestral works with the Irish Radio Orchestra in Dublin just after the end of the war. In 1946, Bax became an external examiner with both University College Cork and University College Dublin, and he also gave individual tuition to aspiring young Irish composers. He received an honorary doctorate degree from the National University of Ireland in 1947. In 1953, Bax was further honoured by appointment as a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO), an honour within the Queen's personal gift. He died during a visit to the Fleischmanns later that year, possibly from a complication of his heart condition. One of his last compositions was Coronation March for Queen Elizabeth II. Not long before he died, Bax was asked by the editor of the The World of Music which were his own preferred works. He provided the following selection: The Garden of Fand (1916) Symphony No. 3 (1929) Winter Legends (1930) The Tale the Pine Trees Knew (1931) Symphony No. 6 (1935) On another occasion, he said, of his Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, which had been commissioned by and dedicated to Gaspar Cassad, "The fact that nobody has ever taken up this work has been one of the major disappointments of my musical life".[3] He died at age 69 and was interred in St. Finbarr's Cemetery, Cork.
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
edited and orchestrated several Bax scores, including the Russian Suite and the film music to Oliver Twist.
List of works
Ballets
Tamara (1911, orch. 2000) From Dusk till Dawn (1917) The Truth about the Russian Dancers (1920)
6 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Orchestral
Symphonies Symphony No. 1 (1922) Symphony No. 2 (1926) Symphony No. 3 (1929) Symphony No. 4 (1931) Symphony No. 5 (1932) Symphony No. 6 (1935) Symphony No. 7 (1939) All are in three movements. Tone poems Cathaleen-ni-Hoolihan (1905) Into The Twilight (1908) In The Faery Hills (1909) Rosc-catha (1910) Christmas Eve (1912, revised c.1921) Nympholept (1912, orch. 1915, revised 1935) The Garden of Fand (1913, orch. 1916) Spring Fire (1913) In Memoriam (1916) November Woods (1917) Tintagel (1917, orch. 1919) Summer Music (1917, orch. 1921, revised 1932) The Happy Forest (1922) The Tale the Pine Trees Knew (1931) Northern Ballad No. 1 (1927) Northern Ballad No. 2 (1934) Prelude for a Solemn Occasion (Northern Ballad No. 3) (1927, orch. 1933) A Legend (1944) Other orchestral works Variations for Orchestra (Improvisations) (1904) A Song of War and Victory (1905) On the Sea Shore (1908, orch. 1984) Festival Overture (1911, revised 1918) Dance of Wild Irravel (1912) Four Orchestral Pieces (191213) Three Pieces for Small Orchestra (1913, revised 1928) Symphonic Scherzo (1917, revised 1933) Russian Suite (1919) Mediterranean (1922) Cortge (1925) Romantic Overture (1926) Overture, Elegy and Rondo (1927) Three Pieces (1928) Overture to a Picaresque Comedy (1930) Sinfonietta (1932) Saga Fragment (1932)
7 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Rogue's Comedy Overture (1936) Overture to Adventure (1936) London Pageant (1937) Paean (1938) Salute to Sydney (Fanfare) (1943) Work in Progress (Overture) (1943) Victory March (1945) The Golden Eagle (Incidental Music) (1945) Two Royal Wedding Fanfares (1947) Coronation March (1952)
Concertante
Symphonic Variations, for piano and orchestra (1918) Phantasy for Viola and Orchestra (1920) Winter Legends, for piano and orchestra (1930) Cello Concerto (1932) Saga Fragment, for piano and orchestra (1932) Violin Concerto (1938) Piano Concertino (1939) Morning Song, for piano and orchestra (1946) Concertante for Three Solo Wind Instruments and Orchestra (1948/1949) Concertante for Orchestra with Piano (Left Hand) (1949) Variations on the name Gabriel Faur for Harp & String Orchestra (1949)
Chamber
One player Valse, for harp (1931) Rhapsodic Ballad, for cello (1939) Two players Harp Fantasy Sonata for harp and viola (1927) Sonata for Flute and Harp (1928) Violin Violin Sonata No. 1 (1910) Legend, for violin and piano, in one movement (1915) Violin Sonata No. 2 (1915, revised 1922) Ballad, for violin and piano (1916) Violin Sonata No. 3 (1927) Ballad, for violin and piano (1929) Violin Sonata in F (1928) Viola Concert Piece for viola and piano (1904) Viola Sonata for viola and piano (19211922) Fantasy Sonata for harp and viola (1927) Legend for viola and piano (1929) Cello
8 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Folk-Tale, for cello and piano (1918) Cello Sonata (1923) Cello Sonatina (1933) Legend-Sonata, for cello and piano (1943) Flute Four Pieces for Flute and Piano (1912, revised 1915 & 1945) Sonata for Flute and Harp (1928) Clarinet Sonata (1934) Three players Trio in One Movement for Piano, Violin, and Viola (1906) Elegiac Trio, for flute, viola, and harp (1916) Piano Trio in B flat (1946) Four players String Quartet No. 1 in G major (1918) Piano Quartet, in one movement (1922) String Quartet No. 2 (1925) String Quartet No. 3 in F (1936) Five players Quintet in G (1908) Piano Quintet in G minor (1915) Quintet for Harp and Strings, in one movement (1919) Oboe Quintet (1922) String Quintet, in one movement (1933) Six or more players In Memoriam, sextet for cor anglais, harp & string quartet (1916) Nonet (1930) Octet (1934) Threnody and Scherzo, octet in two movements (1936) Concerto for Flute, Oboe, Harp and String Quartet (1936)
Piano
One piano Clavierstcke (Juvenilia) (1897-8) Piano Sonata, Op. 1 (1898) Piano Sonata in D minor (1900) Marcia Trionfale (1900) White Peace (arranged by Ronald Stevenson 1907) Concert Valse in E flat (1910) Piano Sonata No. 1 (1910, revised 1917-20) Piano Sonata in F# minor (1910, revised, 1911, 1919 & 1921) Two Russian Tone-Pictures (1912)
9 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Nympholept (1912) Scherzo for Piano (1913) Toccata for Piano (1913) From the Mountains of Home (arranged by Peter Warlock) (1913) The Happy Forest (1914) In the Night (1914) Apple-Blossom-Time (1915) In a Vodka Shop (1915) The Maiden with the Daffodil (1915) ) A Mountain Mood (1915) The Princesss Rose Garden (1915) Sleepy-Head (1915) Winter Waters (1915) Dream in Exile (1916) Nereid (1916) On a May Evening (1918) A Romance (1918) The Slave Girl (1919) What the Minstrel Told Us (1919) Whirligig (1919) Piano Sonata No. 2 (1919, revised 1920) Burlesque (1920) Ceremonial Dance (1920) A Country-Tune (1920) A Hill Tune (1920) Lullaby (1920) Mediterranean (1920) Serpent Dance (1920) Water Music (1920) Piano Sonata in E-flat (1921) Piano Sonata No. 3 (1926) Pan (c.1928) Piano Sonata No. 4 (1932) A Legend (1935) Piano Sonata in B flat Salzburg (1937) O Dame get up and bake your pies (1945) Suite on the Name Gabriel Faur (1945) Four Pieces for Piano (1947) Two Lyrical Pieces for Piano (1948)
Two pianos
Fantasia for Two Pianos (1900) Festival Overture (arrangement of orchestral work 1911) Moy Mell (1916) Mediterranean (arranged for three hands by H. Rich 1920) Hardanger (1927) The Poisoned Fountain (1928) The Devil that tempted St Anthony (1928) Sonata for Two Pianos (1929) Red Autumn (1931)
Film music
10 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
Vocal
Choral Fatherland (Runeberg, tr. C. Bax) [tenor solo] (1907, revised 1934) A Christmas Carol (Anon.) [arranged for SATB by Hubert Dawkes] (1909) Enchanted Summer (Shelley) [two soprano solos] (1910) Variations sur Cadet Rousselle (French trad.) [arranged by Max Saunders] (1918) Of a rose I sing a song (Anon.) [SATB, harp, cello, double bass] (1920) Now is the Time of Christymas (Anon.) [TB, flute, piano] (1921) Mater, ora Filium (Anon.) [SSAATTBB] (1921) This Worldes Joie (Anon.) [SATB with SATB divisions] (1922) The Boars Head (Anon.) [TTBB] (1923) I sing of a maiden that is makeless (Anon.) [SAATB] (1923) To the Name above every Name (Crashaw) [soprano solo] (1924) St Patricks Breastplate (Anon.) [SATB] (1924) Walsinghame (Raleigh) (tenor, obbligato soparano) (1926) Lord, Thou hast told us (Washbourne) [hymn for SATB] (1930) The Morning Watch (Vaughan) [SATB] (1935) 5 Fantasies on Polish Christmas Carols (trans. liwiski) [unison trebles] (1942) 5 Greek Folksongs (trans. Michel-Dmitri Calvocoressi) [SATB] (1942) To Russia (Masefield) [baritone solo] (1944) Gloria [SATB] (1945) Nunc Dimittis [SATB] (1945) Te Deum [SATB] (1945) Epithalamium (Spenser) [SATB in unison] (1947) Magnificat [SATB] (1948) Happy Birthday to you (Hill) [arr. SATB] (1951) What is it like to be young and fair? (C. Bax) [SSAAT] (1953) Songs with orchestra 2 Nocturnes [soprano] (1911) 3 Songs [high voice] (1914) Song of the Dagger (Strettell and Sylva) [bass] (1914) The Bard of the Dimbovitza (Strettel and Sylva) [mezzo-soprano] (1914, revised 1946) Glamour (OByrne) [high voice] (1921, orchestrated by Rodney Newton 1987) A Lyke-Wake (Anon.) [high voice] (1908, orchestrated 1934) Wild Almond (Trench) [high voice] (1924, orchestrated 1934) Eternity (Herrick) [high voice] (1934) O Dear! What can the matter be? (trad. arr. Bax) Songs with chamber ensemble Aspiration (Dehmel) [arranged for high voice w/violin, cello, & piano] (1909) My eyes for beauty pine (Bridges) [high voice with string quartet] (c.1921) O Mistress mine (Shakespeare) [high voice with string quartet] (c.1921) Songs with piano
11 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
The Grand Match (O'Neill) (1903) To My Homeland (Gwynn) (1904) A Celtic Song Cycle (Macleod) (1904) Eilidh my Fawn Closing Doors The Dark Eyes to Mine A Celtic Lullaby At the Last When We Are Lost (Arnold Bax) (1905) From the Uplands to the Sea (Morris) (1905) Leaves, Shadows and Dreams (Macleod) (1905) In the Silence of the Woods (Macleod) (1905) Green Branches (Macleod) (1905) The Fairies (Allingham) (1905) Golden Guendolen (Morris) (1905) The Song in the Twilight (Freda Bax) (1905) Mircath: Viking-Battle-Song (Macleod) (1905) A Hushing Song (Macleod) (1906) I Fear Thy Kisses Gentle Maiden (Shelley) (1906) Ballad: The Twa Corbies [recitation with piano] ('Border Minstrelsy') (1906) Magnificat (St. Luke 1.46-55) (1906) The Blessed Damozel (Rossetti) (1906) 5 Traditional Songs of France (1920) I Heard a Piper Piping (Seosamh MacCathmhaoil, Joseph Campbell) (1922)
References
1. ^ Biography of Bax (http://www.boosey.com/pages/cr/composer/composer_main.asp?composerid=18539& ttype=Biography&ttitle=Biography&langid=1) at boosey.com 2. ^ [1] (http://www.wrightmusic.net/pdfs/eda-kersey.pdf) 3. ^ Baxworks (http://www.davidparlett.co.uk/bax/bax4053.html) 4. ^ As related, for example, in an interview with Richard Adams (http://www.musicweb-international.com /bax/adamshandley.htm) 5. ^ Handley's extensive interview with Lewis Foreman is available in the booklet notes (http://www.chandos.net /pdf/CHAN%2010122.pdf) 6. ^ for example, http://www.musicweb-international.com/classRev/2003/Nov03/Bax_Adams.htm 7. ^ Richard Adams "A Triumphant Return to Manchester" (http://www.musicweb-international.com /bax/edit0505.htm), editorial on the Sir Arnold Bax Website, May 2005. Retrieved 2011-06-27. 8. ^ As detailed in the booklet notes (http://www.chandos.net/pdf/CHAN%2010126.pdf) 9. ^ "BAX, SIR ARNOLD (1883-1953)" (http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/discover/blue-plaques/search/bax-sirarnold-1883-1953). English Heritage. Retrieved 2012-10-20.
Bibliography
Corder, Frederick. A History of The Royal Academy of Music from 1822 to 1922 (London: Fredrick Corder, 1922). OByrne, Dermot. Poems by Arnold Bax, collected, selected and edited by Lewis Foreman, together with two previously unpublished songs by Bax to his own words, Lewis Foreman (ed.), (London: Thames Publishing, 1979). De Barra, Samas. "Arnold Bax, The Fleischmanns and Cork", The Journal of Music in Ireland 5/1 (JanuaryFebruary 2005): 2430. De Barra, Samas. "Into the Twilight: Arnold Bax and Ireland", The Journal of Music in Ireland 4/3
12 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
(MarchApril 2004): 2529. Elnaes, Thomas. "An Anglo-Irish Composer: New Perspectives on the Creative Achievements of Sir Arnold Bax", Master's Dissertation, University of Dublin, Trinity College, 2006. Fleischmann, Tilly. "Some reminiscences of Arnold Bax" (http://www.musicweb-international.com /bax/tilly.htm), 12 May 2005. Fry, Helen. "Music and Men, the Life and Loves of Harriet Cohen (http://www.musicandmen.com)", The History Press, September 2008. Foreman, Lewis, Bax. A composer and his times (1st edn, Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1983; 2nd edn, Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 1987; 3rd edn, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2007). Foreman, Lewis (ed.). Farewell, My Youth and other writings by Arnold Bax (Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1992; now Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing Ltd.). Foreman, Lewis and Susan Foreman. LondonA Musical Gazetteer (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2005). Parlett, Graham. A Catalogue Of The Works Of Sir Arnold Bax (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999). Scott-Sutherland, Colin. Arnold Bax (London: J. M. Dent & Sons, 1973). Scott-Sutherland, Colin (ed.). Ideala Love Letters and Poems of Arnold Bax (Petersfield, Hampshire: Fand Music Press, 2001). White, Harry. The Keepers Recital: Music and Cultural History in Ireland, 17701970 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1998). British Broadcasting Radio 3. "Arnold Bax", Composer of the Week, 29 July 2003.
External links
Biographical links
Sir Arnold Bax (http://www.musicweb-international.com/bax/index.html), an extensive archive of reviews and essays on Arnold Bax Music & Men (http://www.musicandmen.com), a biographical website dedicated to Bax's lover, the pianist Harriet Cohen
Other links
Bax Piano Sonata no. 1 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QS7Ob7fOQW4) played by Jonathan Powell (YouTube) The Lied and Art Song Texts Page created and maintained from Emily Ezust (http://www.recmusic.org /lieder/b/bax.html) Texts of the songs of Bax. Quintet for harp and strings (http://hdl.handle.net/1802/1231) from the Sibley Music Library Digital Score Collection Free scores by Arnold Bax at the International Music Score Library Project National Portrait Gallery (http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?search=ss& sText=Arnold+Bax&LinkID=mp00298) (18 portraits, 8 on display) Reviews of IDEALA: Collected Poems of Dermot O'Byrne (http://www.fandmusic.com /?product=FM091), available from Fand Music Press List of Bax first editions available from Fand Music Press (http://www.fandmusic.com/?composer=2),
13 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Bax
including piano music and the IDEALA book List of Sir Arnold Bax's Works (http://www.davidparlett.co.uk/bax/) David Parlett's site, based on Graham Parlett's Catalog Free scores by Arnold Bax in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki) Works by Bax (http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=arnold%20bax) available at the Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org/) Archival material relating to Arnold Bax (http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches /subjectView.asp?ID=P1822) listed at the UK National Archives
Court offices Preceded by Sir Walford Davies Master of the King's Musick 19421952 Succeeded by Sir Arthur Bliss
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Arnold_Bax&oldid=540241363" Categories: 1883 births 1953 deaths Alumni of the Royal Academy of Music English composers 20th-century classical composers Composers for piano Masters of the Queen's Music Knights Bachelor Composers awarded knighthoods Knights Commander of the Royal Victorian Order People associated with University College Dublin People associated with University College Cork People from Dublin (city) People from Streatham Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medallists People educated at Heath Mount School This page was last modified on 25 February 2013 at 13:18. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
14 of 14
6/6/2013 9:09 AM