RCM Museum celebrates the life of Samuel Coleridge-TaylorPosted in Articles, Arts, Biography, Media Archive, United Kingdom on 2018-01-30 04:38Z by Steven |
RCM Museum celebrates the life of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
Classical-music.com: The official website of BBC Music Magazine
2017-10-19
Anna Maria Barry, Museum Research Assistant
Royal College of Music’s Museum of Music
The composer’s musical fight for civil rights is the focus of an intriguing new digital exhibition, explains Anna Barry
The Royal College of Music Museum has launched a new digital exhibition about composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (above). Released to coincide with Black History Month, the exhibition, entitled Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and the musical fight for Civil Rights celebrates the composer’s important role within civil rights movements in the UK and the US at the turn of the 20th century. Coleridge-Taylor was a student at the college and the exhibition draws on his remarkable collections which are held at its museum.
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born in London in 1875. His mother Alice was British, while his father hailed from Freetown in Sierra Leone. Dr Daniel Taylor had met Alice while studying in Britain, but most likely returned to West Africa without realising that she was pregnant. He never met his son. The young Coleridge-Taylor was given a violin by his maternal grandfather, and soon displayed great musical talent. He joined the Royal College of Music in 1890, studying composition under Charles Villiers Stanford. Coleridge-Taylor soon became a musical celebrity thanks to his trilogy of cantatas, known collectively as The Song of Hiawatha. Until World War II, this was one of the most performed choral pieces in Britain, rivalled only by Handel’s Messiah and Mendelssohn’s Elijah…
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