May Brahe: Difference between revisions
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{{Use Australian English|date=June 2011}} |
{{Use Australian English|date=June 2011}} |
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{{Infobox musical artist |
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| name = May Brahe |
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| background = non_performing_personnel |
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| birth_name = Mary Hannah Dickson |
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| alias = Mervyn Banks, Mary Hannah Brahe, Donald Crichton, Stanley Dickson, Alison Dodd, Stanton Douglas, Eric Faulkner, Wilbur B. Fox, Henry Lovell, Mary Hanna Morgan, George Pointer |
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| birth_date = {{birth date|1884|11|06|df=y}} |
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| birth_place = [[East Melbourne, Victoria|East Melbourne]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], [[Australia]] |
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| death_date = {{death date and age|1956|08|14|1884|11|06|df=y}} |
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| death_place = [[Bellevue Hill, New South Wales|Bellevue Hill]], [[Sydney]] |
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| genre = |
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| occupation = Composer |
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}} |
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'''May Brahe''' (6 November 1884{{spaced ndash}}14 August 1956) was an [[Australia]]n composer, best known for her songs and ballads. Her most famous song by far is "[[Bless This House (song)|Bless This House]]", recorded by [[John McCormack (tenor)|John McCormack]], [[Beniamino Gigli]],<ref name="Naxos">[http://www.naxos.com/catalogue/item.asp?item_code=8.111101 Naxos]</ref> [[Lesley Garrett]] and [[Bryn Terfel]].<ref name="ArkivMusik">[http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/albumList.jsp?name_id1=1440&name_role1=1&comp_id=46784&bcorder=15 ArkivMusik]</ref> She was the only Australian woman composer to win local and international recognition before [[World War II]], having 290 of her 500 songs published.<ref>[http://www.move.com.au/artist.cfm/691 Move records]</ref> Of these, 248 were written under her own name,<ref name=MA>[http://www.musicaustralia.org/apps/MA?function=showDetail¤tMapsRecord=ANL:MA~1061593&itemSeq=2&total=9&&returnFunction=searchResults&scope=scope&simpleTerm=dawson&sessionId=reuseSearch7CFCC6FCD97B81B9B6D213DFC1A074781219924353303 Music Australia]</ref> the remainder under aliases. |
'''May Brahe''' (6 November 1884{{spaced ndash}}14 August 1956) was an [[Australia]]n composer, best known for her songs and ballads. Her most famous song by far is "[[Bless This House (song)|Bless This House]]", recorded by [[John McCormack (tenor)|John McCormack]], [[Beniamino Gigli]],<ref name="Naxos">[http://www.naxos.com/catalogue/item.asp?item_code=8.111101 Naxos]</ref> [[Lesley Garrett]] and [[Bryn Terfel]].<ref name="ArkivMusik">[http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/albumList.jsp?name_id1=1440&name_role1=1&comp_id=46784&bcorder=15 ArkivMusik]</ref> She was the only Australian woman composer to win local and international recognition before [[World War II]], having 290 of her 500 songs published.<ref>[http://www.move.com.au/artist.cfm/691 Move records]</ref> Of these, 248 were written under her own name,<ref name=MA>[http://www.musicaustralia.org/apps/MA?function=showDetail¤tMapsRecord=ANL:MA~1061593&itemSeq=2&total=9&&returnFunction=searchResults&scope=scope&simpleTerm=dawson&sessionId=reuseSearch7CFCC6FCD97B81B9B6D213DFC1A074781219924353303 Music Australia]</ref> the remainder under aliases. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
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Mary Hannah Dickson was born in [[East Melbourne, Victoria|East Melbourne]] in 1884. She was known as May from an early age. Her father was native born and her mother Scottish. She studied piano with her mother, then at Stratherne Girls' School, [[Hawthorn, Victoria|Hawthorn]], and later with Mona McBurney and the singer Alice Rebotarro. |
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In 1903, she married Frederick Brahe, and they had two sons and a daughter. By 1910 she was playing in a trio with [[Marshall Hall (musician)|George W. L. Marshall-Hall]], and accompanying singers. In 1912 she left for [[London]] to establish herself as a composer, leaving her children behind. Her first success was the song |
In 1903, she married Frederick Brahe, and they had two sons and a daughter. By 1910 she was playing in a trio with [[Marshall Hall (musician)|George W. L. Marshall-Hall]], and accompanying singers. In 1912 she left for [[London]] to establish herself as a composer, leaving her children behind. Her first success was the song "It's Quiet Down Here". In 1914 she returned to Australia, but only for long enough to bring her family back to England. |
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Brahe published under her married name and nine [[pseudonym]]s. This allowed more frequent publication, as publishers were reluctant to publish more than four of her songs in a year.<ref name=MA/> The names she composed under included: |
Brahe published under her married name and nine [[pseudonym]]s. This allowed more frequent publication, as publishers were reluctant to publish more than four of her songs in a year.<ref name=MA/> The names she composed under included: Mervyn Banks, Mary Hannah Brahe, Donald Crichton, Stanley Dickson, Alison Dodd, Stanton Douglas, Eric Faulkner, Wilbur B. Fox, Henry Lovell, Mary Hanna Morgan, and George Pointer.<ref>[http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn1155997 NLA Catalogue]</ref> |
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In 1919, her husband was killed in a motor accident. In 1922, in London, she married an Australian-born actor George Albert Morgan. When her publisher was taken over by [[Boosey & Hawkes]] in 1925, she became one of their few composers on an annual retainer. In the next eighteen years she published 400 compositions, mainly ballads. Dame [[Nellie Melba]], [[Peter Dawson (bass-baritone)|Peter Dawson]], [[John Charles Thomas]]<ref>[http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/Drilldown;jsessionid=A18F21C56D4419BAB1B6290EF3FF5370?name_id1=1440&name_role1=1&bcorder=1&comp_id=235980 ArkivMusik]</ref> and other singers recorded her songs, many of which were chosen as items for school concerts in the United Kingdom, Australia and the [[United States]]. |
In 1919, her husband was killed in a motor accident. In 1922, in London, she married an Australian-born actor George Albert Morgan. When her publisher was taken over by [[Boosey & Hawkes]] in 1925, she became one of their few composers on an annual retainer. In the next eighteen years she published 400 compositions, mainly ballads. Dame [[Nellie Melba]], [[Peter Dawson (bass-baritone)|Peter Dawson]], [[John Charles Thomas]]<ref>[http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/Drilldown;jsessionid=A18F21C56D4419BAB1B6290EF3FF5370?name_id1=1440&name_role1=1&bcorder=1&comp_id=235980 ArkivMusik]</ref> and other singers recorded her songs, many of which were chosen as items for school concerts in the United Kingdom, Australia and the [[United States]]. |
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==Musical compositions using the name May H. Brahe (incomplete)== |
==Musical compositions using the name May H. Brahe (incomplete)== |
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===Songs=== |
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* ''As I Went a’Roaming'' (Helen Taylor), Enoch & Sons publisher |
* ''As I Went a’Roaming'' (Helen Taylor), Enoch & Sons publisher |
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* ''Beaux and Belles'' (Helen Taylor) |
* ''Beaux and Belles'' (Helen Taylor) |
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* ''Yours Alone'' (Helen Taylor) |
* ''Yours Alone'' (Helen Taylor) |
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===Cantatas=== |
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* ''Dame Durden's School'', juvenile cantata |
* ''Dame Durden's School'', juvenile cantata |
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* ''The Magic Wood'', juvenile cantata |
* ''The Magic Wood'', juvenile cantata |
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===Musical comedy=== |
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* ''Castles in Spain'', a South-American musical romance (libretto: [[Sydney Box]], Montgomery Tully; lyrics: Harold V. Purcell, [[Muriel Box]]) |
* ''Castles in Spain'', a South-American musical romance (libretto: [[Sydney Box]], Montgomery Tully; lyrics: Harold V. Purcell, [[Muriel Box]]) |
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===Piano solo=== |
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* ''Gay Pastorale'' |
* ''Gay Pastorale'' |
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* ''Marita'' |
* ''Marita'' |
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* ''Invitation'' (Rose Fyleman) |
* ''Invitation'' (Rose Fyleman) |
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== |
==References== |
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* [http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070397b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography] |
* [http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070397b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography] |
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* [http://www.musicaustralia.org/apps/MA?&function=toolbarAction&returnFunction=searchResults&reuseSearch=true&total=196&dbType=MABIB&startRec=181&endRec=196&sessionId=reuseSearchBB70328054788812FD00D37E6621EF501245034587191&whichAction=navigateTo1&selectedMapsRecord=&resStartRec=181&resEndRec=196&resTotal=196 Music Australia] |
* [http://www.musicaustralia.org/apps/MA?&function=toolbarAction&returnFunction=searchResults&reuseSearch=true&total=196&dbType=MABIB&startRec=181&endRec=196&sessionId=reuseSearchBB70328054788812FD00D37E6621EF501245034587191&whichAction=navigateTo1&selectedMapsRecord=&resStartRec=181&resEndRec=196&resTotal=196 Music Australia] |
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* [http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Search/Home?lookfor=author:%22Brahe,%20May%20H.,%20d.%201956%22&iknowwhatimean=1&page=1 NLA Catalogue] |
* [http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Search/Home?lookfor=author:%22Brahe,%20May%20H.,%20d.%201956%22&iknowwhatimean=1&page=1 NLA Catalogue] |
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==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 18:27, 6 October 2012
May Brahe | |
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Birth name | Mary Hannah Dickson |
Also known as | Mervyn Banks, Mary Hannah Brahe, Donald Crichton, Stanley Dickson, Alison Dodd, Stanton Douglas, Eric Faulkner, Wilbur B. Fox, Henry Lovell, Mary Hanna Morgan, George Pointer |
Born | East Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | 6 November 1884
Died | 14 August 1956 Bellevue Hill, Sydney | (aged 71)
Occupation | Composer |
May Brahe (6 November 1884 – 14 August 1956) was an Australian composer, best known for her songs and ballads. Her most famous song by far is "Bless This House", recorded by John McCormack, Beniamino Gigli,[1] Lesley Garrett and Bryn Terfel.[2] She was the only Australian woman composer to win local and international recognition before World War II, having 290 of her 500 songs published.[3] Of these, 248 were written under her own name,[4] the remainder under aliases.
Biography
Mary Hannah Dickson was born in East Melbourne in 1884. She was known as May from an early age. Her father was native born and her mother Scottish. She studied piano with her mother, then at Stratherne Girls' School, Hawthorn, and later with Mona McBurney and the singer Alice Rebotarro.
In 1903, she married Frederick Brahe, and they had two sons and a daughter. By 1910 she was playing in a trio with George W. L. Marshall-Hall, and accompanying singers. In 1912 she left for London to establish herself as a composer, leaving her children behind. Her first success was the song "It's Quiet Down Here". In 1914 she returned to Australia, but only for long enough to bring her family back to England.
Brahe published under her married name and nine pseudonyms. This allowed more frequent publication, as publishers were reluctant to publish more than four of her songs in a year.[4] The names she composed under included: Mervyn Banks, Mary Hannah Brahe, Donald Crichton, Stanley Dickson, Alison Dodd, Stanton Douglas, Eric Faulkner, Wilbur B. Fox, Henry Lovell, Mary Hanna Morgan, and George Pointer.[5]
In 1919, her husband was killed in a motor accident. In 1922, in London, she married an Australian-born actor George Albert Morgan. When her publisher was taken over by Boosey & Hawkes in 1925, she became one of their few composers on an annual retainer. In the next eighteen years she published 400 compositions, mainly ballads. Dame Nellie Melba, Peter Dawson, John Charles Thomas[6] and other singers recorded her songs, many of which were chosen as items for school concerts in the United Kingdom, Australia and the United States.
She made settings of poems by William Blake, Robert Browning, Robert Herrick, Walter de la Mare, Dorothea Mackellar and living lyricists such as Helen Taylor, Madge Dickson (her sister), and P. J. O'Reilly. Helen Taylor was her most frequent collaborator, including Bless This House (1927). This simple song became world-famous in recordings by singers such as John McCormack, Peter Dawson, Jan Peerce, Beniamino Gigli[1] and Josef Locke,[7] through to Vera Lynn, Doris Day and Perry Como, and continues its popularity in the present day, with recordings by Benjamin Luxon, Leontyne Price, Lesley Garrett and Bryn Terfel.[2]
She wrote musical comedies, including Castles in Spain, with a libretto by Sydney and Muriel Box. She returned to Australia in 1939 and lived in semi-retirement. She lived comfortably from song royalties.[4] She died at Bellevue Hill, Sydney in 1956; she was survived by two sons and a daughter of her first marriage and a son of her second.
Musical compositions using the name May H. Brahe (incomplete)
Songs
- As I Went a’Roaming (Helen Taylor), Enoch & Sons publisher
- Beaux and Belles (Helen Taylor)
- The Country Dance
- Bless This House (Helen Taylor)
- By Road and River, 5 songs (Helen Taylor)
- O Western Wind!
- Red Roofs
- The Call of the Maytime (Helen Taylor)
- Children of All Nations (Lucie Smith)
- Close Thine Eyes (adapted from lyrics by King Charles I of England)
- Coming Home Along (Nancie B. Marsland)
- Country Folk (Helen Taylor)
- Cradle Me Low (Helen Taylor)
- Cuckoo Calls (Helen Taylor)
- The Days of Old (Porter Emerson Brown)
- Down Here (P. J. O'Reilly), Enoch & Sons publisher
- Evening Shadows (Jean Crichton)
- The Everlasting Love (Helen Taylor)
- Four Songs from "Peacock Pie" (Walter de la Mare)
- The Old Stone House
- From Far and Near (Alban Gordon)
- Galloping Dreary Dun (adapted by P. J. O'Reilly)
- Give Me Your Hand (George Cooper)
- Good-bye, and God be with You (P. J. O'Reilly)
- Guess You Know (Helen Taylor)
- The Haunting Little Tune (Harold George)
- I Passed by your Window (unknown author), Enoch & Sons publisher
- I Thought I'd Forgotten (But Still I Remember) (Helen Taylor)
- I Walked in My Garden (Harold George)
- In a Month of Sundays (Dorothy Dickinson)
- A Japanese Love Song (Madge Dickson), Enoch & Sons publisher, 1910
- Jennifer (Royden Barrie)
- Keep Thou My Heart (Edward Lockton)
- Last Night (Shirley Darbyshire)
- A Leafy Wood (Jean Lucas)
- Life's Balcony (Helen Taylor)
- Listen, Mary (Constance Wilford)
- Little Bird (Dorothy Harrison)
- A Little Green Lane (Desmond Carter)
- Little Lamb (William Blake)[8]
- Look Up to the Sunrise (Edward Lockton)
- Love and Life, 5 little songs
- Love Me Little, Love Me Long (Anonymous)
- Marjorie (Walter Learned)
- Matthew, Mark, Luke and John (adapted by Walter de la Mare)
- Messengers (Helen Taylor)
- My Dear Old Town (Arthur L. Salmon)
- A Northern Lament (Helen Taylor)
- Nothing to Say (Fred E. Weatherly)
- The Nutmeg Tree (adapted by Margaret Lucas)
- A Parting Prayer (John Marvell)
- My Prayer for You (Margaret Dickson)
- Off to the Greenwood (Helen Taylor)
- Oh, Pray for Peace (Helen Taylor)
- A Pageant of Summer, song cycle for 4 voices (Helen Taylor):
- Meadowsweet
- None-so-pretty
- Traveller's Joy
- The Piper from Over the Way (Helen Taylor)
- A Prayer in Absence (Helen Taylor)
- The Queen (Alex C. Welsh)
- Real Australian Children Songs (Madge Dickson)
- Ring-Time (Helen Taylor)
- She is All So Slight (Richard Aldington)
- Shy Mignonette (Helen Taylor)
- Sitting at Home by the Fire (Helen Taylor)
- Sleep, Pretty Babe[9]
- Song of a Cretan Warrior (Thomas Campbell)
- A Song of Exile (P. J. O'Reilly)
- Song Pictures, 5 songs (Helen Taylor)
- I Passed By Your Window
- To a Miniature
- Spindrift, 5 songs (Ethel Tindal Atkinson/Madge Dickson)
- Spring Blossoms, 4 little songs (Morris Hazlitt/Madge Dickson/Robert Herrick)
- Spring is on the Way (Jean Crichton)
- Sweet and Low[9]
- That's All (Helen Taylor)
- There's a Whisper in the Air (Nancie B. Marsland)
- Through the April Meadows (Helen Taylor)
- Two Little Words (Helen Taylor)
- Two Songs (Robert Browning)[10]
- Oh, to be in England
- The Year's at the Spring
- When I Hear a Song-Lark (Morris Hazlitt)
- The Wide Brown Land (Dorothea Mackellar)
- Years Ago (Helen Taylor)
- You'll Come Home Again (Harold George)
- Yours Alone (Helen Taylor)
Cantatas
- Dame Durden's School, juvenile cantata
- The Magic Wood, juvenile cantata
Musical comedy
- Castles in Spain, a South-American musical romance (libretto: Sydney Box, Montgomery Tully; lyrics: Harold V. Purcell, Muriel Box)
Piano solo
- Gay Pastorale
- Marita
- Minuet for Ninon
- Toy Town Patrol
Musical compositions using the name Stanley Dickson
- Crying for the Moon (Dorothy M. Tweedale)
- Dancing Days (Helen Taylor)
- God Bless You (Kathleen Stuart)
- Little Brown Cottage (Greatrex Newman)
- Thanks Be to God (P. J. O'Reilly)
Musical compositions using the name Alison Dodd
- Invitation (Rose Fyleman)
References
External links