Mary Lucas

Mary Lucas (born Mary Anderson Juler, 24 May 188214 January 1952),[1] sometimes referred to as Mary Anderson Lucas, was an English composer and pianist.[2]

Biography

Her father was a doctor, and she was one of five children, growing up in London and (from 1891) Chipstead in Surrey. She studied piano at the Dresden Conservatory with Carlo Albanesi (1856-1926)[3] and (later in life, during the 1920s) composition at the Royal College of Music with Herbert Howells, R.O. Morris and Maurice Jacobson.[4] She married entrepreneur and inventor Ralph Lucas in 1903,[5] and their son Colin became a noted architect.[6][7]

Music

Lucas gave up composition for a few years after she married, but returned to produce a number of successful compositions, including six string quartets.[8] In 1934 and 1935 the Stratton String Quartet championed her music, performing her quartets at the London Music Club's First Performance Society on 29 November 1934 at 22 Holland Park,[9] and in January 1935 at the Blackheath Concert Halls.[10] There was a BBC broadcast of the third quartet by the all female Macnaghten Quartet on 4 February 1936.[11]

Lucas had a special affinity with the clarinet, and may have encouraged her niece Pauline Juler (1914-2003) to become a professional clarinetist.[12] Her Clarinet Sonata was written for Juler in 1938.[13][14] Around this time she was also performing duo recitals with the clarinet Rudolph Dunbar, and a recording of them playing her Lament for clarinet and piano was issued by Octacros Records in the late-1930s.[15] A performance of the impressionistic Circus Suite for orchestra, conducted by Henry Wood at the Royal Albert Hall on 4 July 1942, gave Lucus her Proms debut at the age of sixty.[16]

Her papers (including some recordings) are partially housed at the British Library,[17] while some manuscripts and other papers are held at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Family and friends

Her husband Ralph Lucas was involved in the design and manufacturing of early motor cars, including the Ralph Lucas Car, developed from 1901 until around 1908. He died in 1955. Their son Colin Lucas (1906-1984) became a pioneer of reinforced concrete construction. He built Noah's Boathouse in Cookham for his parents.[18] Mary Lucas established a music room there, where musical gatherings were held.[19][20] Visitors to these included friends such as Paul Nash, Alain Daniélou and Edmund Rubbra.[21]

Another of her nieces was the actress, dancer and singer Daphne Anderson.[22]

Works

Selected works include:

Orchestral

  • Capriccio for saxophone and string orchestra[23]
  • The Circus, suite for orchestra (1939)[24][16] (pub. Peters)
  • Concertino for flute and orchestra (1940) [25]
  • Five Tunes for Small Orchestra [26]
  • Fugue for strings (1939) [25]
  • Occasional Overture (fp 22 November 1940, Arts Theatre Club) [26]
  • Rhapsody for orchestra (performed in Bournemouth, April 1928)[27]
  • Variations on a Theme by Purcell for string orchestra (1938)[24] (pub. Peters)

Chamber Music

  • Clarinet Sonata (1938) [26] (pub. Hinrichsen)[28]
  • Complainte et Rapsodie for clarinet and piano [25]
  • Duo for clarinet and viola (1941) [25]
  • Fugue for flute, oboe and viola (1938) [25]
  • Lament for clarinet and piano (1938) [26]
  • Rhapsody for flute, cello and piano (1946) [25]
  • String Quartet No 1 [25]
  • String Quartet No 2 (1933) [25]
  • String Quartet No 3 (1935) [25]
  • Trio for clarinet, viola and piano (1939) [25]
  • Violin Sonata (performance 4 November 1930, Blackheath) [26]

Vocal

  • Choeurs isolés, choral [25]
  • The Hour of Magic (text: W H Davies) [26]
  • Sleeping Sea and Lullaby, two choral part songs (1939), pub. Chester[29]
  • Songs for two part choir (OUP): Dandelion Down, Duck's Ditty, Evening Song, Thunder at Night, The Wind [30]

Ballet and Dramatic [25]

  • Amour et mort, ballet (1936)
  • Preludes de Ballet (1945)
  • Sciure (piano-flute-string quintet), ballet (1941)
  • The Book of Thel, masque for solo voices, chorus, chamber orchestra, and male and female narrators (1935)
  • Musiques de scène, masque
  • Sawdust, ballet (fp 21 May 1941, Wulfrun Hall Wolverhampton) [26]

References

  1. Wikitree: Mary Anderson (Juler) Lucas
  2. Obituary (three lines only), The Musical Times, Vol. 93, No. 1311 (May 1952), p 230
  3. NOTE: the sources say Dresden, but Albanesi settled in London from 1893 and taught at the Royal Academy of Music - see his obituary, The Musical Times, Vol. 67, No. 1005 (Nov. 1, 1926), p. 1037
  4. British Music Society. British Composer Profiles, 3rd Edition, 2012
  5. Greenwich Industrial History: Ralph Lucas (1876-1955)
  6. Sharp, Dennis; Rendel, Sally (2008). Connell, Ward and Lucas: Modern movement architects in England (Digitized online by GoogleBooks). ISBN 9780711227682. Retrieved 5 January 2011.
  7. Paul Mellon Centre Archive
  8. "THE DISTAFF SIDE: SOME BRITISH WOMEN COMPOSERS". Retrieved 5 January 2011.
  9. The Times, 26 November 1934, p 10
  10. See The British Library, Music Collections, Programmes and handbills relating to Mary Anderson Lucas, .
  11. Radio Times, Issue 644, 2 February 1936, p 35-6
  12. 'Pauline Rosemary (Juler) Richards (1914-2003)', biography at WikiTree
  13. The Clarinet: Volume 11. International Clarinet Society, Idaho State University. Dept. of Music. 1983.
  14. The Clarinet Sonata was revived by Peter Cigleris and Martin Cousin in Weymouth on 10 February 2019.
  15. Michael Thomas: Octaras
  16. BBC Proms Archive
  17. The British Library, Music Collections, Programmes and handbills relating to Mary Anderson Lucas
  18. Ouspensky Today. Colin Lucas: a view of a creative life
  19. BBC Berkshire: Noah's Boathouse Hits Troubled Waters
  20. BBC Radio 3: Essential Classics, 21 January 2019
  21. Romano Kate. 'Mary Lucas and the Concrete Boathouse', BBC Radio 3, 21 January, 2019
  22. WikiTree. 'Gladys Amy (Gladys) Scrutton formerly Juler'
  23. The Musical Times, Nov. 1941, Vol. 82, No. 1185 (Nov. 1941), p. 413
  24. British Music Collection
  25. Musicalics Catalogue
  26. Lucas Collection: Concert Programmes
  27. Musical Times, 1 June 1928, p 549
  28. Pitfield, Spenser Simpson. British Music for Clarinet and Piano: 1880-1945 (Ph.D, University of Sheffield (2000), p 96
  29. Musical Times, May 1939, p 359
  30. Presto Music
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.