Classical CD and DVD reviews. MusicWeb is not a subscription site and it is our advertisers that pay for it. Please visit their sites regularly to see if anything might interest you. Purchasing from them keeps MusicWeb free.

Classical Editor: Rob Barnett                               Founder Len Mullenger





ETHEL SMYTH

Dr David C F Wright

 

Ethel Smyth was born in London on 23 April 1858.

She was a formidable woman which, it has to be said, is a polite way of describing her excessive domineering attitude. One wonders how her father, J H Smyth, a Major-General in the Royal Artillery, contributed to Ethel's personality. On the other hand she could be hearty and jovial. She was one of eight children of which six were female.

She was headstrong all her life and interested in education. When she displayed her interest in music her family were displeased. In fact they stopped her music lessons because she became too intense. She was always a rebel and unpredictable.

She did not care what her family thought. She announced that she was going to be a professional musician when there was considered no future in it especially for a teenage girl. Her parents were very cross. She had had the best of education with a private tutor and at a boarding school in Putney. When she was seventeen she had lessons with Alexander Ewing and studied the works of Wagner and read Berlioz's Treatise on Instrumentation. She regarded Leipzig as the centre of musical excellence and wanted to study there. She argued with her parents about her plans and was moody, sullen and disruptive. She would not eat or come out of her room or go to church or social functions and shouted and swore at everybody. Eventually for the sanity of the home her father reluctantly allowed her to go in 1877

But she was only there a year . She was again a rebel. She said that the standard of teaching and music there was abysmal. And yet she had Carl Reinecke as a tutor. He was the conductor of the Gewandhaus Orchestra. But she met some interesting musicians there including Grieg, Dvořák and Tchaikovsky. Her rebellious attitude and desire for attention led her in 1878 to have private tuition from Heinrich von Herzogenberg. Through himshe met Brahms and Clara Schumann.

Her first work was a String Quartet performed in 1884. A sonata for violin and piano, Op. 4, appeared in 1887 and a Sonata for cello and piano, Op. 5, in 1887. Her opus 3 and Opus 4 were sets of German lieder which she took to the publishers Breitkopf and Härtel. When she was told that there was no market for such songs, she retorted that they had to be published but that she would not accept a fee or royalties and called the publisher a donkey.

It was Brahms who expressed the view that the songs had worth and this pandered to Ethel's desire for attention. She responded by admiring Brahms and beginning to write in his style. Her Seven Short Chorale Preludes for organ display this.

She returned to England. No teacher was good enough for her. She studied orchestration on her own and composed two works, the four movement Serenade in D and the overture Anthony and Cleopatra both premiered by August Manns at the Crystal Palace in 1890. George Bernard Shaw wrote about the overture that when the composer was called to the platform the audience were stupefied that a woman could make so much noise. However, it did have some success.

Despite her socialist and atheist/agnostic views she composed her Mass in D in 1891 premiered by the Royal Choral Society under Sir Joseph Barnaby at the Royal Albert Hall. Sir Donald Tovey claimed it as a great work and to be compared with Beethoven's Missa Solemnis, a remark which is unbelievable from a scholar of Tovey's standing. It has some fine moments but it is rather ponderous in a German tradition. The conductor Hermann Levi was impressed with it and told Smyth that she should concentrate on opera. She did.

What Smyth achieved was the support of many women in the public eye. The exiled Empress Eugene, the widow of Napoleon III helped financially with the premiere of the Mass as her sister Mary Hunter and did the American Mary Dodge who financed the first British performance of The Wreckers. The assistance was probably more for the advancement of women rather than the music.

Smyth wrote six operas in quick succession. Fantasia, completed in 1898 took about eighteen months to compose and was based on a libretto by Henry Brewster adapted from a comedy by Alfred de Musset. It was not a success. In 1902, her second opera Der Wald appeared which was performed in Berlin and Covent Garden and it was the first opera by a British woman staged at the Metropolitan in New York which performance she attended.

In 1904 her opera The Wreckers appeared and it is her most well-known opera to a libretto by Brewster. The British premiere was a concert version in 1908 conducted by Beecham.

Two smaller works date from this time, the Four Songs of 1908 and Three Moods of the Sea (1913)

She allied herself to the suffrage movement after meeting Emmeline Pankhurst in 1910 and for two years she supported what the movement claimed: a right for women to vote. But it was not just that. If it had been just that the movement would had been admired but the movement was a terrorist organisation. Women smashed windows, put burning rags soaked with paraffin into letter boxes destroying letters to loved ones, carried bricks in their large handbags and attacked policeman and clergymen in the street with these heavy weapons. They would break up meetings including church services. That they chained themselves to railings was one thing but they made false accusations that policeman had groped them and when they were arrested and in prison cells they were force-fed which the women claim was assault.

Smyth was captivated by Pankhurst and said that she would be her slave. She became close to other women and was able to indulge her lesbianism. Her work The March of the Women from her Three Songs of Sunrise became the anthem of the suffragettes. Smyth was found guilty of criminal damage of the property of a cabinet minister and was sentenced to two months in Holloway Prison.

Thereafter she went to Egypt in 1913 and wrote her comedy opera The Boatswain's Mate which used The March of the Women material. It was premiered in London's Shaftesbury Theatre in 1916. It had a mixed reception and she conducted the overture at the 1921 Promenade Concerts.

Now in her early sixties she was alarmed at the fact that she was going deaf and, to add to her malaise, heard strange noises. She embarked on another career as a writer and wrote ten books mostly biographical dealing with Beecham, Brahms, Queen Victoria, Emmeline Pankhurst and Virginia Woolf. In these books she laboured the point tenaciously that women were superior in all things. Two of her book titles tell it all ... Female Pipings in Eden (1933) and Inordinate Affection (1936). Her ranting and raving in her letters including those published in the broadsheets continued her sexism and verbal abuse of men as inferior creatures.

She was noted for her eccentricity. She dressed like a man sinceshe took that role in her relationships with other women. She smoked cigars and wore tweed suits. She loved sheepdogs and lavished excessive affection upon them. The 1920s saw her last two operas, Fete Galante (1922) with a libretto by Maurice Baring and Entente Cordiale (1925) described as a post war comedy. But they have not caught on.

She composed a rather anaemic Concerto for horn, violin and orchestra in 1927 trying to imitate the lyrical Brahms and The Prison (1930) to a text by Henry Brewster which was described as a symphony for soprano, baritone and orchestra.

She was respected in some quarters, or it may be that she was given consideration to stem the flow of her attacks upon the establishment. She had received a honorary doctorate from Durham in 1910 and another from Oxford in 1926. In 1922 she was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

She died in Woking on 9 May 1944.

Copyright Dr David C F Wright 1999. This article or any part of it must not be copied or used in any way nor stored in a retrieval system or downloaded without the prior written consent of the author.

 

Advertising Rates
Visitor stats
MusicWeb International
has over 21,000 Classical CD reviews on offer


Gerard Hoffnung Concerts &
The Bricklayer Story

Naxos Classical 

Australian Eloquence CDs on Buywell.com


New Releases

Hyperion
New Releases


Guild Music






MusicWeb sells the Polish
catalogue CDAccord
£10.50 post free W-W


MusicWeb sells the
Arcodiva catalogue
£12.00 post free W-W


Price Reduction: £11.00
post-free
world-wide
Try it and see - Sale or Return

 

MusicWeb can now offer you discs from the following catalogues:
Prices include postage

[Acte Préalable £13.50]
[Arcodiva £12.00]
[Ashgate Music Books]
[Avie from £6.25]
[British Music Society £13.49]
[CDACCORD from £10.50 ]
[ClassicO £12.50]
[Hortus £14.99 ]

[Lyrita ONLY £11.00 ]
LYRITA Sale or Return
[Onyx £12.00
]
ONYX Sale or Return
[REDCLIFFE £11 ]
[Tactus £11.50 ]
[Talent from £12.00 ]
[Toccata Classics £12.50 ]

MusicWeb Recommended Recordings 2008

DISCS OF THE YEAR 2007


Return to Index



Reviews from previous months
Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the discs reviewed. details
We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin Board.  Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to which you refer..

 


You can purchase CDs and Save around 22% with these retailers: