Madeleine Dring - Trio for Flute, Oboe and Piano (1968)(with full score)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • Mov.1: Allegro con brio 00:10
    Mov.2: Andante semplice 03:02
    Mov.3: Allegro giocoso 07:31
    Fl. Jeanne Baxtresser
    Ob. Joseph Robinson
    Pf. Pedja Muzijevic
    Madeleine Dring spent the first four years of her life at Raleigh Road, Harringay when the family moved to Streatham. She showed talent at an early age began lessons in the junior department of the Royal College of Music beginning on her tenth birthday. She attended the school with scholarships for violin and piano. As part of their training, all of the students performed in the children's theatre. She formally began composition studies at the RCMJD with Stanley Drummond Wolff in 1937, continued the next year with Leslie Fly, and the next two with Percy Buck. She continued at the Royal College for senior-level studies, where her composition teacher was Herbert Howells. She dropped the study of violin after the death of her instructor, W.H. Reed, at the end of the first year. She also studied mime, drama, and singing. Dring's love of theatre and music co-mingled happily; many of her earliest professional creations were for the stage, radio, and television.
    In 1947 she married Roger Lord who served as Principal Oboist with London Symphony Orchestra for thirty years. She composed several works for Roger, including the highly regarded Dances for solo oboe. Soon after her marriage, her first pieces were published with Lengnick and with Oxford (1948). The Lords had one son in 1950.
    A book Madeleine Dring: Her Music, Her Life by Ro Hancock-Child, was published in 2000 (2nd edition 2009), with cartoon illustrations from Dring's own notebooks. The effort was funded by a grant from Dring's husband, Roger Lord, in an effort to disseminate information about his late wife. Several articles, compact disc recordings, and inclusions of Dring's biographical information in books about composers in the last decade have secured her name a place in the modern lexicon. Dring died in 1977 of a cerebral hemorrhage. Despite some confusion about her final resting place, Dring's tombstone was recently uncovered at Lambeth Cemetery in Streatham. Both Roger and their son Jeremy passed away in 2014. Roger died at age 90 and Jeremy died of ALS.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 31