Blanche Robinson

Blanche Robinson

Blanche Robinson (Mrs. Martin Hennion Robinson) (née Williams b. May 18, 1883, near Liberty, Kansas; d. Aug 19, 1969, Los Angeles, CA) was an American composer and well-known piano accompanist. During her prolific years as a composer, she lived in New York City. During her more active years as a piano accompanist, she lived in Los Angeles. In her published music, she was known as Mrs. M. Hennion Robinson or Mrs. M. Hennion-Robinson.

Contents

Two Blanche Robinsons & two Blanch Williams of the same era

(i) Because Blanche Robinson's maiden name was "Williams" and (ii) because Blanche Robinson wrote and used poetry in art songs that she composed, she might be confused with Blanche Robinson Williams (b 1895), the poet from Virginia — who, separately, might be confused with Blanche Colton Williams, PhD (1879-1944), the author and former head of the English department at Hunter College.[1]

Music career

Before she became a teenager, Robinson began accepting engagements in concert work, and under the management of Mr. Pardee and Miss Weber toured the Middle West in recital as concert pianist. In 1901 her father's business called him to California, and the family moved to Los Angeles.

For nearly three years after arriving in Los Angeles, Robinson did concert work and was soloist on many notable programs. Around 1904, Robinson began specializing exclusively in accompaniment. She accompanied artists that included George Hamlin, Jeannie Jornelli, Marcella Craft, Maggie Teyte, and Pavlowa, Franz Wilcez and Hugo Herrman. For nine years she was the accompanist for the Woman's Lyric Club, and for five years of the Ellis Club.

Robinson became a pupil in composition of Frederick Stephenson in Los Angeles. Her The Woman at Home, a chorus for women's voices, was performed with much success by the Lyric Club. Among her better known compositions are Songs of You, The Mystic Hour, Youth, Fairies, Butterflies, The Dawn of Dawns, and a chorus for men's voices, A Song for Heroes. She performed under the management of Mr. Behymer in concert work. She also performed with Ebell Club, the Friday Morning Club, the Gamut Club, and many leading artists who toured Los Angeles.[2]

Family

  • Father: Oliver David Williams (1854, Kentucky - 1932, Venice, CA)
  • Mother: Joanna Williams, née Dickerson (25 Oct 1855, Crawfordsville, IN - Oct 1949, Venice, CA)
  • Husband: Martin Hennion Robinson (b. Jan 18, 1878, Missouri; d. May 2, 1964, Los Angeles) and Blanche Williams were married September 27, 1904, in Los Angeles, at the Central Methodist Episcopal Church, Los Angeles.[3]

Robinson died August 19, 1969, in Los Angeles.[4] Her ashes are stored at Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery, Santa Monica, next to those of her daughter Dorothy B. Robinson (b. 1906, Los Angeles; d. 2004), also a pianist.

Music club and sorority affiliations

Both Blanche Robinson and her daughter, Dorothy Robinson, were members of The Dominant Club, a Los Angeles charitable club of women musicians founded in 1906 that promotes women in classical music and chamber music. Blanche Robinson was a charter member and past president of The Dominant Club.[5]

In 1928, Blanche Robinson was inducted as an honorary member of Sigma Alpha Iota (ΣΑΙ), Sigma Xi Chapter of the University of California, Los Angeles. ΣΑΙ is an international fraternity for women in music.

Early education

At age nine, Robinson's family moved to Chicago; there, she began eight-years of study with William Charles Ernest Seeboeck (Aug. 21, 1859, Vienna, Austria - d. 1907, Chicago), a gifted pianist and composer who had been a student of Anton Rubinstein (1829-1894).[2][6][7]

Selected compositions

  • Love Was a Beggar, written for Mary McCormic, music by Blanche Hennion Robinson
  • Love's Trilogy, a song for four-part chorus of women's voices, words by E. Sterrett, music by Blanche Hennion Robinson, G. Schirmer (1925)
  • The Fairies, words and music by Blanche Robinson, G. Schirmer (1926)
  • The Woman at Home, a chorus for women's voices
  • Songs of You
  • The Mystic Hour
  • Youth
  • Butterflies
  • The Dawn of Dawns
  • The Chudder Weaver, for high or medium voice, music by Blanche Robinson, words by Frances Hull Topping (b. 1879), G. Schirmer (c July 3, 1937)
  • Two pictures for voice and piano (Library of Congress Control No: unk84197289), G. Schirmer (c1924)
  • The Lover's Errand
Ellis Club of Los Angeles Collection of Musical Arrangements and Papers
Processed by the staff of the Dept. of Music Special Collections, UCLA
UCLA Library, Performing Arts Special Collections Online Archive of California
  • Baffled, in C minor, music by Mrs. M. Hennion Robinson (TTBB - voice parts only); words by Helen Combes (mimeograph, n.d.) (c May 31, 1932), Harms, Inc.
  • Marmela, music by Mrs. M. Hennion Robinson (TTBB, voice parts only); words by Mabel W. Phillips (mimeograph, n.d.)
  • A Song for Heroes, music by Mrs. Hennion Robinson (TTBB), words by Edwin Markham (mimeograph, n.d.)
  • King Robert of Sicily, music by Mrs. Hennion Robinson (SATB with narration; chorus parts only); words by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (mimeograph, n.d.)
  • Liebestraum, by Franz Liszt, arrangement (TTBB) and words by Mrs. Hennion Robinson (mimeograph, n.d.)

Discography

Songs and Choral Music, (LP) (c1959)

Frederick Davis, conductor; Women's Lyric Club of Los Angeles; M. Hennion Robinson, piano; works by Handel, Schubert, Musorgsky, Britten and Zador[8]

50th Anniversary Concert, Woman's Lyric Club (LP) (1954)

The Woman's Lyric Club; Mrs. M. Hennion Robinson, piano; Heimo Haitto, violin; Benjamin Edwards, conductor[9]
Music Spread thy Voice Around, George Frideric Handel
Come Unto These Yellow Sands, Henry Purcell
Do Not Go My Love, Richard Hageman (Enid Jacobsen, contralto)
Spring Morning in the Hills, Elinor Remick Warren
The Lover's Errand, Mrs. M. Hennion Robinson
The Snow, Edward Elgar
Hymn to the Waters, Gustav Holst
Le Papillon, Felix Fourdrain (Merlyn Pearce, soprano)
Where Silence Speaks, Benjamin Edwards[disambiguation needed ]
Le Nil, Xavier Leroux
Spanish Gypsy Girl, Eduard Lassen

Participation in a judges panel to select a California state song

In 1921, Lynden Ellsworth Behymer (1862-1947), impresario, and Bessie Bartlett Frankel (Mrs. Cecil Frankel) (1884-1959), donated a sum of money to the California Federation of Music Clubs to hold a contest for lyrics to a state song "of real value." The judges were Benjamin Franklin Field (1868-1960), chairman of the federation and chairman of the committee of judges, Grace Atherton Dennen (1874-1927), editor and publisher of The Lyric West, and Blanche Robinson. The judges selected Mary Lennox of San Francisco on January 17, 1922, as the winner for her composition, California, Sweet Homeland of Mine.

References

  1. ^ (Obituary) Blanche Williams, Authoress, Dies, The Evening Independent, St. Petersburg, FL, pg. 11, col. 3, Aug. 10, 1944
  2. ^ a b John Steven McGroarty (1862-1944), Los Angeles: From the Mountains to the Sea, American Historical Society (1921)
  3. ^ Invitations Issued, The Los Angeles Times, pg. A2, col. 4, Sep. 18, 1904
  4. ^ Vital Records: Deaths, The Los Angeles Times, Aug. 21, 1969
  5. ^ Dominant Club to Honor Member, The Los Angeles Times, Nov. 4, 1966
  6. ^ Alfred Theodore Andreas (1839-1900), History of Chicago, Vol III: Music and Drama, pg. 633, Arno Press, New York (1975) (reprint of the 1884-86 ed. published by A.T. Andreas, Chicago)
  7. ^ Charles Eugene Claghorn (1911-2005), Biographical Dictionary of American Music, Parker Publishing Co., West Nyack, NY (1973)
  8. ^ Copy at the Library of Congress (LC Control No: 99573794)
  9. ^ Copy at the Library of Congress (LC Control No: 2004654554)

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