- George Butterworth
:"For George Butterworth, Illustrator & Cartoonist, see
George Butterworth (Cartoonist) ."George Sainton Kaye Butterworth, MC (July 12 ,1885 -August 5 ,1916 ) was an Englishcomposer best known for his settings ofA. E. Housman 'spoem s.Early years
Although Butterworth was born in
London , his family moved toYorkshire not long after his birth. He received his firstmusic lessons from his mother, who was a singer, and began composing at an early age. However, his father intended for him to be asolicitor , and he attendedEton College , from there continuing on toTrinity College, Oxford . While at Trinity he became more focused on music, for there he met thefolk song collectorCecil Sharp and composer and folk song enthusiastRalph Vaughan Williams . Butterworth and Vaughan Williams made several trips into the English countryside to collect folk songs, and both saw their compositions strongly influenced by what they heard. Butterworth was also an expertfolk dance r, being particularly fond of Morris dancing.Vaughan Williams and Butterworth became close friends. It was Butterworth who suggested to Vaughan Williams that he turn a
symphonic poem he was working on into his "London Symphony". When the manuscript for that piece was lost (having been sent toFritz Busch in Germany just before the outbreak of war) Butterworth, together withGeoffrey Toye and the critic Edward J. Dent, helped Vaughan Williams reconstruct the work. [Mann, William, liner notes to EMI CD CDM 7 64017 2, 1987] Vaughan Williams dedicated the piece to Butterworth's memory after his death. Upon leaving Oxford, Butterworth began a career in music, writing criticism for "The Times ", composing, and teaching atRadley College ,Oxfordshire . He also briefly studied at theRoyal College of Music where he worked withHubert Parry among others.First World War
At the outbreak of
World War I , Butterworth signed up for service in theBritish Army . He served in theDurham Light Infantry as a lieutenant in the 13th Battalion. He was killed by asniper in 1916 at Pozières leading a raid during the Battle of the Somme. His body was not recovered, and his name appears on the Thiepval memorial, near the site of the Somme. He was awarded theMilitary Cross , and a trench was named after him.A Shropshire Lad
Butterworth did not write a great deal of music, and during the war he destroyed many works he did not care for. Of those that survive, his works based on A. E. Housman's collection of poems "
A Shropshire Lad " are the best known. Many English composers of Butterworth's time set Housman's poetry, including Ralph Vaughan Williams.In 1911 and 1912, Butterworth wrote two
song cycle s on Housman's poems. These were eventually published in two cycles, "Six Songs from A Shropshire Lad" and "Bredon Hill and Other Songs". Ten of the songs were first performed while the composer was at Oxford, but the eleventh (On the Idle Hill of Summer) was not written until he was living in London. They are rarely performed in full today, although six of the songs are often presented together, with "Is My Team Ploughing?" being the most famous. Another, "Loveliest of Trees", is the basis for his 1912orchestra l rhapsody, also called "A Shropshire Lad".The parallel between the often morbid subject matter of "A Shropshire Lad", set in the context of the
Second Boer War , and Butterworth's subsequent death during the Great War is frequently commented upon. A number of Butterworth's other short orchestral works are often heard, "Two English Idylls" (1911) and "The Banks of Green Willow" (1913) among them. The latter work was premiered by the 24-year oldAdrian Boult in 1914. It is generally thought by those who have studied his work that he showed promise of greater talent which would have flourished but for his early death.Notes
External links
* [http://www.rubecula.com/Butterworth/Butterworth.html An essay on Butterworth's life and music]
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