- Herbert Murrill
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Herbert Murrill (11 May 1909 – 25 July 1952) was an English musician, composer, and organist.
Biography
Murrill was born in London. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music from 1925 to 1928 and thereafter was organ scholar at Worcester College, Oxford, from 1928 to 1931. In 1933 he married the concert pianist Alice Margaret Good. Murrill's second wife was the cellist Vera Canning. He was for a time in the 1930s organist of Christ Church, Lancaster Gate, London and St Thomas's Church, Regent Street, London.
From 1933 until his early death, he was Professor of Composition at the Royal Academy of Music. He also worked for the BBC from 1936 onwards (save for a period in the Intelligence Corps between 1942 and 1946), reaching the post of Head of Music in 1950. He died in London.
Musical works
His works include a jazz opera, Man in Cage, which was performed in 1930 while he was still at university. He wrote film scores for And So To Work (1936) and The Daily Round (1937), both early films from the director Richard Massingham. He wrote two cello concertos, as well as some chamber and vocal pieces. There are several piano pieces. However, his most frequently performed works now are his choral and organ works: his setting of the Magnificat and Nunc dimittis in E major (published in 1947), an organ piece called Carillon, and his arrangement for organ of the orchestral march Crown Imperial by William Walton. His piano duet arrangement of Walton's First Symphony was published by OUP.
Writing in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Ronald Crichton says that Murrill's affinities were Francophile and mildly middle-Stravinskian, both influences tempered by an English kind of neo-classicism. [1]
References
BBC Directors of Music Percy Pitt (1924) · Adrian Boult (1930) · Arthur Bliss (1942) · Victor Hely-Hutchinson (1944) · Kenneth Wright (acting) (1946) · Steuart Wilson (1948) · Herbert Murrill (1950) · Richard Howgill (1952) · William Glock (1959) · Robert Ponsonby (1972) · John Drummond (1985) · Nicholas Kenyon (1992) · Roger Wright (1998)
Categories:- 1909 births
- 1952 deaths
- English composers
- English classical organists
- Organ scholars
- People from London
- Alumni of Worcester College, Oxford
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Music
- Academics of the Royal Academy of Music
- British composer stubs
- British classical musician stubs
- Organist stubs
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