| MYRA
HESS (1890 - 1965)
Born in Hampstead, Myra Hess was the youngest of four children.
She commenced playing the piano at the age of five and in due course
passed the junior examinations of the Trinity College of Music.
By
the age of seven she was a student at the Guildhall School of
Music where she was influenced by Julian Pascal and Dr Lando Morgan.On
gaining a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music she became
a student of Tobias Matthay, one of the greatest piano teachers
of her time and it was his deep insight into both the psychological
and technical aspects of playing that was responsible for her
early maturity as a concert pianist.
Myra
Hess made her debut with a recital at the Aeolian Hall when she
was seventeen and this resulted in an engagement to play the Beethoven
G Major Concerto with Sir Thomas Beecham. The outstanding success
of her performance gained her recognition lmost immediately and
within a few years she was playing in most parts of Europe.
Of
her first New York concert in 1922 the well known critic W. J.
Henderson wrote: "She is a great pianist without limitation" and
praised the imagination and sensitivity shown in the "subtly wrought
details of her readings and the singular aptness of her purpose"
Myra Hess went on to play all over the U.S.A. and with all of
its major orchestras.
In
1936 King George V made her a Companion of the Order of the British
Empire and five years later she became a Dame Commander of the
same Order. In 1941 she was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal
Philharmonic Society - a distinction reserved for only the greatest
of musicians.
Before
the 1939 - 45 war she made many tours in Germany, Austria, France
and Holland. At this time she was noted for her performances of
Bach, Scarlatti, and Mozart and Beethoven. She also specialised
in Schumann and took an active interest in all types of chamber
music.
In
the first months of the Second World War all live music performances
ceased in Britain. Dame Myra abandoned a tour of America and on
returning to London inaugurated what was to
become
a remarkable and popular series of lunch-time concerts at the
National Gallery. This was exactly what everybody wanted as the
black-out made it difficult for London's suburban residents to
travel up to town after dark.
It
is not practical to list the enormous range of the works performed
at these concerts but mention should be made of the outstanding
performances of the complete series of Mozart piano concertos
in collaboration with Alec Sherman and his New London Orchestra.
By
the Autumn of 1944, 1300 concerts had been performed at the National
Gallery in this series, £15,000 paid out in artists' fees and
£10,000 paid to the Musicians' Benevolent Fund. The concerts continued
throughout the bombing of London though they ran at a loss during
the most difficult days. However, contributions from music lovers
in America helped to defray expenses when attendances were small.
In
the aftermath of World War 2 Dame Myra resumed her international
career and was particularly successful in the United States. Her
programming was often uncompromising in her later years (a favourite
recital consisted entirely of late Beethoven sonatas) yet her
box office appeal remained as strong as ever. When illness struck
in the l960's she turned to teaching, and was especially associated
with Stephen Bishop and Yonty Solomon in the early stages of their
careers.
Dame Myra died in 1965 but will be remembered for her morale-boosting
concerts at the National Gallery during World War 2, her transcription
of the Bach Chorale Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring , and her interpretation
of Beethoven.
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