Bantock, Granville

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Bantock, Granville

Pageant of Human Life, Choral suite for male, female and children’s voices

SKU: 4201 Category:

18,00 

Granville Ransome Bantock – 

A Pageant of Human Life

(b. London, 7 August 1868 – d. London, 16 October 1946)

Published 1914 by Novello
Premiere unknown
First known performance: Appleby Chorus & Acocks Green Council School Choir,
conducted by Appleby Matthews,
Birmingham, England, March 9, 1920 at Birmingham’s Town Hall.

Preface
Granville Ransome Bantock was born in London on August 7, 1868. He was the son of the surgeon and gynecologist George Granville Bantock. In 1884, at age 16, Bantock began showing a strong interest in music. His father opposed this desire, and Bantock prepared for the Indian Civil Service Examinations at his father’s wish, but was unable to sit for the examinations because of illness. His father next chose chemical engineering as a profession for his son, but engineering study soon gave way to concert-going and study of music scores. The Principal of the City and Guilds Institute realized that Bantock’s heart was not in engineering, and helped persuade Bantock’s father to allow young Granville to study music – first private harmony and counterpoint lessons and then, after an 1889 visit to Germany where he saw Wagner’s Parsifal and Tristan und Isolde, at the Royal Academy of Music (RAM). A student of composition, his most significant instructor at RAM was Frederick Corder (1852-1932). In only Bantock’s second term at RAM, and with little formal music instruction, he won the Macfarren Scholarship.

Graduation from the Royal Academy in 1893 left Bantock at loose ends and with few prospects. He founded, with almost no capital, a music periodical called The New Quarterly Musical Review. Bantock persuaded some of the finest musicians of the time to contribute to his journal without recompense, but the journal folded in 1896. The only article bearing Bantock’s name was entitled Confucianism and Music, an early sign of Bantock’s love and respect for things oriental.

Bantock obtained his first regular position in music from a theatrical agent, which involved touring the provinces in a burlesque entitled Little Boy Blue. This led to other similar engagements, culminating in an appointment as conductor with George Edwardes’ Gaiety Company. During 1894-1895 Bantock toured the United States and Australia with Edwardes’ company in several pieces, including The Gaiety Girls. After his return to England, he was engaged to take Shamus O’Brien, Charles Villiers Stanford’s (1852-1924) romantic comedy, on tour in England and Ireland. …

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Score No.

4201

Genre

A Cappella

Size

Printing

Reprint

Pages

44

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