thumb|George Alexander Macfarren

Sir George Alexander Macfarren (2 March 181331 October 1887) was an English composer and musicologist.

Life

thumb|upright|left|[[Walter Macfarren, his brother]]

George Alexander Macfarren was born in London on 2 March 1813 to George Macfarren, a dancing-master, dramatic author and journalist, who later became the editor of the Musical World, and Elizabeth Macfarren, née Jackson. At the age of seven, Macfarren was sent to Dr Nicholas's school in Ealing, where his father was dancing-master; the school numbered among its alumni John Henry Newman and Thomas Henry Huxley. His health was poor, however, and his eyesight weak, He was withdrawn from the school in 1823 to undergo a course of eye treatment. One amanuensis was composer Oliveria Prescott.

On 27 September 1844, Macfarren married Clarina Thalia Andrae, Her singing translation for the finale text of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, the "Ode to Joy", became its most popular translation in England. She also composed for piano. Emma Maria Macfarren, the wife of another brother, John, was also a pianist and composer.

thumb|Macfarren's house in Hamilton Terrace, St John's Wood

thumb|Plaque on the house

Macfarren was knighted in 1883. and died on 31 October 1887, at his house in Hamilton Terrace, St John's Wood.

Musical career

Macfarren began to study music when he was fourteen, under Charles Lucas. In 1829, at the age of sixteen, he entered the Royal Academy of Music, where he studied composition under Cipriani Potter as well as piano under William Henry Holmes and trombone with John Smithies. In his first year at the academy, Macfarren composed his first work, the Symphony in F minor.

From 1834 to 1836 Macfarren taught at the academy without a professorship; he was appointed a professor in 1837. He resigned in 1847 when his espousal of Alfred Day's new theory of harmony became a source of dispute between him and the rest of the academy's faculty. He succeeded Sir William Sterndale Bennett as principal of the academy in 1876. again succeeding Bennett. and a textbook on counterpoint (1881).

His overture "Chevy Chace" was performed on 26 October 1843 by the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra conducted by Felix Mendelssohn.

Mendelssohn had heard it performed in London and wrote to the composer that he "liked it very much". After the Leipzig concert Mendelssohn wrote again to say "Your overture went very well, and was most cordially and unanimously received by the public, the orchestra playing it with true delight and enthusiasm".

Richard Wagner also admired the peculiar and wildly passionate character of the piece (which he described as the "Steeple Chase by MacFarrinc" in his diary). Wagner also described the overture's composer as "a pompous, melancholy Scotsman".

The "Chevy Chace" overture and two of his symphonies have been recorded.

Among Macfarren's operas were King Charles II, produced at the Princess's Theatre in 1849 (Natalia Macfarren made her operatic debut in this production), A recording by Victorian Opera was recorded in 2011. A recording of the two act chamber opera The Soldier's Legacy of 1864, scored for four soloists, piano and harmonium, was issued in 2023.

His oratorios brought him some popular and critical success. The most enduringly successful of these, St John the Baptist, was first performed in 1873 at the Bristol Festival. The Resurrection premiered in 1876, Joseph in 1877 and King David in 1883. Other chamber works include a piano trio in E minor, a piano quintet in G minor, sonatas for flute and violin, and three piano sonatas. Macfarren also composed for the concertina, a squeezebox button-accordion. His composition Romance and Allegro agitato for concertina, violin, viola, cello, and double bass was first performed by Richard Blagrove in 1854. Other compositions for concertina include the Barcarole (1856) and Violetta – A Romance (1859), both for concertina and piano. Macfarren also wrote an arrangement for the concertina and seven other instruments, of the second movement from Mendelssohn’s Italian symphony.

Compositions (selective list)

Orchestral

  • 1828 – Symphony No. 1 in C (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, September 1830)
  • 1831 – Symphony No. 2 in D minor (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, December 1831)
  • 1832 – Symphony No. 3 in E minor
  • 1832 – Overture in E-flat (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, 26 June 1833)
  • 1833 – Symphony No. 4 in F minor (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 27 October 1834)
  • 1833 – Symphony No. 5 in A minor
  • 1834 – The Merchant of Venice, overture (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, October 1835)
  • 1835 – Piano Concerto in C minor (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 2 November 1835)
  • 1835 – Concerto for Two Pianos in C major (jointly as a student with William Sterndale Bennett
  • 1836 – Symphony No. 6 in B-flat
  • 1836 – Romeo and Juliet, overture
  • 1836 – Concertino in A, for cello and orchestra
  • 1836 – Chevy Chace, overture (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 7 January 1838)
  • 1839–40 – Symphony No. 7 in C-sharp minor (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 9 June 1845)
  • 1842 – Don Carlos, overture
  • 1845 – Symphony No. 8 in D
  • 1856 – Hamlet, overture (fp. New Philharmonic Society, London, 23 April 1856)
  • 1863 – Flute Concerto in G (fp. Hanover Square Rooms, London, 24 February 1864)
  • 1873 – Violin Concerto in G minor (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 12 May 1873)
  • 1874 – Symphony No. 9 in E minor (fp. British Orchestral Society, London, 26 March 1874)
  • 1874 – Festival Overture (fp. Liverpool Festival, 1874)
  • 1875 – Idyll in Memory of Sterndale Bennett (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 5 July 1875)

Choral and vocal

  • 1853 – Lenora, cantata (fp. Exeter Hall, London, 25 April 1853)
  • 1856 – May Day, cantata (fp. Bradford Festival, 28 August 1856)
  • 1860 – Christmas, cantata (fp. Musical Society of London, 9 May 1860)
  • 1867 - Two Songs with clarinet obbligato: 'A Widow Bird' (Shelley), 'Pack Clouds Away' (T. Heywood)
  • 1842 – String Quartet No 3 in A major
  • 1843-4 – Piano Quintet in G minor
  • 1852 – String Quartet in G minor
  • 1857 – Violin Sonata in E minor
  • 1864 – Fantasia: Traditions of Shakespeare, variations for clarinet and piano
  • 1872 – Religious March in E-flat major
  • 1878 – String Quartet in G major
  • 1880 – Piano Trio in A minor for flute, cello and piano
  • 1883 – Flute Sonata

Piano

  • 1842 – Piano Sonata No 1 in E-flat major (revised 1887)
  • 1845 – Piano Sonata No 2 in A Ma cousine
  • 1880 – Piano Sonata No 3 in G

Incidental music

  • 1882 – Ajax (fp. Cambridge University, November 1882)

Reputation

During his lifetime, Macfarren's music met with a mixed reception; "his views were often considered dogmatic and reactionary, but, unlike Grove, his theoretical and analytical expertise was indisputable.". One contemporary called Macfarren "essentially a musical grammarian, engaged all his life long in settling the doctrine of the enclitic de." Those who thought highly of his work praised its originality and its tastefulness. According to a contemporary commentator, Macfarren "had great originality of thought and, as a composer, would probably have had still greater success if his early composition studies had been formed on the more modern lines to which he afterwards became so devotedly attached." Salome's dance in St John the Baptist was praised for its avoidance of the salacious: "The whole of the scene is very cleverly worked out, and the composer has avoided anything inappropriate in the music descriptive of the dance, that might be considered out of place in an oratorio." By the early twentieth century, Macfarren's works were no longer performed, a fact which the Worshipful Company of Musicians attributed to a lack of genius on Macfarren's part: "Never was more earnest composer, more prolific writer; never did man strive more zealously for the art of his country; yet Heaven had endowed him only with talent and not genius."

Modern commentators generally consider Macfarren to be "the most eminent representative" of conservatism in orchestration. His Ajax has been called "professionally composed if uninspiring" and his writing for trumpet singled out as "conventional ... although he does make liberal use of the out-of-tune harmonics, especially b [flat]', he rarely uses notes outside the harmonic series and rarely writes the first trumpet part above the first treble staff." Macfarren's music is "capable of graceful lyricism, [but] what may be a desire to avoid cliches in the songs leads him at times to an unexpected angularity of line that seems more awkward than fresh. However, Macfarren's St John the Baptist has been praised as "an original and imaginative piece in which the shadow of Mendelssohn, so prominent since the appearance of Elijah in 1846, is only occasionally perceptible."