- Herbert Howells
Herbert Norman Howells CH (17 October 1892 – 23 February 1983) was an English
composer , organist, and teacher.Life
Howells was born in
Lydney ,Gloucestershire , and was the youngest of six children born to Oliver and Elizabeth Howells. His father was an amateur organist, and Herbert himself showed early musical promise. He studied first withHerbert Brewer atGloucester Cathedral , as an articled pupil alongsideIvor Novello andIvor Gurney , the celebrated English songwriter and poet, with whom he became great friends. A September 1910 concert in Gloucester Cathedral included the premiere of a mysterious new work by the yet little-knownRalph Vaughan Williams . Howells not only made the composer's personal acquaintance that evening, but (as he often recounted) the piece, theFantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis , profoundly moved him. Later he studied at theRoyal College of Music (RCM) under C.V. Stanford,Hubert Parry and Charles Wood.In 1915 he was diagnosed with Graves' disease and given six months to live. Since doctors believed that it was worth taking a chance on a previously untested treatment, he became the first person in the country to receive radium treatment. He was briefly assistant organist at
Salisbury Cathedral in 1917, though his severe illness cut this appointment short. Friends then arranged for a grant from the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, whereunder Howells would assistRichard Runciman Terry in editing the voluminous Latin Tudor repertoire that he and his choir were reviving atWestminster Cathedral . Although they were envisioning an undemanding sinecure, Howells took great interest in this work, absorbing the English Renaissance style which he loved and would evoke in his own, and continued it until joining the faculty of the RCM in 1920. DuringWorld War II , he served as acting organist of St John's College, Cambridge.In 1935 his nine-year-old son, Michael, died suddenly from polio (or
meningitis ; accounts vary); several of his subsequent works reflect this tragedy. [cite web
url=http://www.8notes.com/biographies/howells.asp
title=Herbert Howells Biography
accessdate=2008-10-01]In later life Howells was awarded an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University, and was made a Companion of Honour in 1972. He died in 1983 in London and his ashes reside in Westminster Abbey.
His daughter Ursula (1922 - 2005) was an actress and he was godfather to the cellist
Julian Lloyd Webber .Works
In his twenties and thirties his compositional output focussed chiefly on
orchestra l andchamber music , including twopiano concerto s. The hostile reception given to the second of these in 1925 largely silenced Howells' compositional activities for almost ten years. The death of his son Michael in 1935 did, however, appear to unleash a new period of creativity; both Howells himself and his music were never the same after this period of his life. Though not an orthodox Christian, he became increasingly identified with the composition of religious music, most notably the "Hymnus Paradisi " for chorus and orchestra. This was composed after his son's death but not released for performance until 1950, at the insistence (according to Howells' own account) of his close friend and mentorRalph Vaughan Williams . It incorporates passages from the earlier unaccompaniedRequiem , begun before Michael's death but not published until 1981, with a dedication to his memory. Again, this private account of grief remained in his desk drawer for forty years before he submitted it for publication. Two shorter works from 1961, the "Coventry Antiphon" (Coventry Cathedral being dedicated to Saint Michael) and "Sequence for Saint Michael" are also associated with his son, as is hishymn tune "Michael".He wrote two works for
brass band : "Pageantry" and "Three Figures". "Pageantry" was written for the 1934 British Open brass band championships. Howells arranged its first movement, "King's Herald", for full orchestra for the coronation of King George VI in 1937.Church music
Howells is particularly known for his large output of
Anglican church music , including a complete Service forKing's College, Cambridge (the Collegium Regale) and settings of theMagnificat andNunc Dimittis for the choirs of St John's College, Cambridge,New College, Oxford ,Westminster Abbey , Worcester, St Paul's, and Gloucester cathedrals, among others, as well as for two parish churches,St Mary Redcliffe , Bristol andSt Augustine's Church, Edgbaston . These settings are often tailored for the building after which they are named. For example, the St Paul's Service has a very slow rate of harmonic change to suit the prolonged reverberation in that cathedral. The motet "Take Him, Earth, for Cherishing", written shortly after the assassination of PresidentJohn F. Kennedy , is dedicated to Kennedy's memory, and is considered by many to be perhaps his finest "a cappella" anthem. Two other anthems, "Like as the hart" and "O Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem" are similar in style and rhapsodic beauty and enjoy a firm and deserved place in the Anglican choral repertoire.Of his several hymn tunes appearing in current hymnals, "Michael" (written for the words "All My hope on God is Founded") is particularly widespread.
"Hymnus Paradisi" was the first of four large-scale sacred choral works. His "Missa Sabrinensis" is on the same scale, in terms of length and forces required, as Beethoven's "Missa Solemnis", while "An English Mass" is scored for significantly smaller forces, is performed almost entirely in English, and follows the Anglican tradition of placing the Gloria last. Finally, Howells' setting of the
Stabat Mater , at about 50 minutes, is one of the longest extant settings of that text.ee also
*
List of compositions by Herbert Howells Notes
References
*cite book | author=Paul Spicer | title=Herbert Howells | location=Bridgend | publisher=Seren | year=1998 | id=ISBN 1-85411-232-5
*cite book | author=Nicolas Slonimsky | title=The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians | publisher=Schirmer Books | year=1994 | id=ISBN 0-02-872416-X
*cite book | author=Christopher Palmer | title=Herbert Howells, a centennial celebration | location=London | publisher=Thames Publishing | year=1992 | id=ISBN 0-905210-86-7
* Paul Andrews. "Herbert Howells", "Grove Music Online", ed. L. Macy (accessed 1 January 2005), [http://www.grovemusic.com/ grovemusic.com] (subscription access).
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