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John Ireland

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: John Ireland
Ireland, John, 1879-1962, English composer. Inspired by visits to the Channel Islands, he wrote music of a simple, rugged beauty. His many songs include the cycle Songs of a Wayfarer (1903) and Sea Fever (1913), to the poem by John Masefield. In addition to songs, chamber music, and piano pieces, Ireland wrote orchestral music.
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Artist: John Ireland
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John Ireland
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Born: August 13, 1879 in Inglewood, Bowden, Cheshire, England
  • Died: June 12, 1962 in Rock Mill, Washington, Sussex, England
  • Genres: Band Music, Chamber Music, Concerto, Film Music, Keyboard Music, Orchestral Music

Biography

John Ireland was a conservative British composer whose music developed from a style that looked backward and forward toward Beethoven, Brahms, and other Classical and Romantic influences towards a post-Romantic manner, rich in lyricism, but having absorbed Impressionist and Neo-Classical elements. He is best known for his chamber music, solo piano compositions, and his songs. Yet, even in these genres, he was not consistent. In the orchestral realm he composed relatively few works, though several were of high quality, including the Piano Concerto in E flat and A London Overture. Ireland wrote not a single symphony or opera, and produced a single cantata, These Things Shall Be, a work which he came to dislike. In the end, Ireland must be assessed an important composer, who at his best could stand with his countrymen and contemporaries Vaughan Williams and Walton.

John Ireland was born near Manchester. As a youth he exhibited musical talent early, despite his parents' involvement in the literary world. They had many friends who were writers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson. This literary connection would surface later in many of Ireland's songs, many being settings of poems by Thomas Hardy, A.E. Housman, John Masefield, Christina Rosetti, and other English poets. At the age of fourteen he entered the Royal College of Music and shortly afterward suffered the loss of both parents. At the RCM he studied piano (with Frederick Cliffe), organ, and composition. In the latter realm, his teacher was the difficult but thorough Stanford, with whom he began study in 1897.

Ireland wrote a fair number of compositions during his student years, but later destroyed most of them. One work of significance from this period that has survived, though, was the Sextet for Clarinet, Horn and String Quartet (1898). After Ireland ended his studies with Stanford in 1901, he worked as an organist and choir director. He served in that dual capacity at St. Luke's Church in Chelsea, beginning in 1904, holding the post until 1926.

Ireland's Phantasie Trio (1906) and his Violin Sonata No. 1 (1908-1909) helped establish his reputation. The influence of Impressionism was taking hold of him in the early part of the new century, though largely affecting his piano works. Ireland composed his orchestral piece, The Forgotten Rite, in 1913, a work that reflected his interest in pagan mysticism. In the period 1915-1917 he produced his Violin Sonata No. 2, regarded by many as among the greatest chamber works to emerge from wartime England.

Ireland took a faculty post in composition at the RCM in 1923. Over the years, his students there would include Britten, Searle, and Moeran. In 1927, the composer married, but only briefly, the ceremony subsequently being annulled and thus swiftly ending a most unpleasant episode in his personal life.

Ireland left the RCM in 1939, but continued composing, turning out works like the brilliant Fantasy-Sonata for clarinet and piano in 1943. After he composed the film score for The Overlanders in the years 1946-1947, however, he wrote nothing more. It has been said that Ireland led a relatively uneventful life, landing no conducting post, traveling very little, never startling his audiences with a bold new composition, or exhibiting outrageous personal behavior. He was a self-critical, introspective man, haunted by memories of a sad childhood. He spent the latter part of his retirement in Rock Mill, Sussex, where he purchased a converted wind mill in 1953, where he died nine years later. ~ Robert Cummings, All Music Guide
Actor: John Ireland
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  • Active: '40s
  • Major Genres: Historical Film, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Overlanders
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Overlanders (1946)

Biography

John Ireland was an English composer who was best known for his chamber music, songs, and solo piano works, but also left behind orchestral pieces of exceptional beauty, including one complete film score for the postwar Ealing Studios production of The Overlanders (1946). Ireland was born in Bowden, near Manchester, England, in 1879, and was educated at the Royal College of Music as a piano student and later as a composer with Sir Charles Villier Stanford. His early influences included Johannes Brahms, although his later music incorporated the more impressionistic and modern influences of Ravel, Stravinsky, and Debussy. He established his reputation as a composer through his chamber works while serving as the organist and choirmaster at St. Luke's in Chelsea, and later as a teacher at the Royal College of Music. His students included Benjamin Britten, Alan Bush, and E. J. Moeran. Ireland was highly self-critical and also a very slow, methodical composer, which resulted in his orchestral works coming very slowly later in his career. They ended up somewhat neglected, and he had largely retired by the outbreak of the Second World War. That didn't prevent Ealing Studios musical director Ernest Irving from approaching and persuading Ireland to compose the music for the studio's first overseas production, The Overlanders. This score, one of the longest and largest bodies of orchestral music ever written by the composer, was highly accomplished and expressive, proving sufficiently popular to yield an orchestral suite prepared by Irving, which was later recorded by Sir Adrian Boult. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 
 

 

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