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Bridge, Frank

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Bridge, Frank (1879–1941)

English composer. His works include the orchestral suite The Sea (1911), and Oration (1930) for cello and orchestra. He taught the English composer Benjamin Britten.

Bridge was born in Brighton and studied at the Royal College of Music, London, where Charles Stanford was his composition master. He also learned the violin, viola, and conducting. He went on to play viola in various quartets and gained varied experience as an operatic and concert conductor, but later devoted his time to composition, under the patronage of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, though he also taught Britten privately. He won Cobbett Prizes for chamber music 1905–15 and honourable mention for his E minor string quartet at Bologna, Italy, in 1906. He won acclaim for such accessible works as The Sea, Lament (1915) for strings, and There is a Willow (1928). However, starting with the Piano Sonata (1924), his music explores dissonance to a greater degree, including bitonality. His third and fourth string quartets (1927, 1937) show an advanced harmonic idiom, not far removed from the music of Alban Berg. He was well known as a teacher; his pupil Britten's Variations on a theme of Frank Bridge (1937) are based on a theme from his master's Idyll no. 2 for string quartet (1906).

As a composer he possessed a formidably polished technique, and in his interwar compositions developed a radical cosmopolitan idiom, influenced by the atonality of Arnold Schoenberg. He is now recognized as one of the finest composers of his generation, particularly in the field of chamber music.

Works

Opera

The Christmas Rose (1918–29; produced London, 1932).

Orchestral

symphonic poem Isabella (1907), suite The Sea (1911), rhapsody Enter Spring (1927), tone-poem Summer for orchestra; Lament for strings (1915); There is a Willow Grows Aslant a Brook (on a passage in Hamlet; 1928); Phantasm for piano and orchestra (1931), Oration for cello and orchestra (1930), Rebus overture (1940) and Allegro moderato for strings (1941).

Chamber

four string quartets (1901–37), two piano trios, Fantasy quartet and several smaller pieces for string quartet, piano quintet, Fantasy Trio and quartet for piano and strings, string sextet, Rhapsody for two violins and viola, Divertimenti for wind instruments, violin and piano sonata, cello and piano sonata; numerous piano works including sonata, four Characteristic Pieces, suite A Fairy Tale, three Improvisations for the left hand; violin, viola, cello, and organ pieces.

Vocal

choruses; songs.



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