Rosa Newmarch

Summary

Rosa Harriet Newmarch (18 December 1857 – 9 April 1940) was an English poet and writer on music.

The English patron of the arts and music writer, Rosa Newmarch

Biography edit

Rosa Harriet Jeaffreson was born in Leamington in 1857, the maternal granddaughter of 19th-century dramatist James Kenney. She settled in London in 1880, when she began contributing articles to various literary journals. In 1883, she married Henry Charles Newmarch, thereafter using her married name in her professional work.[citation needed]

Beginning in 1897 she did a great deal of research on Russian music, making many visits to Russia and working at the Imperial Public Library of Saint Petersburg under the supervision of Vladimir Stassov. She became one of the first English critics to champion Russian music. After 1915 she performed a similar service for Slovak music.[citation needed]

From 1907 she edited the Living Masters of Music book series for John Lane.[1]

From 1908 until 1920 she wrote program notes for the New Queen's Hall Orchestra, and for Prom concerts. From 1919 she was assisted in respect of new works to the repertoire by Eric Blom, then in the early stages of his writing career. Newmarch's existing notes for established works continued to appear in the programs. Newmarch and Blom continued to write in tandem until 1927, when the BBC took over the concerts.[2][3]

Newmarch died in Worthing in 1940, aged 82. She was the great-grandmother of comedian Sara Pascoe.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

On 26 October 2010, Newmarch was the subject of the 30-minute BBC Radio programme "Rosa and Leoš", narrated by Peter Avis. This described her role popularising the music of Leoš Janáček in Britain, and organising a visit to Britain by the composer.[citation needed]

Books edit

  • Tchaikovsky (1900)
  • Horae Amoris (1903) (poetry)
  • Henry J. Wood (1904)
  • Songs to a Singer (1906) (poetry)
  • The Life and Letters of Tchaikovsky (1908)
  • César Franck (by Vincent d'Indy, as translator) (1910)
  • The Russian Opera (1914)
  • The Russian Arts (1917)
  • Jean Sibelius (1939)
  • The Music of Czechoslovakia (1942)
  • The Concert-Goer's Library (six volumes, 1928–48). These are collections of her programme notes, arranged by musical form.

References edit

  1. ^ Publisher's advertisement in: Rosa Newmarch, The Life & Letters of Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky, London: John Lane/The Bodley Head and New York: John Lane Company, 1906. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  2. ^ Frank Howes, "Blom, Eric (Walter)" in Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th edition, Supplementary Volume, 1961
  3. ^ H. C. Colles, "Newmarch, Rosa", Grove's Dictionary, 5th edition, Eric Blom, ed. 1954

Further reading edit

  • David Ewen, Encyclopedia of Concert Music. New York; Hill and Wang, 1959.
  • Bullock, Philip Ross (2009). Rosa Newmarch and Russian Music in Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth-Century England. Farnham, U.K.: Ashgate. ISBN 9780754666622. OCLC 939160839.

External links edit

  Media related to Rosa Newmarch at Wikimedia Commons

  • Works by Rosa Newmarch at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Rosa Newmarch at Internet Archive
  • Tchaikovsky Research (Biography of Rosa Newmarch)
  • Leamington History Group (Biography of Rosa Newmarch)
  • Women Poets Timeline Project (Biography of Rosa Newmarch)
  • BBC: Rosa and Leos, by Peter Avis