Roger Sacheverell Coke

Roger Sacheverell Coke (/ˈkʊk/ ("cook"); 20 October 1912, Pinxton,[1] nr Alfreton, Derbyshire – 23 October 1972) was an English composer and pianist.

Life

Roger Sacheverell Coke was from a wealthy family. He inherited the family estate of Brookhill Hall, Pinxton[1] at the age of two, when his father, Lieutenant Langton Sacheverell Coke, died at the Battle of Ypres in October 1914.[2][3][4] Coke began composing when he was at Eton College, where he was taught by Henry Ley, and was influenced to take up the piano by hearing Benno Moiseiwitsch.[4][5] Coke's musical interests were strongly supported by his mother and for his 21st birthday, she had outbuildings on the family estate converted to a large music studio and performance space, equipped with a Steinway piano, and with capacity for an audience of several hundred.[5] He pursued his study of composition and the piano seriously. He took piano lessons in London with Mabel Lander (herself a pupil of Theodor Leschetizky and teacher of Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret) and was later a pupil of Alan Bush. He made his debut as a composer-pianist in 1932 with his first piano concerto,[6] and formed the Brookhill Symphony Orchestra in 1940 to play his own and other neglected works.[7]

Coke was homosexual, and a heavy cigarette smoker.[5] Despite his freedom from financial concerns, he suffered from depression. However, in the safe isolation of his studio he composed a large corpus of works, with a strong emphasis on his own instrument, the piano.[5] For the orchestra he wrote three symphonies, six piano concertos,[8] two "vocal concertos" for soprano and orchestra and four symphonic poems. In the chamber music field there are sonatas for cello[9] and for violin, as well as extended works for piano solo, notably the 24 Preludes[10] and 15 Variations and Finale, and around 100 songs.[6] Despite the failure of any publisher to take up his works, some were performed around Britain, and occasionally broadcast. Coke bore the cost of those of his compositions that were published, and often also the costs of performance.[5] Some works were taken up by leading musicians, including pianists Charles Lynch and Moura Lympany, and he counted Moiseiwitsch and Sergei Rachmaninoff amongst his friends.[4][5]

In November 1959, Coke's three-act opera The Cenci, to his own libretto based on Shelley's verse drama, was given a single performance at the Scala Theatre in London, with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Eugene Goossens. The critics were unanimously hostile and dismissive and Coke became seriously depressed.[2][5] Coke died of a heart attack in 1972. A revival of interest in his work began in 2012 with a performance of his first violin sonata at the English Music Festival in Dorchester Abbey on 2 June 2012.[11] Many of his unpublished manuscripts are held at Chesterfield Library.[6][12]

Works

OpusNameYearDedicatee
1Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor1931
2Romanza for piano trio1931Dorothy Coke
3Fantasie for piano1931Frederick Lyne
4Piano Concerto No. 2 in E minor1933Mabel Lander
5Three String Pieces1933John Frederick Staton
6Rhapsody for oboe, bassoon & piano1933A & I Winfield
7Three Small Pieces for wind quartet-Gilbert Inglefield
8Piano Quintet-Ethel Boileau
9(not known)--
10Improvisata for violin & piano--
11(not known)--
12Piano Sonata No. 1 in D minor1935George Chavchavadze
13Symphony No. 1 in E minor1934-
14(not known)--
15Variations and Fugue for piano in D minor1935-
16Elegy for a Dead Musician for contralto, violin and orchestra (or piano)1934Bridget Tallents
17(not known)--
18(not known)--
19Six Songs for soprano or tenor1935-
20Two Songs for soprano or tenor and strings (or piano)1935-
21Variations and Fugue for piano in D minor1935Alan Bush
22Symphony No. 2 in G minor1936Sergei Rachmaninoff
23/3Waltz for piano--
24Cello Sonata No. 1 in D minor1936Dorothy Coke
25Vocal Concerto No. 11934Barbara Welby
26Piano Sonata No. 2 in G1936Charles Lynch
27Ballade in C for piano1936Griselda Gould
28Piano Sonata No. 3 in A minor1937-
29Cello Sonata No. 2 in C1938Alan Morton
30Piano Concerto No. 3 in E flat1938Charles Lynch
31November Afternoon for soprano or tenor1939Natalia Satina
32Elegiac Trio in C minor1938Bridget Jackson
33Eleven Preludes for piano1938Dorothy Coke
34Thirteen Preludes for piano1941Dorothy Coke
35Sacred Concerto in A minor for soprano, cello, piano and oboe1939Princess Marina Chavchavadze
36Poem for cello, piano and small orchestra1939Alan Morton
37Fifteen Variations and Finale in C minor for piano1939Prince George Chavchavadze
38Piano Concerto No. 4 in C sharp minor1940Eileen Joyce
39Six Songs for soprano or tenor1939Guy Branch
40Six Songs for contralto or bass1939Vera St. John
41Prelude to 'The Cenci' for orchestra1940Richard Austin
41The Cenci (opera in three acts)1940Richard Austin
42Six Songs for contralto or bass1941Bridget Tallents
43Eight Songs for soprano or tenor1941Barbara Welby
44Cello Sonata No. 3 in A minor1941Kinkie Halswell
45Symphonic Poem No. 1 'The Lotos Eaters'1941Brookhill Symphony Orchestra
46Violin Sonata No. 1 in D minor1940Raymond Mosley
47Vocal Concerto No. 21942Oliver Welby
48Clarinet Sonata in C1942-
49Six Songs for contralto or bass1942Marianne Mislap-Kapper
50Four Songs for soprano or tenor1942Barbara Welby
51Symphonic Poem No. 2 'Elegiac Ballade'1942The Pilots of the Royal Air Force
52Variations on Rachmaninoff's Song, 'A Soldier's Wife' in G minor for piano1943-
53Symphonic Poem No. 3 'Dorian Gray'1943Arnold Bax
54Fourteen Songs, from Rhymes and Roundelayes for high voice1948Freda Orton
55Violin Sonata No. 2 in B flat minor1943Jan Sedivka
56Symphony No. 31948William Leak or Eugene Goossens
57Piano Concerto No. 5 in D minor1947F. Orton
58Thirty Songs for low voice1948Frances and Ronald Coke-Steel
59Trio in G for flute, viola and piano1948Ortina
60Viola Sonata in C minor1948Gordon Fox
61Variations on 'Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes' in B flat for piano1949Louis Kentner
62Cello Sonata No. 4 in A1949-
63Piano Concerto No. 6 in C minor1954John Williams (1965/66), Oliver Welby (1954/69)
64(not known)--
65Piano Quintet1970Simon Holwell
66String Quartet1971Clive Jones or the Alfreton Hall String Quartet
67Six Songs for soprano or tenor1954Olive Wright
68(not known)--
69(not known)--
70Six Songs for high voice1956Barbara Welby
71Six Songs for high voice1956Cossack Shannon
72Six Songs for high voice1957Doris
73Variations in C sharp minor for piano1957Julie Marie Baud
74/1Thule for soprano1958Barbara Welby
75Cello Sonata1962-
76(not known)--
77(not known)--
78(not known)--
79Piano Concerto No. 6 in C minor1954-
80Violin Concerto1960Raymond Mosley
81Four Songs1966Hugo Meynell
81Three Songs for soprano1960Percy Young
82Piano Quintet in F minor1967Patricia Hurst
83Trio in G minor1960-
Polichinelle & Inventions (in 2 parts) for piano1936Emanuel Yarovsky
Berceuse for piano1936Griselda Brook
Violin Sonata1953-
Moment Musical for piano in D minor1954John Williams
Song1964Julie
Song1964Donald Grundy
Piano Concerto in G minor1970-
Piano Studies1971-
Song for soprano or tenor1966Hugo Meynell
Daffodils (song)--
Dearest Do Not You Delay Me (song)--
Isles of Greece (song)--

Recordings

References

  1. House and Heritage. Brookhill Hall, Derbyshire
  2. Brown, Geoff. "Simon Callaghan plays Roger Sacheverell Coke". classical-music.com. BBC Music Magazine. Archived from the original on 22 June 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  3. Callaghan, Simon. "The discovery of a long-forgotten British composer-pianist". Gramophone. Mark Allen Group. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  4. Callaghan, Simon (2015). "Roger Sacheverell Coke (1912-72) His Life & Music". Musical Opinion (July–September). Archived from the original on 22 June 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  5. Matthew-Walker, Robert (2015). "Roger Sacheverell Coke" (PDF). SOMM Recordings. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2021. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  6. Ridgewell, Rupert (2017). "Roger Sacheverell Coke". Hyperion Records. Archived from the original on 25 February 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  7. Obituary, Musical Times 1558 (May 1972) p 1226
  8. Piano Concertos, reviewed by MusicWeb International
  9. Cello Sonatas, reviewed by MusicWeb International
  10. 24 Preludes, reviewed by MusicWeb International
  11. Barnett, Rob. 'More Neglected Music Unveiled at the English Music Festival'. Seen & Heard, 2012.
  12. Derbyshire County Council: Special Local Studies Collections, Coke-Steel Collection
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.