Hart Pease Danks

Hart Pease Danks
Background information
Born (1834-04-06)April 6, 1834
New Haven, Connecticut
Died November 20, 1903(1903-11-20) (aged 69)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation(s) Songwriter
Years active 1850s-1890s

Hart Pease Danks (6 April 1834 20 November 1903) was a musician who specialized in composing, singing and leading choral groups. He is best known for his 1873 composition, Silver Threads Among the Gold.

Biography

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Danks moved with his family to Saratoga Springs, New York when he was eight. He studied music with Dr. E. Whiting, later moving to Chicago, where he worked as a carpenter in his father's construction business before embarking on a full-time music career.[1]

Gravestone of H.P. Danks, Kensico Cemetery, in Valhalla, New York

In 1858, he married Hattie R. Colahan.[2] In 1864, he moved to New York City. In 1873, he published his best known song, "Silver Threads Among the Gold" (words by Eben E. Rexford), which sold over three million copies. Having sold the rights to it, though, he died penniless in a boarding house in Philadelphia, his last written words: "It’s hard to die alone".[3][4] His widow died, alone, in 1924.[5] Danks is buried at Kensico Cemetery, in Valhalla, New York.

Pease Danks was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970. He wrote over 1,000 songs.[6]

His works also include several operettas, including for instance Zanie (published 1887, to a libretto by Fanny Crosby)[7] and Pauline, or the Belle of Saratoga (ca.1874).[8]

Other collaborators and contributions.

References

  1. Sanjek, Russell. American popular music and its business: the first four hundred years, Vol. II 1790 to 1909, p. 255-56 (1988)
  2. Bomberger, E. Douglas. Brainard's biographies of American musicians, p.79-80 (1999)
  3. (21 November 1903). Composer Found Dead Beside His Piano, The New York Times
  4. Hoag, Doane R. (8 July 1988). His Love Ballad Was Not For Him, Reading Eagle
  5. Brisbane, Arthur (30 March 1924). Today, Pittsburgh Press
  6. The National cyclopaedia of American biography, Vol. VIII, p. 447 (1898)
  7. who under many of her pseudonyms provided texts to many of his songs. See IMSLP and Neptune (2002) (sources for Crosby Wikipedia article)
  8. Bradley, Ian C. (2010). Water Music: Music-Making in the Spas of Europe and North America. Oxford University Press. p. 169. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
  9. again, see many of his songs at IMSLP - usually but not always under her pseudonyms.
  10. Our American music, three hundred years of it, p. 609 (1954)

External links

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