Stanley Bate

Stanley Bate (December 12, 1911 – October 19, 1959) was an English composer and pianist.

Life

Bate received early training in music and had composed two operas by age twenty. He studied under Ralph Vaughan Williams, R.O. Morris, Gordon Jacob, and Arthur Benjamin, and then in Paris with Nadia Boulanger and in Berlin with Paul Hindemith. He wrote incidental music for performances at German playhouses, and toured Australia and the United States as a pianist. Bate was openly gay,[1] but was married to fellow composer Peggy Glanville-Hicks from 1938 to 1949, when they divorced.[2] After several years living in America, where Bate and Glanville-Hicks had moved in 1941, he returned to London; he received less praise in his birth country than abroad, and the lack of attention his works received resulted in his decision to commit suicide in 1959. There has been recent interest in his music with the high profile and well reviewed recordings of his Symphonies 3 & 4 with Martin Yates conducting The Royal Scottish National Orchestra on the Dutton Epoch label, and the same forces, together with Lionel Handy, cello, have also recently released a recording of Bate’s Cello Concerto on the Lyrita label.

Works

Bate's works are influenced by Hindemith, Vaughan Williams, and William Walton.

Dramatic

Operas
Ballets
Incidental music
Music for films

Instrumental

Orchestral

Chamber music

Piano

Vocal

Notes

  1. Commire, Anne; Klezmer, Deborah (1999). Women in world history: a biographical encyclopedia 6. Yorkin Publications. p. 276.
  2. Langmore, Diane; Bennet, Darryl (2009). Australian Dictionary of Biography 17. Miegunyah Press. p. 441.

References

External links

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