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Rebecca Clarke (composer)

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English composer and violist (1886–1979)

Clarke with a viola in 1919

Rebecca Helferich Clarke (27 August 1886 – 13 October 1979) was a British classical composer andviolist. Internationally renowned as a viola virtuoso, she also became one of the first female professional orchestral players in London.[1]

Rebecca Clarke had a German mother and an American father, and spent substantial periods of her life in the United States, where she permanently settled after World War II. She was born inHarrow and studied at theRoyal Academy of Music andRoyal College of Music in London. Stranded in the United States at the outbreak ofWorld War II, she married composer and pianistJames Friskin in 1944. Clarke died at her home in New York at the age of 93.

Although Clarke's output was not large, her work was recognised for its compositional skill and artistic power. Some of her works have yet to be published; those that were published in her lifetime were largely forgotten after she stopped composing. Scholarship and interest in her compositions revived in 1976. The Rebecca Clarke Society was established in 2000 to promote the study and performance of her music.

Early life

[edit]
London'sRoyal College of Music where Clarke studied from 1907 to 1910

Clarke was born inHarrow, England, to Joseph Thacher Clarke, an American, and his German wife, Agnes Paulina Marie Amalie Helferich.[2] Her father was interested in music, and Clarke started on violin after sitting in on lessons that were being given to her brother,Hans Thacher Clarke, who was 15 months her junior.[3] There was a familystring quartet: Joseph playing cello, and Agnes, who was a pianist, playing viola, with Hans and Rebecca.[4] Her father was abusive, often hitting her with a steel ruler over infractions such as biting her nails.[5]

Clarke started composing at an early age[6] and began formal studies at theRoyal Academy of Music in 1903, as a violin pupil ofHans Wessely.[2] She did not enjoy the teaching, as she said in an interview at the end of her life, which involved the "book under the arm" method for correctbowing: already at the time it was considered an "old fashioned German" style of tuition.[7][8] She was withdrawn by her father in 1905, after her harmony teacherPercy Hilder Miles proposed to her. Miles later left hisStradivarius violin to Clarke in his will.[9]

Shortly after leaving the Royal Academy, Clarke made the first of many visits to the United States.[3] She then attended theRoyal College of Music, becoming SirCharles Villiers Stanford's first female composition student.[10] Her substantialTheme and Variations for piano dates from this period.[11] At Stanford's urging she shifted her focus from the violin to the viola, just as the latter was coming to be seen as a legitimate solo instrument.[2] She studied withLionel Tertis, who was considered by some the greatest violist of the day.[2] In 1910 she composed "Tears", a setting of Chinese poetry, in collaboration with a group of fellow students at RCM.[3]

Clarke also sang under the direction ofRalph Vaughan Williams in a student ensemble called the Palestrina Society, which she organised with another student, the pianist Beryl Reeves.[3][12] Reeves, the daughter ofWilliam Pember Reeves andMaud Pember Reeves, married Clarke's brother Eric in 1919.[13][14][15]

Orchestral musician and chamber ensembles in London

[edit]

Following her criticism of his extra-marital affairs, Clarke's father turned her out of the house and cut off her funds.[16][17] She had to leave the Royal College in 1910 and supported herself through her viola playing. Clarke, along withJessie Grimson on violin, became one of the first female professional orchestral musicians in London when she was selected by SirHenry Wood to play in theQueen's Hall Orchestra in 1913.[5][10][18] She also participated in chamber groups during this period, includingNora Clench's female quartet.[19]

Clarke was sought after as a violist, and was invited to the at-home chamber music recitals of Paul andMuriel Draper inLisson Grove from 1911 to 1914;[20][21][22] Paul Draper was an American tenor studying in London withRaimund von zur-Mühlen.[23] Clarke played withArtur Schnabel,Pablo Casals,Jascha Heifetz,Jacques Thibaud,Guilhermina Suggia,Arthur Rubinstein,Pierre Monteux, andGeorge Szell, among others.[6]

Touring 1916–1923

[edit]

In 1916 Clarke visited the United States, where some of her songs had been performed byGervase Elwes. On this trip, she metElizabeth Sprague Coolidge, a music patron.[2] Marin Jacobson has suggested that the contact was through the pianist Gertrude Watson, a friend of Coolidge who had studied underTheodor Leschetizky, and who had toured with Clarke and the cellistMay Mukle for the benefit of war relief.[24][25]

In 1918, Clarke premiered her short, lyrical piece for viola and piano titledMorpheus, composed under the pseudonym "Anthony Trent", at a joint recital with May Mukle in New York City. Reviewers praisedMorpheus, if largely ignoring Clarke's other works.[17]

Clarke continued to perform with May Mukle, inHawaii in 1918 and 1919, and on a tour of the British colonies in 1923.[26] Mukle was a good friend, and withKathleen Long andMarjorie Hayward they later made up the English Ensemblepiano quartet.[27]

Compositions 1919 to mid-1920s

[edit]

Clarke's compositional career peaked in a brief period, beginning with theviola sonata she entered in a 1919 competition sponsored by Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge. In a field of 72 entrants, Clarke's sonata tied for first place with a composition byErnest Bloch; Coolidge gave Bloch hercasting vote. Reporters speculated that "Rebecca Clarke" was a pseudonym for Bloch himself.[10] The sonata was well received and had its first performance at the Berkshire music festival in 1919. In 1921 Clarke again made a good showing in Coolidge's competition with herpiano trio. A 1923rhapsody forcello andpiano followed, sponsored by Coolidge, making Clarke the sole woman to receive Coolidge's patronage.[10] These three works represent the height of Clarke's compositional career.[2]

Later life

[edit]

Clarke, after completing a world tour in 1922–23, embarked upon a career as a solo and ensemble performer in London.[28] In 1924 she became a founding member of theAeolian Players. She was one of theAeolian Hall ensemble conducted in October 1928 byMaurice Ravel, in a concert of his own works, withGordon Bryan,Gwendolen Mason and others.[29]

Clarke performed on several recordings in the 1920s and 1930s, and participated inBBC music broadcasts. Her compositional output greatly decreased during this period.[2] However, she continued to perform, participating in the Paris Colonial Exhibition in 1931 as part of the English Ensemble.[30] Between 1927 and 1933 she was romantically involved with the BritishbaritoneJohn Goss, who was eight years her junior and married at the time.[5] He had premiered several of her mature songs, two of which were dedicated to him, "June Twilight" and "The Seal Man". Her "Tiger, Tiger", finished at the time the relationship was ending, proved to be her last composition for solo voice until the early 1940s.[31]

In 1936 Clarke sold the Stradivarius she had been bequeathed to a dealer in New York. At the outbreak of World War II, Clarke was in the US visiting her two brothers, and was unable to obtain a visa to return to Britain. She lived for a while with her brothers' families and then in 1942 took a position as a governess for a family in Connecticut.[32] She composed 10 works between 1939 and 1942, including herPassacaglia on an Old English Tune.[3] She had first metJames Friskin, a composer, concert pianist, and founding member of theJuilliard School faculty, and later to become her husband, when they were both students at the Royal College of Music. They renewed their friendship after a chance meeting on a Manhattan street in 1944 and married in September of that year when both were in their late 50s. According to musicologist Liane Curtis, Friskin was "a man who gave [Clarke] a sense of deep satisfaction and equilibrium."[5]

Later compositions

[edit]

Clarke has been described byStephen Banfield as the most distinguished British female composer of the inter-war generation.[33] She is now established as one of the most important 'women composers' of her generation. However, as she told a journalist, "I would sooner be regarded as a 16th-rate composer than be judged as if there were one kind of musical art for men and another for women."[34] However, her later output was sporadic.[2] It has been suggested by musicologist Liane Curtis that Clarke haddysthymia, a chronic form ofdepression;[35] the lack of encouragement—sometimes outright discouragement—she received for her work also made her reluctant to compose.[5] Clarke did not consider herself able to balance her personal life and the demands of composition: "I can't do it unless it's the first thing I think of every morning when I wake and the last thing I think of every night before I go to sleep." After her marriage, she stopped composing, despite the encouragement of her husband, although she continued working on arrangements until shortly before her death. She also stopped performing.[2][5]

Last years and death

[edit]

In 1963 Clarke helped establish the May Mukle prize at the Royal Academy of Music. It is awarded annually to an outstanding cellist.[36]

After her husband's death in 1967, Clarke began writing amemoir, titledI Had a Father Too (or the Mustard Spoon); it was completed in 1973 but never published. In it she describes her early life, marked by frequent beatings from her father and strained family relations which affected her perceptions of her proper place in life.[5] She had stopped performing after her marriage.[2][5] In the 1970s, as interest rose in her music, tonal compositions and in women composers, she gave a few more performances in New York.[6]

Clarke died on 13 October 1979 at her home inNew York City at the age of 93, and wascremated.[2]

Compositions

[edit]
A 1918 program showcasing Clarke's work. Here, her duetMorpheus is credited to the pseudonym "Anthony Trent".

A large portion of Clarke's music features the viola, as she was a professional performer for many years. Much of her output was written for herself and the all-female chamber ensembles she played in, including the Norah Clench Quartet, the English Ensemble, and the d'Aranyi Sisters. She also toured worldwide, particularly with cellist May Mukle. Several trends in20th-century classical music strongly influenced her works. Clarke also knew many leading composers of the day, includingBloch andRavel, with whom her work has been compared.[2]

Theimpressionism ofDebussy is often mentioned in connection with Clarke's work, particularly its lush textures and modernisticharmonies. TheViola Sonata (published in the same year as the Bloch and theHindemith Viola Sonata) is an example of this, with itspentatonic opening theme, thick harmonies, emotionally intense nature, and dense,rhythmically complex texture. The Sonata remains a part of the standard repertoire for the viola.Morpheus, composed a year earlier, was her first expansive work, after over a decade of songs and miniatures. TheRhapsody that Coolidge sponsored is Clarke's most ambitious work: it is roughly 23 minutes long, with complex musical ideas and ambiguous tonalities contributing to the varying moods of the piece. In contrast, "Midsummer Moon", written the following year, is a light miniature, with a flutter-like solo violin line.[17]

In addition to her chamber music for strings, Clarke wrote many songs. Nearly all of Clarke's early pieces are for solo voice and piano. Her 1933 "Tiger, Tiger", a setting ofBlake's poem "The Tyger", is dark and brooding, almostexpressionist. She worked on it for five years to the exclusion of other works during her tumultuous relationship with John Goss and revised it in 1972.[10] Most of her songs, however, are lighter in nature. Her earliest works wereparlour songs, and she went on to build up a body of work drawn primarily from classic texts byYeats,Masefield, andA.E. Housman.[2]

During 1939 to 1942, the last prolific period near the end of her compositional career, her style became more clear andcontrapuntal, with emphasis onmotivic elements and tonal structures, the hallmarks ofneoclassicism.Dumka (1941), a recently published work for violin, viola, and piano, reflects theEastern Europeanfolk styles ofBartók andMartinů.[10] The "Passacaglia on an Old English Tune", also from 1941 and premiered by Clarke herself, is based on a theme attributed toThomas Tallis which appears throughout the work. The piece is modal in flavor, mainly in theDorian mode but venturing into the seldom-heardPhrygian mode. The piece is dedicated to "BB", ostensibly Clarke's niece Magdalen; scholars speculate that the dedication is more likely referring toBenjamin Britten, who organised a concert commemorating the death of Clarke's friend and major influenceFrank Bridge.[37] ThePrelude, Allegro, and Pastorale, also composed in 1941, is another neoclassically influenced piece, written for clarinet and viola (originally for her brother and sister-in-law).[17]

Clarke composed no large scale works such as symphonies. Her total output of compositions comprises 47 songs, 3 arrangements, 11 choral works, and 25 instrumental pieces (including the Piano Trio, and the Viola Sonata).[10] Her work was all but forgotten for a long period of time, but interest in it was revived in 1976 following a radio broadcast in celebration of her ninetieth birthday. Some of Clarke's compositions remain unpublished and in the personal possession of her heirs, along with most of her writings.[35] However, in the early 2000s more of her works were printed and recorded.[38] Examples of recent publications include her sonata in G major and sonata for violin and piano in D major, both published in 2023.[39]

Modern reception of Clarke's work has been generally positive. A 1981 review of her Viola Sonata called it a "thoughtful, well constructed piece" from a relatively obscure composer;[40] a 1985 review noted its "emotional intensity and use of dark tone colours".[41] Andrew Achenbach, in his review of aHelen Callus recording of several Clarke works, referred toMorpheus as "striking" and "languorous".[42] Laurence Vittes noted that Clarke's "Lullaby" was "exceedingly sweet and tender".[43] A 1987 review concluded that "it seems astonishing that such splendidly written and deeply moving music should have lain in obscurity all these years".[44]

The Viola Sonata was the subject ofBBC Radio 3's Building a Library survey on 17 October 2015. The top recommendation, chosen by Helen Wallace, was byTabea Zimmermann (viola) andKirill Gerstein (piano). In 2017 BBC Radio 3 devoted five hours to her music asComposer of the Week.[45] A compilation recording of Clarke's songs was released for the first time byKitty Whately,Nicholas Phan andAnna Tilbrook in 2025.[46]

Legacy

[edit]

At the beginning of the 21st century, it was common knowledge that many of Clarke's compositions remained unpublished, while others were out of print. ThePrelude, allegro and pastorale: for Bb clarinet and viola had been published for the first time, byOxford University Press. A 2002 review in theJournal of the American Viola Society noted that the editor Christopher Johnson "now holds the rights to the works in the Clarke estate."[47][48] The Rebecca Clarke Society had been established in September 2000 to promote performance, scholarship, and awareness of the works of Rebecca Clarke.[49]

The head of the Rebecca Clarke Society, Liane Curtis, is the editor ofA Rebecca Clarke Reader, originally published by Indiana University Press in 2004. The book was withdrawn from circulation by the publisher following Johnson's complaints about the unlicensed reproduction of substantial excerpts from Clarke's unpublished writings.[50] TheReader has since been reissued by the Rebecca Clarke Society itself.[51]

Selected works

[edit]
For a more comprehensive list, seeList of compositions by Rebecca Clarke.

Chamber music

  • 2 Pieces: Lullaby and Grotesque for viola (or violin) and cello (c. 1916)
  • Morpheus for viola and piano (1917–1918)
  • Sonata for viola and piano (1919)
  • Piano Trio (1921)
  • Rhapsody for cello and piano (1923)
  • Passacaglia on an Old English Tune for viola (or cello) and piano (?1940–1941)
  • Prelude, Allegro and Pastorale for viola and clarinet (1941)

Vocal

  • Shiv and the Grasshopper for voice and piano (1904); words fromThe Jungle Book byRudyard Kipling
  • Shy One for voice and piano (1912); words byWilliam Butler Yeats
  • He That Dwelleth in the Secret Place (Psalm 91) for soloists and mixed chorus (1921)
  • The Seal Man for voice and piano (1922); words byJohn Masefield
  • The Aspidistra for voice and piano (1929); words byClaude Flight
  • The Tiger for voice and piano (1929–1933); words byWilliam Blake
  • God Made a Tree for voice and piano (1954); words by Katherine Kendall

Choral

References

[edit]
  1. ^Broad, Leah (2023).Quartet: How Four Women Changed the Musical World. Faber and Faber.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmPonder, Michael. "Clarke, Rebecca Helferich (1886–1979)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61135. (Subscription,Wikipedia Library access orUK public library membership required.)
  3. ^abcdeCurtis, Liane (2005). "Violist to Violist: Nancy Uscher's Interview with Rebecca Clarke Friskin". In Curtis, Liane (ed.).A Rebecca Clarke Reader. Rebecca Clarke Society. p. 185.ISBN 978-0-9770079-0-5.
  4. ^Bynog, David M. (2021).Notes for Violists: A Guide to the Repertoire. Oxford University Press. p. 100.ISBN 978-0-19-091610-7.
  5. ^abcdefghCurtis, Liane (May 1996)."A Case of Identity"(PDF).Musical Times.137 (1839):15–21.doi:10.2307/1003935.JSTOR 1003935.
  6. ^abc"Life".Rebecca Clarke. 3 June 2020.
  7. ^Curtis, Liane, ed. (2005).A Rebecca Clarke Reader. The Rebecca Clarke Society, Inc. p. 184.ISBN 978-0-9770079-0-5.
  8. ^Adolf Busch. Boydell & Brewer. p. 68.ISBN 978-0-907689-78-2.
  9. ^"Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1720, the 'General Kyd' (Provenance)". Tarisio Auctions. Retrieved4 September 2023.
  10. ^abcdefgCurtis, Liane. "Rebecca Clarke".Grove Music Online.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.44728.(subscription required)
  11. ^"Complete Piano Music".MusicWeb. Retrieved23 September 2022.
  12. ^"Letter from Ralph Vaughan Williams to Beryl Reeves Letter No. VWL364".The Letters of Ralph Vaughan Williams. Retrieved13 December 2025.
  13. ^World Biography. Institute for Research in Biography. 1948. p. 1137.
  14. ^Alexander, Sally. "Reeves [née Robison], Magdalen Stuart [known as Maud Pember Reeves] (1865–1953)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/41214. (Subscription,Wikipedia Library access orUK public library membership required.)
  15. ^"Miss Clarke to be Married"(PDF).The Sunday Star. 23 January 1944. p. B5.
  16. ^Cooper, John Michael (12 February 2024).Historical Dictionary of Romantic Music. Bloomsbury. p. 137.ISBN 979-8-216-32992-3.
  17. ^abcdPonder, Michael (2000).Rebecca Clarke: Midsummer Moon (Media notes). Dutton Laboratories.
  18. ^Jacobs, Arthur (1994).Henry J. Wood: Maker of the Proms. Methuen. p. 142.ISBN 978-0-413-68390-8.
  19. ^Musical Women in England, 1870-1914: Encroaching on All Man's Privileges. Springer. 7 July 2000. p. 190.ISBN 978-0-312-29934-7.
  20. ^Baron, John H. (2010).Chamber Music: A Research and Information Guide. Routledge. p. 812.ISBN 978-1-135-84827-9.
  21. ^"Mrs Drapers Höhle".das Orchester (in German).
  22. ^"Muriel Draper Papers".archives.yale.edu. Retrieved7 December 2025.
  23. ^Thompson, Oscar; Slonimsky, Nicolas (1956).The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians. Dodd, Mead. p. 470.
  24. ^Koay, Kheng K. (16 October 2023).Female Recreation of Music Traditions: Women’s Sounds of the Past and Present. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 51.ISBN 978-1-5275-3438-4.
  25. ^Barr, Cyrilla (1998).Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge: American Patron of Music. Schirmer Books. p. 77.ISBN 978-0-02-864888-0.
  26. ^"Her Life". Rebecca Clarke Society. Retrieved11 December 2023.
  27. ^Seddon, Laura (15 April 2016).British Women Composers and Instrumental Chamber Music in the Early Twentieth Century. Routledge. p. 62.ISBN 978-1-317-17134-8.
  28. ^Reich, Nancy B (2005). "Rebecca Clarke: An Uncommon Woman". In Curtis, Liane (ed.).A Rebecca Clarke reader. Rebecca Clarke Society. pp. 10–18.ISBN 978-0-9770079-0-5.
  29. ^Blom, Eric (28 October 1928)."Ravel: 'One is glad to have his exquisite art as part of the world's music'".The Guardian.
  30. ^Clarke, Rebecca (Autumn 1931). "La Semaine Anglaise at the Paris Colonial Exhibition".BMS Bulletin. New Series I:7–11.
  31. ^Stein, Deborah (2005). "'Dare seize the fire': An introduction to the songs of Rebecca Clarke". In Curtis, Liane (ed.).A Rebecca Clarke Reader. Rebecca Clarke Society. pp. 43–78.ISBN 978-0-9770079-0-5.
  32. ^Ammer, Christine (2001).Unsung: A History of Women in American Music (2nd ed.). Amadeus. p. 167.ISBN 1-57467-058-1.
  33. ^Banfield, Stephen (1995). "Clarke, Rebecca (Thacher)".The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers. W.W. Norton and Co. p. 120.
  34. ^Broad, Leah (May 2023)."Clarke, Rebecca".Classical Music.
  35. ^abCurtis, Liane (Fall 2003). "When Virginia Woolf met Rebecca Clarke".Newsletter of the Rebecca Clarke Society.
  36. ^Schleifer, Martha Furman (2000). Program notes to Clarke'sSonata for Viola and Piano. Hildegard Publishing Company.
  37. ^Curtis, Liane (1999). Program notes to Clarke'sPassacaglia on an Old English Tune. Hildegard Publishing Company.
  38. ^Curtis, Liane, ed. (2005).A Rebecca Clarke reader. The Rebecca Clarke Society. pp. 3–5.
  39. ^"What Dame Ethel Smyth and Rebecca Clarke can teach us this International Women's Day".The Strad. 7 March 2025.
  40. ^"Review: Britten. Lacrymae, Op. 48, Clarke. Viola Sonata".Gramophone: 48. July 1981.
  41. ^"Review: Clarke. Viola Sonata".Gramophone: 42. July 1985.
  42. ^Achenbach, Andrew (February 2003). "Review: A Portrait of the Viola".Gramophone: 65.
  43. ^Vittes, Laurence (November 2005). "Viola View".Gramophone: 49.
  44. ^"Review: Clarke. Piano Trio".Gramophone: 75. March 1987.
  45. ^"The Famous Viola Sonata, Rebecca Clarke (1886–1979), Composer of the Week".BBC Radio 3.
  46. ^Jeal, Erica (7 November 2025)."Rebecca Clarke: The Complete Songs album review – rich, radiant performances bring a forgotten voice to life".The Guardian.
  47. ^Prelude, allegro and pastorale: for Bb clarinet and viola. Oxford University Press. 1999.ISBN 0193862387.
  48. ^Journal of the American Viola Society. Vol. 18. American Viola Society. 2002. p. 45.
  49. ^"About the Rebecca Clarke Society". Rebecca Clarke Society. Archived fromthe original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved1 December 2010.
  50. ^Byrne, Richard (16 July 2004)."Silent Treatment".The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved1 December 2010.
  51. ^"A Rebecca Clarke Reader". Rebecca Clarke Society. Retrieved19 June 2012.

External links

[edit]

Media related toRebecca Helferich Clarke at Wikimedia Commons

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