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Basil Cameron
Basil Cameron
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Basil Cameron CBE (18 August 1884 – 26 June 1975) was an English conductor.

Key Information

Early career

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He was born Basil George Cameron Hindenberg[1] at 34 Waylen Street, Reading, the son of a German immigrant family.[2] His father, Frederick Clementz Hindenberg, was a piano tuner. He took up the violin at age 8, and studied with the organist and composer Tertius Noble at York Minster, and then for four years at the Berlin Hochschule, where his violin teachers were Joseph Joachim and Leopold Auer.[3] Back in England he joined Henry Wood's Queen's Hall Orchestra in 1908 and then the London Symphony Orchestra. In 1912, Hindenberg began conducting at the resort of Torquay, where he included music by Delius and Stravinsky in the repertoire alongside more popular seaside favorites.[4] He also organized festivals dedicated to the music of Wagner (1913) and Strauss (1914), raising the profile of the orchestra.[2]

World War I and after

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In 1914, at the start of World War I, it was considered less than ideal in England to bear such a Germanic-sounding name as Hindenberg, so the family name was discreetly dropped and he adopted his third name, Cameron, as his professional surname. Various sources have suggested that the name Hindenberg had initially been adopted because German-sounding conductors could find work more easily than English ones could. It has also been suggested that the name Cameron was his mother's maiden name. Both of these assertions are incorrect.[1][5]

During the war, Cameron served in the British Army from November 1915 to August 1918, where he rose to the rank of lieutenant and was wounded in action at Bullecourt in 1918.[6] After the war, Cameron led orchestras in many other British seaside resorts, including Brighton, Hastings (from 1923) and Harrogate (from 1924, succeeding Howard Carr). Laudatory reviews by George Bernard Shaw and Percy Grainger increased his renown, and led to London engagements from the Royal Philharmonic Society.[7] Eric Coates, who had been a violinist with Cameron in the Queen’s Hall Orchestra, dedicated his Four Ways Suite of 1927 to him. It had been commissioned by Cameron and was premiered in Harrogate that year.[5][8]

In 1929 Cameron organized an all-British festival in Harrogate, including the music of Bax, Delius, Henry Balfour Gardiner, Joseph Holbrooke, William Hurlstone and Peter Warlock.[2] Also in 1929, Cameron auditioned the pianist Moura Lympany, then aged just 12 years old, and immediately organized her concert debut with him at Harrogate, playing Mendelssohn's G minor Piano Concerto.[9]

In 1930 he guest-conducted with the San Francisco Symphony, and was later invited to become its music director, where from 1930 and 1932 he served as joint music director with Issay Dobrowen. In 1932 he was appointed music director of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, where he stayed until February 1938.[2]

Return to England

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In 1938, he returned to England where he remained for the rest of his career. In 1940, he joined the conducting staff of the Proms as an associate conductor to Sir Henry Wood and began conducting for various orchestras, the London Philharmonic Orchestra most frequently. With the LPO, Cameron conducted the first UK performance of Benjamin Britten's Violin Concerto (on 6 April 1941), and the first UK performance of the Sinfonia da Requiem at the Royal Albert Hall on 22 July 1942. [5]

Cameron played an essential role in the immediate post World War II period at the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts held in the Royal Albert Hall where, with Malcolm Sargent, he was responsible for the bulk of the programming, including the Bach/Brahms evenings. One notable occasion was on 7 September 1945 when Cameron conducted the first performance in England of Schoenberg's Piano Concerto, with the 23-year-old pianist Kyla Greenbaum as the soloist.[10][11] Despite some underlying hostility the work was received by the audience with unexpected enthusiasm, and (according to The Musical Times) Greenbaum played with "immense courage".[12] Other premieres he conducted at the Proms included E. J. Moeran's Serenade in G (on 2 September 1948) and Alan Bush's Violin Concerto (on 25 August 1949).[2]

Retirement and death

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Cameron was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1957.[13] On 31 March 1960, while conducting the London Symphony Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall with Wilhelm Backhaus as soloist, Cameron became ill and could not continue. He retired in 1964, aged 80 years, with a final concert featuring the Symphony No 4 by Brahms and the Symphony of Psalms by Stravinsky.[5] 

He was married twice, first to Frances James, and second to Phyllis MacQueen, but died (unmarried) in a Leominster nursing home, aged 91.[2]

References

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from Grokipedia
''Basil Cameron'' is an English conductor known for his long and dedicated service at the BBC Proms, where he conducted a vast repertoire as an associate conductor and frequent performer, as well as his leadership roles with orchestras in Britain and the United States. Born Basil George Cameron Hindenberg on 18 August 1884 in Reading, England, to German-Scottish parentage, he studied violin with Joseph Joachim and composition with Max Bruch at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik from 1902 to 1906 before returning to London to play violin in the Queen's Hall Orchestra. In 1912 he began conducting the Torquay Municipal Orchestra under the name Basil Hindenberg, but changed his surname to Cameron during World War I amid anti-German sentiment. Cameron went on to lead the Hastings orchestra from 1923 to 1930 and conducted festivals of Wagner and Richard Strauss in Torquay that enhanced his reputation in English musical circles. He served as co-conductor of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra from 1931 to 1934 and music director of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra from 1932 to 1938, before returning permanently to England. Joining the BBC Proms conducting staff in 1940 as assistant to Sir Henry Wood, he became a mainstay of the festival, sharing seasons with Sir Malcolm Sargent and handling demanding programmes with minimal rehearsal time. Known for his practical musicianship, strong orchestral control, and commitment to the music rather than personal showmanship, Cameron earned the respect of colleagues like Sir Henry Wood, who praised his grip over the orchestra despite his shy and sensitive nature. He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1957 and marked his eightieth birthday with a special Proms concert he conducted himself in 1964. Basil Cameron retired from the Proms shortly thereafter and died on 26 June 1975 in Leominster, England.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Family Background

Basil Cameron was born Basil George Cameron Hindenberg on 18 August 1884 in Reading, Berkshire. He was the son of Frederick Clementz Hindenberg, a German immigrant who worked as a piano tuner, and Eliza Helena Sherman. His mother died in 1887 when he was three years old, contributing to early family hardships. The family also endured the tragedy of his sister's early death during his childhood in Reading. These early losses occurred within a household of modest circumstances shaped by his father's German heritage and occupation in music-related trade. He showed an initial interest in the violin around age eight, though his formal musical development came later.

Musical Training and Early Influences

Basil Cameron began his violin studies at the age of eight. He continued his early training under Tertius Noble at York Minster from 1900 to 1902, where he received instruction in violin performance. Cameron then attended the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin from 1902 to 1906, studying violin with Joseph Joachim and composition with Max Bruch. After returning to England, he joined Henry Wood’s Queen’s Hall Orchestra as a violinist in 1908 and later performed with the London Symphony Orchestra.

Early Conducting Career in Britain

Violinist to Conductor Transition

Basil Cameron, who initially performed under the name Basil Hindenberg, established himself as a violinist after studying at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik with Joseph Joachim and Max Bruch, before joining the Queen's Hall Orchestra for five years. In 1912, he transitioned to conducting with his appointment as conductor of the Torquay Municipal Orchestra, an ensemble of 25 players that performed at the town's newly built Pavilion. He expanded the orchestra's artistic scope by combining popular selections with more advanced modern repertoire, most notably conducting the United Kingdom premiere of Igor Stravinsky's Symphony in E flat, Op. 1, on 16 April 1914 at the Torquay Music Festival. Cameron further demonstrated programming innovation through composer-focused festivals, organizing a Wagner Festival in 1913 that proved remarkably successful and exceeded expectations for a local orchestra of its size. In 1914, he led a Richard Strauss Festival, which contributed to elevating the orchestra's profile within the English musical scene. These efforts highlighted his early commitment to ambitious and forward-looking concert presentation.

Torquay and Seaside Orchestra Positions

After World War I, Basil Cameron resumed his conducting career with a series of appointments at British seaside orchestras, building his reputation through innovative programming and support for contemporary British music. In November 1923 he was appointed Musical Director of the Hastings Municipal Orchestra, where he initially conducted a 21-player ensemble for a 21-week season that included weekly symphony concerts. His tenure saw significant development, including the extension of the season to 28 weeks by 1926 and the permanent expansion of the orchestra to 32 players following the opening of the acoustically superior White Rock Pavilion in April 1927. In summer 1924 Cameron assumed the additional role of conductor for the Harrogate Orchestra, establishing a dual winter-summer arrangement that linked the two resorts until his departure in 1930. During his Harrogate summers Cameron championed new British works, notably premiering Eric Coates' Four Ways Suite at the Harrogate Festival on 23 September 1927; the piece was dedicated to him by his friend Coates. In 1929 he co-organized, with Percy Grainger, a short festival of British music in Harrogate held over three days from 24 to 26 July, featuring works by composers including Arnold Bax, Frederick Delius, Joseph Holbrooke, Peter Warlock, and others associated with the Frankfurt Group and broader British repertoire. That same year Cameron gave the 12-year-old Moura Lympany her professional concert debut at Harrogate, conducting Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor and suggesting her stage name from an old spelling of her mother's maiden name. The Hastings orchestra under Cameron also embarked on a series of early recordings for Decca in 1929, including overtures such as Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld and Hérold's Zampa. These activities reflected his growing prominence in promoting British orchestral music at seaside venues before his move to the United States.

World War I and Name Change

Military Service

Basil Cameron enlisted in the British Army in November 1915 and served during World War I. During his service in World War I, he rose to the rank of lieutenant in the London Regiment. He was wounded in action in 1918. At the outset of the war, he adopted the professional name Basil Cameron from his birth surname Hindenberg.

Adoption of Professional Name

In 1914, at the outbreak of World War I, Basil Cameron dropped his surname Hindenberg due to widespread anti-German sentiment in Britain. Born Basil George Cameron Hindenberg, he adopted his third given name, Cameron, as his professional surname thereafter. This professional name change allowed him to continue his musical career without the disadvantages associated with a German-sounding surname during the conflict. The family name change was handled discreetly.

Career in the United States

San Francisco Symphony Orchestra

In 1930, Basil Cameron guest-conducted the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, an appearance that prompted an invitation to become its music director. He accepted the role and served jointly with Issay Dobrowen, sharing leadership of the orchestra. Cameron's tenure as joint music director ran from 1930 to 1932, following the conclusion of Alfred Hertz's long leadership and preceding the appointment of Pierre Monteux. This arrangement reflected a transitional phase for the orchestra, with Dobrowen continuing in his music directorship role beyond Cameron's departure.

Seattle Symphony Orchestra

Following his guest conducting engagements with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, Basil Cameron was appointed music director of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra in 1932. He held this position until 1938, a tenure marked by significant challenges stemming from audience disinterest, board conflicts, and issues within the orchestra itself. The period proved difficult, with performances frequently drawing half-empty houses and the orchestra contending with rickety budgets. Constant wrangling among the socialite directors compounded these problems, while insubordination among the musicians further strained relations and operations. These conditions were said to have made life unbearable for conductors like Cameron, who left Seattle under similar circumstances as others before and after him.

Return to Britain and Proms Era

Association with the London Philharmonic and Proms

In 1938, Basil Cameron returned permanently to England after his time in the United States. He soon became associated with the BBC Proms, serving as assistant conductor to Sir Henry Wood during the early years of the war. Cameron developed a close and frequent association with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducting it regularly in London and on tour. In August 1940, amid wartime conditions, he joined Malcolm Sargent to lead the LPO on an extensive provincial tour of Britain organized with commercial support, performing accessible programs in theatres and music halls starting in Glasgow and reaching many regional audiences despite travel restrictions and air raids. After the war, Cameron shared responsibility for Proms programming and conducting with Malcolm Sargent, who held the principal role with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. He remained a regular presence at the Proms and with the LPO as a guest conductor. During the 1951 Festival of Britain celebrations, Cameron conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra in a dedicated season of concerts at the Royal Albert Hall between 10 May and 30 June.

Notable Premieres and Repertoire Contributions

Basil Cameron conducted several notable premieres that introduced significant modern compositions to British audiences, particularly through his work with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and at the BBC Proms. He led the UK premiere of Benjamin Britten's Violin Concerto on 6 April 1941, with Thomas Matthews as soloist and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Cameron also gave the first English performance of Britten's Sinfonia da Requiem on 22 July 1942 at the Royal Albert Hall during the Proms season. Cameron conducted the English premiere of Arnold Schoenberg's Piano Concerto on 7 September 1945 at the BBC Proms. ) He presented E. J. Moeran's Serenade in G on 2 September 1948. Cameron gave the premiere of Alan Bush's Violin Concerto on 25 August 1949. These performances highlighted Cameron's commitment to contemporary music and helped establish key works in the British orchestral repertoire.

Film Conducting Work

Role in The Magic Bow

Basil Cameron conducted the orchestral score for the 1946 British film The Magic Bow, a biographical drama about the life of violin virtuoso Niccolò Paganini. The production starred Stewart Granger in the title role and featured violin solos performed by Yehudi Menuhin, with Cameron leading the musical recordings. Conducting the National Symphony Orchestra, Cameron oversaw the film's orchestral elements, which included adaptations of Paganini's compositions. This engagement represented Cameron's only documented work as a film conductor, distinct from his extensive career in symphonic and concert performance.

Later Years, Honours, and Retirement

Post-War Conducting and Health Incident

After World War II, Basil Cameron maintained a significant presence in British concert life, continuing his long association with the BBC Proms where he shared conducting responsibilities with Sir Malcolm Sargent into the 1950s, and frequently appeared with the London Symphony Orchestra. He also took part in special events such as the 1951 Festival of Britain concerts with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the 1954 fiftieth-anniversary concert of the London Symphony Orchestra. On 31 March 1960, Cameron collapsed on the podium during a London Symphony Orchestra concert at the Royal Festival Hall, having just begun the Piano Concerto No. 5 ("Emperor") by Beethoven with soloist Wilhelm Backhaus after opening with the Egmont Overture. He was carried offstage and taken to hospital, unable to continue, and the remainder of the concert was led by the orchestra's leader. Cameron retired in 1964 at the age of 80. His final appearance was the BBC Proms Eightieth Birthday Concert on 18 August 1964 at the Royal Albert Hall with the London Symphony Orchestra, featuring a program that included Brahms's Symphony No. 4 and Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms.

Awards, Final Performances, and Death

Basil Cameron was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1957 in recognition of his services to music. This honour acknowledged his long career as a conductor across Britain, the United States, and at major festivals including the Proms. He retired from active conducting in 1964. His final appearance at the Proms came on 18 August 1964 at the Royal Albert Hall, a special concert marking his eightieth birthday. For the occasion, he conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in a programme featuring Brahms' Symphony No. 4—his favourite symphony—along with Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms and one of Mozart's Horn Concertos. This performance is widely regarded as his last major public appearance. Basil Cameron died on 26 June 1975 in Leominster, Herefordshire, England.

Personal Life

Character

Basil Cameron was known as a quiet and reserved figure in the music world, earning the description "the Quiet Maestro" for his understated demeanor. As a conductor, Cameron was non-assertive in style, prioritizing the prominence and contributions of soloists over personal display. Anecdotal observations occasionally noted difficulties in rehearsal settings, attributed to his reserved and unforceful approach.

References

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