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Gordon Crosse
Gordon Crosse
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Gordon Crosse (1 December 1937 – 21 November 2021) was an English composer.

Biography

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Crosse was born in Bury, Lancashire on 1 December 1937,[1] and in 1961 graduated from St Edmund Hall, Oxford with a first class honours degree in music, where his tutors included Egon Wellesz.[2] He then undertook two years of postgraduate research on early fifteenth-century music before beginning an academic career at the University of Birmingham. Subsequent employment included posts at the Universities of Essex, Cambridge and California. He won the Worshipful Company of Musicians' Cobbett Medal for services to music in 1976. For two years after 1980 he taught part-time at the Royal Academy of Music in London but then retired to his Suffolk home to compose full-time.

Crosse first came to prominence at the 1964 Aldeburgh Festival with Meet My Folks! (Theme and Relations, op. 10), a music theatre work for children and adults based on poems by Ted Hughes. Hughes also provided the lyrics for five of Crosse's subsequent works: the "cantata" The Demon of Adachigahara (op. 21, 1968); The New World for voice and piano (op. 25); the opera The Story of Vasco (op. 29, 1974); Wintersong for six singers and optional percussion (op. 51); and Harvest Songs for two choirs and orchestra (op. 56). The Demon of Adachigahara, another music theatre work for children and adults, is a retelling of a traditional Japanese folk-tale akin to a Brothers Grimm story; it warns of the dangers of curiosity. The Story of Vasco, premièred in 1974 by Sadler's Wells Opera at the Coliseum Theatre in London, is a setting of Hughes' translation and adaptation of Georges Schehadé's play Histoire de Vasco.

Changes (op. 17), for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra, was written for the 1966 Three Choirs Festival in Worcester. The title refers to the sound of church-bells and it sets Crosse's own choice of texts by a variety of English poets ("I spent as long choosing the text as writing the music"),[3] an approach similar to that of Britten in his Spring Symphony. Though the subject-matter is often dark – many of the texts relate to death – the composer aimed "to fashion something enjoyable to listener and performer alike."

Crosse's first opera, Purgatory (op. 18), is a one-act setting of the play by William Butler Yeats. The opera reflects Crosse's admiration for the music of Benjamin Britten, in particular The Turn of the Screw.[4] It was written in 1966 and premièred at the Cheltenham Music Festival later that year. In 1969, Crosse returned to the Aldeburgh Festival to hear the English Opera Group première his second opera The Grace of Todd (op. 20) and revive Purgatory. The following year, the piece Some Marches on a Ground [5] for full orchestra elaborated material that would later appear in The Story of Vasco of 1974.

Crosse also composed the music for King Lear, the 1983 television production of Shakespeare's play, in which Laurence Olivier played the title role, and for which the celebrated actor won the last of his five Emmy Awards.[6] The production marked Olivier's last appearance in a Shakespearean role. This is the only television production for which Crosse has composed the music.

Crosse's interest in the relationship between music, literature and drama is evident in his concert as well as his theatrical work. Two examples are Memories of Morning: Night [5] for mezzo-soprano and orchestra, based on Jean Rhys' novel Wide Sargasso Sea; and World Within for actress, soprano and small ensemble, based on a text by Emily Brontë. Crosse also developed an interest in ballet after he adapted his orchestral piece Play Ground (1977) for choreographer Kenneth MacMillan. The ballet version of Play Ground was premièred at the 1979 Edinburgh Festival by the Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet, after which MacMillan then choreographed Crosse's chamber piece Wildboy (clarinet and ensemble, 1978) to produce a ballet for the American Ballet Theatre. In 1984, following a request by choreographer David Bintley, Crosse extended Benjamin Britten's Young Apollo for use as ballet music; the resulting ballet was premièred later that year by The Royal Ballet at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, London.

Works for soloist and orchestra form the other major strand in Crosse's composition. These include two violin concertos, a cello concerto[5] (written in 1979 "in memoriam Luigi Dallapiccola", based on a motif from Dallapiccola's piece Piccola Musica Notturna) and three works featuring blown instruments (Ariadne for oboe, commissioned for the oboist Sarah Francis, Thel for flute and Wildboy for clarinet).

Later career and death

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His fiftieth birthday was celebrated in 1987 with featured performances at several festivals, and he was BBC Radio 3 "Composer of the Week" in December. But following the completion of Sea Psalms, written for Glasgow forces in its year as European City of Culture, 1990, Crosse shifted his focus to computer programming and music technology, and in the following 17 years, produced little music, except several songs with recorder parts, written for the recorder player John Turner. He retired from his programming job in 2004.[7]

With Dirge from Cymbeline for baritone and harp, written in 2007 for the NMC Songbook, Crosse resumed active composition. The Dirge was followed by a Trio for oboe, violin and cello (Rhyming with Everything) and a "Fantasia" for flute/recorder, harp and strings. Then came a stream of new works, both large scale and small. Chamber works included four more string quartets (Nos 2 to 5), Brief Encounter for oboe, recorder and strings, a trio for oboe, violin and cello, and the Three Kipling Songs (2008). Orchestral works included a Viola Concerto, a 3rd violin concerto 'Horizon' and the Symphonies No 3, 4, 5 'The Seabird's Cry' and 6 (for double string orchestra, piano, timpani and harp). OUP was the publisher of his pieces until 1990, and Cadenza Music was his primary publisher since 2008.[8]

Crosse married Elizabeth Bunch in 1965 after they met at Aldeburgh, and they bought a house, Brant's Cottage in Blackheath, Wenhaston, near Blythburgh, Suffolk. There were two sons.[9] She died of cancer in 2011. In later years his partner was the poet Wendy Mulford, with whom he bought a cottage on Papa Westray, the northern-most of the Orkney Islands.[10] Crosse died on 21 November 2021, at the age of 83.[11]

Selected works

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Orchestral

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2009 Brief Encounter for oboe d'amore, recorder & string orchestra
Fantasia on "Ca' the Yowes" for flute/recorder, harp & string orchestra
Viola Concerto for viola & string orchestra with French horn
1986 Array 30' for trumpet & string orchestra
1979 Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra [5] op. 44 25' "In Memoriam Luigi Dallapiccola"
1978 Play Ground op. 41 27'
1975 Symphony No. 2 op. 37 24'
1974 Young Apollo 30'
Memories of Morning: Night [5] op. 30 34' mezzo-soprano & orchestra
1970 Some Marches on a Ground [5] op. 28 12'
Concerto No. 2 for Violin and Orchestra op. 26 34'
1966 Changes: A Nocturnal Cycle op. 17 50' soprano & baritone soloists, chorus, orchestra

Chamber

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1986 Wintersong op. 51 30' six singers, optional percussion
1983 Wavesongs [5] 30' cello and piano
1982 Watermusic [12] 11' recorders (one player) and piano
1980 A Year and a Day [5] op. 48a 8' solo clarinet
1979 Verses in Memoriam David Munrow [13]   9' counter-tenor, recorder, cello and harpsichord
1978 Wildboy op. 42 27' clarinet and ensemble
Thel op. 38 14' flute, two horns and string ensemble 1973 Dreamsongs [14] op. 35 14' clarinet, oboe, bassoon, piano
1972 Ariadne op. 31 23' oboe and ensemble
The New World op. 25 20' voice and piano

Opera and music theatre

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1977 World Within op. 40 43' actress, mezzo-soprano, ensemble
1974 The Story of Vasco op. 29 135' three-act opera
1968 The Demon of Adachigahara op. 21 30' children and adults
The Grace of Todd op. 20 75' "comedy in three scenes"
1966 Purgatory op. 18 40' one-act opera
1964 Meet My Folks! (Theme and Relations) op. 10 25' children and adults

Recordings

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Meet My Folks! op. 10 EMI CLP 1893 (LP)
Concerto da Camera op. 6 EMI ASD 2333 (LP)
Argo ZRG 759 (LP)
EMI 50999 9 18514 2 (CD)
Manoug Parikian (violin), Melos Ensemble conducted by Edward Downes
Changes: A Nocturnal Cycle op. 17 Argo ZRG 656 (LP)
Lyrita SRCD 259 (CD)
Vyvyan, Shirley-Quirk, LSO & Chorus conducted by Del Mar
Purgatory op. 18 Argo ZRG 810 (LP)
Lyrita SRCD 313 (CD)
Some Marches on a Ground op. 28 First Edition LS 471 (LP)
RCA Gold Seal GL 25018 (LP)
Louisville Orchestra conducted by Jorge Mester[15]
The New World op. 25 U-K DKP  9093 (CD) Muriel Dickinson (voice); Peter Dickinson (piano)
A Year and a Day op. 48a Métier MSV 92013(CD) Kate Romano (clarinet); Alan Hicks (piano)
Ariadne op. 31 Argo ZRG 842 (LP)
Lyrita SRCD 259 (CD)
Sarah Francis (oboe); LSO ensemble conducted by Michael Lankester
Watermusic Olympia OCD 714 (CD) John Turner (recorders); Peter Lawson (piano)
Wavesongs NMC D019 (CD) Alexander Baillie (cello); Andrew Ball (piano)
Memories of Morning: Night
Cello Concerto
Some Marches on a Ground
op. 30
op. 44
op. 28
NMC D058 (CD) Bickley (mezzo-soprano) Alexander Baillie (cello)
BBCSO conducted by Martyn Brabbins
Three Kipling Songs
Rhyming with Everything (Trio)
Prima Facie PFCD0004 (CD) Lesley-Jane Rogers (soprano), John Turner (recorder), Richard Simpson (oboe), Richard Howarth (violin), Jonathan Price (cello)
Elegy and Scherzo for string orchestra op. 47 Dutton CDLX 7207 (CD) Manchester Chamber Ensemble conducted by Richard Howarth
Brief Encounter
Viola Concerto
Fantasia on 'Ca the Yowes'
Métier MSV 77201 (CD) Matthew Jones (viola), John Turner (recorder)
Manchester Sinfonia conducted by Timothy Reynish

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Gordon Crosse was a British composer recognized for his dramatic and literary-inspired works across opera, orchestral, chamber, and vocal genres. Born on 1 December 1937 in Bury, Lancashire, he earned a first-class honours degree in music from Oxford University in 1961, followed by research on early fifteenth-century music and a period of study in Rome under Goffredo Petrassi. His early career combined composition with academia, including positions at the Universities of Birmingham and Essex, a fellowship at King's College, Cambridge, and a teaching stint at the University of California, Santa Barbara. After settling in Suffolk, he focused full-time on composition from the early 1980s, though he later worked as a computer programmer from 1990 to 2004 before resuming composition in 2007. Crosse received the Cobbett Medal for services to chamber music in 1976. His output includes four operas—Purgatory, The Story of Vasco, Potter Thompson, and Holly from the Bongs—along with notable concert works such as two violin concertos, two symphonies, a cello concerto, Dreamsongs, Memories of Morning: Night, Wild Boy, and later pieces including a viola concerto, additional string quartets, and orchestral elegy AD PATREM. Many of his major works were commissioned by prominent institutions such as the BBC Proms, Aldeburgh Festival, and international orchestras. Crosse died on 21 November 2021.

Life

Early life and education

Gordon Crosse was born on 1 December 1937 in Bury, Lancashire, England, where his father worked for the Midland Bank. He pursued music studies at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, earning a first-class honours degree in 1961, with tutors including Egon Wellesz. Following his graduation, Crosse conducted two years of postgraduate research on early fifteenth-century music, which included a three-month Italian Government Scholarship in Rome to study under Goffredo Petrassi.

Academic career

Gordon Crosse began his academic career after completing his postgraduate research, taking up a position as Haywood Fellow in Music at the University of Birmingham from 1966 to 1969. He subsequently held teaching posts at the University of Essex and served as Composer-in-Residence at King's College, Cambridge for two years. In 1977, he spent a year as Visiting Professor in Composition at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He later taught part-time at the Royal Academy of Music in London for two years in the early 1980s. In 1976, he received the Cobbett Medal from the Worshipful Company of Musicians for services to chamber music. Crosse retired from teaching in the early 1980s to devote himself fully to composition, settling in Suffolk.

Composing career

Gordon Crosse first gained widespread attention as a composer with the premiere of his children's cantata Meet My Folks! at the 1964 Aldeburgh Festival, where its blend of young and adult performers impressed Benjamin Britten and secured further festival invitations. He was widely regarded as a natural heir to Britten, particularly through his focus on music theatre, operas, and dramatic vocal works, often drawing on contemporary poetry. A significant portion of his output centered on collaborations with poet Ted Hughes, beginning with Meet My Folks! (1964) and continuing with The Demon of Adachigahara (1968) and the full-scale opera The Story of Vasco (1974, premiered by Sadler's Wells Opera). His operas also included Purgatory (1966, after W.B. Yeats) and The Grace of Todd (1969, premiered by the English Opera Group at Aldeburgh). Among his notable orchestral and chamber works are Symphony No. 2, the Cello Concerto (1979, dedicated to the memory of Luigi Dallapiccola), Play Ground (later choreographed as a ballet by Kenneth MacMillan), and Wildboy (1978, also adapted for ballet in 1981). In 1984, he created an extension of Britten's Young Apollo for a ballet by David Bintley at the Royal Opera House. Crosse's music often exhibited tonal and post-tonal elements combined with lyrical and dramatic expression, and he demonstrated particular skill in writing for children and adults alike, as well as for soloists and larger ensembles. His early works were primarily published by Oxford University Press. Following the premiere of Sea Psalms in 1990, Crosse entered a hiatus of approximately 18 years from composition, during which he pursued a career in computer programming. He resumed composing in 2007 with a contribution to the NMC Songbook, and his late period proved highly productive, yielding further symphonies, string quartets, a viola concerto, piano sonatas, and other chamber and orchestral pieces. From 2008, many of his later works were published by Cadenza Music.

Film and television work

Gordon Crosse's contributions to film and television were relatively infrequent and focused on incidental music, contrasting with the predominance of his concert hall, operatic, and chamber works. His credits in this area include composing for a short film and several television productions, often involving literary or dramatic subject matter. He composed the music for the 1965 short film The More Man Understands and for one episode of the BBC television series Workshop in 1966. In 1975, Crosse received a writer credit for one episode of the television series 2nd House, which featured his chamber opera Potter Thompson. He later provided additional music for the 1981 television movie Artemis 81. In 1983, Crosse composed and conducted the incidental music for Granada Television's production of Shakespeare's King Lear, starring Laurence Olivier in the title role; the score was performed by members of the Hallé Orchestra. That same year, he composed music for one episode of the television series Spooky. These screen credits represent the full extent of his verified film and television work.

Personal life

Gordon Crosse married Elizabeth Bunch in 1965 after meeting her in the porch of Orford Church during an Aldeburgh Festival. The couple had two sons, Jo and Gabriel, and lived in a rambling house in Wenhaston, near Blythburgh, Suffolk. Elizabeth died of cancer in 2011. After Elizabeth's death, Crosse attended the Quaker Meeting House in Leiston and met the poet Wendy Mulford, who became his companion in later years. Together they purchased a house on the shores of Papa Westray, the northernmost of the Orkney Islands. Tributes described Crosse as a generous, open, and warm person who enjoyed conversation, lacked pride, and expressed no regrets about his life choices.

Death and legacy

Gordon Crosse died peacefully at home on 21 November 2021 after a short illness, aged 83. Tributes following his death described him as a natural heir to Benjamin Britten, particularly through his operas and music theatre works, many of which involved collaborations with Ted Hughes. His stage pieces from the late 1960s, such as Purgatory and The Grace of Todd, were regarded as highly successful achievements, although they largely failed to remain in the repertory. Crosse was reluctant to engage with certain later recordings of his music, including a 1994 project and initially the 1997 BBC Symphony Orchestra retrospective CD, but he attended a playback session and was moved and delighted by the warm reception from the players. He possessed great warmth of personality and never expressed regret over his career trajectory, which included a long hiatus to pursue computer programming. His overall body of work, including the many pieces composed after his return to composition in 2007, has been assessed as major and eminently deserving of rediscovery.
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