Goodwin & Tabb was a London-based music hire library that dates back to 1826. It moved into music publishing music in 1906, was amalgamated with J. Curwen & Sons in 1924, and since 1986 has been part of the Wise Music Group. [1]
The company began as an orchestral music hire library in 1826, hiring out scores and orchestral parts to performers on behalf of publishers. Founder William V Goodwin handed the business over to his son Robert Felix Goodwin in the 1870s. Richard Prestridge Tabb married William's only daughter in 1875 and became the partner of Robert in the following year. [2] Hire material bound in distinctive orange or buff covers became familiar to UK orchestras for multiple decades. [3]
The original 71 Great Queen Street offices were vacated in 1906 for 34 Percy Street, when the company first began publishing contemporary British music. By then Robert's son Felix Goodwin was in charge. The first new music published by the firm was by William Hurlstone. Other composers on its books in the early days included Joseph Holbrooke, Frank Bridge and Thomas Dunhill. [1] In the 1920s the company published the first edition full orchestral score of Holst's The Planets, though only 200 copies were printed. [4] (There was also a more widely available miniature score). Other composers published in the 1920s were Algernon Ashton, Arthur Bliss, Rutland Boughton, Cecil Dudley, Armstrong Gibbs, Herbert Howells, Frederick Laurence (an employee of the company from 1916) [5] and Alec Rowley.
During and after World War 1 the library became one of the primary music resources for Henry Wood's Queen's Hall Promenade Concerts. Frederick Laurence was effectively the Proms music librarian from 1916. [5] In 1921 Felix Goodwin expanded the music lending library to deal with the manuscript scores and orchestral parts of unpublished works by many British composers of the time, under the name "The Robert Goodwin Library of Manuscripts" to commemorate his father. Composers were invited to deposit their MSS. in the library and the firm would advertise them in printed lists and negotiate for the hire of copies. [6]
Felix Goodwin died in 1935. [7] As Havergal Brian - who worked at the company as editor and copyist - pointed out in his obituary of Felix in 1935, the financial rewards of publishing British music were slim. "There was little response at that time from the British public...he knew that the chances were mostly against them, but he was willing to go down with them when the trial came". [8]
In 1924 the catalogues of F & B Goodwin (as the publishing arm was renamed) and J Curwen & Sons were amalgamated, with Felix Goodwin joining Curwen. [9] Things slowed down in the 1930s and 1940s, with only a few new works published under the Goodwin imprint by composers including Granville Bantock and Leslie Bridgewater published. After the war the offices were at 36-38 Dean Street. J Curwen & Sons was acquired by G Schirmer Ltd in 1969 and has been part of Wise Music Group since 1986. [10] Separately, the Goodwin & Tabb orchestral hire division was acquired by Novello in 1971 [3] and is now also part of Wise.
Gustav Theodore Holst was an English composer, arranger and teacher. Best known for his orchestral suite The Planets, he composed many other works across a range of genres, although none achieved comparable success. His distinctive compositional style was the product of many influences, Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss being most crucial early in his development. The subsequent inspiration of the English folksong revival of the early 20th century, and the example of such rising modern composers as Maurice Ravel, led Holst to develop and refine an individual style.
Sir Donald Francis Tovey's Essays in Musical Analysis are a series of analytical essays on classical music. The essays came into existence as programme notes, written by Tovey, to accompany concerts given by the Reid Orchestra in Edinburgh. Between 1935 and 1939, they were published in six volumes as Essays in Musical Analysis. Each volume focused on a certain genre of orchestral or choral music, with many of the works discussed with the help of music examples. In 1944, a posthumous seventh volume appeared on chamber music. In 1989, a new version was published with some essays omitted and the remainder of Volumes I-VI consolidated into two volumes.
The heckelphone is a musical instrument invented by Wilhelm Heckel and his sons. The idea to create the instrument was initiated by Richard Wagner, who suggested its concept at the occasion of a visit of Wilhelm Heckel in 1879. Introduced in 1904, it is similar to the oboe but, like the bass oboe, pitched an octave lower, the heckelphone has a significantly larger bore.
Sir Granville Ransome Bantock was a British composer of classical music.
Fritz Bennicke Hart was an English composer, conductor, teacher and unpublished novelist, who spent considerable periods in Australia and Hawaii.
Joseph Charles Holbrooke, sometimes given as Josef Holbrooke, was an English composer, conductor, and pianist.
Wise Music Group is a global music publisher, with headquarters in Berners Street, London. In February 2020, Wise Music Group changed its name from The Music Sales Group.
Frederick Corder was an English composer and music teacher.
Martin Edward Fallas Shaw was an English composer, conductor, and theatre producer. His over 300 published works include songs, hymns, carols, oratorios, several instrumental works, a congregational mass setting, and four operas including a ballad opera.
Ernst Eulenburg the music publisher was established by Ernst Eulenburg in Leipzig in 1874. The firm started by publishing a series of studies by a Dresden piano teacher, and then expanded into light music and works for men's chorus, at first all non-copyright works.
Philip Napier Miles was a philanthropist and musician in Bristol, and a descendent of the Napier family. He was High Sheriff of Gloucestershire for 1916–17.
Frederic William Austin was an English baritone singer, a musical teacher and composer in the period 1905–30. He is perhaps best remembered for his arrangement of Johann Pepusch's music for a 1920 production of The Beggar's Opera by John Gay, and its sequel Polly in 1922; and for his popularization of the melody of the carol The Twelve Days of Christmas. Austin was the older brother of the composer Ernest Austin (1874–1947).
Jane Marian Joseph was an English composer, arranger and music teacher. She was a pupil and later associate of the composer Gustav Holst, and was instrumental in the organisation and management of various of the music festivals which Holst sponsored. Many of her works were composed for performance at these festivals and similar occasions. Her early death at age 35, which prevented the full realisation of her talents, was considered by her contemporaries as a considerable loss to English music.
Annie Jessy Curwen, born Annie Jessy Gregg, usually known from her books as Mrs. Curwen or Mrs. J. Spencer Curwen, was a writer children's books and books for music teachers, on music theory and performance, and particularly piano playing, which were published by J. Curwen & Sons Ltd. of London in the late 19th century.
This is a summary of 1931 in music in the United Kingdom.
This is a summary of 1925 in music in the United Kingdom.
Robert Ernest Bryson was a Scottish composer and organist who spent much of his life in Oxton, Cheshire, England, working as a cotton merchant in Liverpool. He was the founder-chairman and later President of the Rodewald Concert Society in Liverpool.
John Gerrard Williams, most commonly known as Gerrard Williams, was an English composer and arranger.
Frederick Laurence was a British composer, early film music pioneer and latterly an orchestral manager and administrator. He changed his name mid-career by deed poll in 1919 to avoid the anti-German sentiment prevalent in Britain at the time.