The musical tradition at Balliol College, Oxford was established in the period 1870 to 1893 when Benjamin Jowett was Master there, with an organ introduced in the college chapel in 1874. [1] On the arrival of John Farmer as organist in 1885, a series of classical concerts on Sunday evenings began, taking place in the college hall, which became a fixture. [2] Balliol College did not offer music as an undergraduate subject, and the University of Oxford did not establish a Music Department until 1950. [3] Ernest Walker, Balliol's Director of Music 1901–1925, over his time in Oxford "had immense influence on a whole generation of musicians." [4]
Susan L. F. Wollenberg wrote "From their inception in 1885 the Balliol concerts showed special features". [5] Edward Heath wrote in 1986:
The Balliol Concerts not only play a major part in the life of the College, they are also a unique aspect in the musical activities of the whole university [...] It is by this means that so many generations of Oxford men and women have come to know and love the greatest chamber music in the world played by the leading artists of the day. [6]
The 1,950th Balliol concert was given on 7 November 2024 by Raphael Wallfisch and Simon Callaghan (piano). The programme included cello works of Walker, along with works by Schubert, Schumann, and Beethoven.
The Sunday evening music concerts are organised by the Balliol College Musical Society to bring chamber music to a wider audience. Notable musicians who have performed include:
| Musician | Instrument | Born |
|---|---|---|
| Fanny Davies [7] | pianist | 1861 |
| Nikolai Medtner [7] | pianist | 1879 |
| Arthur Rubinstein [7] | pianist | 1887 |
| Solomon [7] | pianist | 1902 |
| Claudio Arrau [7] | pianist | 1903 |
| Vlado Perlemuter | pianist | 1904 |
| Yehudi Menuhin [7] | violinist | 1916 |
| Hephzibah Menuhin [7] | pianist | 1920 |
| Busch Quartet [7] | quartet | 1919 |
| Dame Felicity Lott | soprano | 1947 |
| Pascal Rogé | pianist | 1951 |
| András Schiff | pianist | 1953 |
| Raphael Wallfisch | cellist | 1953 |
| Anne Schwanewilms | soprano | 1967 |
| Vienna Piano Trio [8] | trio | 1988 |
The programmes from the mid-1950s attended by Michael Scaife [9] show the musical diversity of the performances.
| Röntgen String Quartet | 25 Oct 1953 |
| John Kennedy (cello) and Scylla Kennedy (piano) | 8 Nov 1953 |
| Robert Masters String Quartet | 22 Nov 1953 |
| various performers | 27 Nov 1953 |
| London Harpsichord Ensemble | 7 Feb 1954 |
| Balliol College Choir conducted by W. Llewellyn | 21 Feb 1954 |
| Flora Nielsonsoprano and Thomas Armstrong piano | 7 Mar 1954 |
| Eileen McLoughlin (soprano) and Julian Bream (guitar and lute) | 2 May 1954 |
| Element String Quartet | 30 May 1954 |
| Ralph Kirkpatrick (harpsichord) | 24 Oct 1954 |
| Jelly d’Aranyi (violin) and Ivor Keys (piano) | 31 Oct 1954 |
| group of string players led by Ernest Element | 28 Nov 1954 |
| Alan Loveday and Neville Marriner (violins) and George Malcolm (piano) | 22 Jan 1955 |
| Alfred Loewenguth, Maurice Fueri, Roger Roche, and Pierre Basseux | 6 Feb 1955 |
| various performers | 20 Feb 1955 |
| Elizabeth Vernon Powell (solo piano), David Galliver (tenor) and Thomas Armstrong (accompanist) | 6 Mar 1955 |
| Adila Fachiri (violin), David Gwylt (cello) and John Gwylt (piano) | 1 May 1955 |
| David Martin (violin) | 29 May 1955 |
| Rubbra-Gruenberg-Pleeth Trio | 16 Oct 1955 |
| Valerie Tryon (piano) | 30 Oct 1955 |
| Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute and bass viol) and Thurston Dart (harpsichord) | 4 Mar 1956 |
| Golden Age Singers, directed by Margaret Field-Hyde | 29 Apr 1956 |
The Society was established in 1885 by John Farmer, formerly the music master of Harrow School, who was invited by the then Master, Benjamin Jowett, to become Director of Music. These concerts were the first secular Sunday concerts in England. Attendees included not only students but also guests including Robert Browning, Lord Coleridge and T. H. Huxley. The 1,000th concert of the Society was given in 1937 . The series continued without interruption through World War II. [10]
The atmosphere at the concerts was described by Edward Heath:
These concerts had one tradition that no other college maintained. At the end of the concert, when the applause for the final item was dying, the Master sitting in the front row, waved his programme aloft. The whole audience rose, faced the organ at the back of the Hall and sang the Chorale printed on the programme sheet. It gave the concerts a tremendous finale. [11]
L. E. Jones, who entered Balliol as an undergraduate in 1904, [12] wrote in his autobiography of the "moving spirit" in the Balliol concerts:
Thin, bent, etiolated, with a despondent black beard and a falsetto voice, Dr. Walker looked anything but the 'live wire' that he, in fact, was. [13]
Of the period when Walker was Balliol's Director of Music, it has been said "Many of the most important figures in the English musical world played at Balliol at this time". [14] They included:
Margaret Deneke of Lady Margaret Hall came under the influence of Walker and Donald Tovey. She and her sister Helena held concerts at their home Gunfield, where Busch and Marie Soldat-Roeger played. [18] Variations on a Theme of Joachim (Op. 40, published 1927) by Walker was given its premiere at Balliol by Jelly d'Arányi. [19] [20]
Walker's successor as Balliol's Director of Music was William Henry Harris. While running the concert series from 1925 to 1933, he was organist for other Oxford colleges. [21]
| Image | Name | Join Date | Field of work | Comments | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cristoph Denoth | 2006 | guitarist | artist in residence 2006-9 Professor, RCM | [22] | |
| Miron Fyodorov | 2004 | hip hop | Russian artist Oxxxymiron | [23] | |
| Oliver Weindling | 1974 | jazz | Original member, Oxcentrics jazz band. Founded jazz Babel Label and the Vortex Jazz Club in East London | [24] | |
| Christopher Page | 1971 | musicologist | medieval music | [25] | |
| Nicholas Kenyon | 1969 | BBC Radio 3 | Organiser BBC Proms | [26] : 450 | |
| Vernon Handley | 1951 | conductor | supported British composers | [26] : 246 | |
| Edward Heath | 1935 | organist, conductor | Prime Minister | [26] : 107 | |
| George Malcolm | 1934 | harpsichordist | Master of Music, Westminster Cathedral | [26] : 102 | |
| Richard Buckle | 1934 | Ballet | Founded Ballet magazine | [26] : 98 | |
| Sydney Carter | 1933 | songwriter | "Lord of the Dance" | [26] : 90 | |
| Inglis Gundry | 1923 | composer | lecturer on musical appreciation | [26] : 30 | |
| Victor Hely-Hutchinson | 1920 | composer, conductor, pianist | switched to RCM after one year "Carol Symphony" | [27] : 219 [28] | |
| F. S. Kelly | 1900 | composer | Olympic gold medallist in rowing | [27] : 62 | |
| Donald Tovey | 1895 | composer | Essays in Musical Analysis | [26] : 43 | |
| Ernest Walker | 1887 | composer | Honorary Fellow | [26] : 22 | |
| John Farmer | 1885 | Director of Music | organist, composer and keyboardist | [29] | |
| Sir Harold Boulton | 1878 | songwriter | "Skye Boat Song" | [26] : 4 | |
| Julian Sturgis | 1868 | librettist | "the best serious librettist of the day" (W.S.Gilbert) FA Cup Final winner | [30] : 55 |
Jowett gave an organ by Henry Willis & Sons for the college hall, in 1885. [31] In 1938 Harrison & Harrison built a new organ for the college chapel, replacing the original organ. [32]
The college funds an organ scholar. One was the former Prime Minister Edward Heath. Organ scholars noted in other fields include Christopher Longuet-Higgins from 1942, [33] and Ronald Gordon from 1945. [34]
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