Parisian Suite
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Product ID: GM1 CO074
By William Mathias
Publisher:
Goodmusic
Series:
Concert Originals
Line Up:
Symphony Orchestra
Duration:
7:30
Set & Score
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About this item
My father composed his Suite Parisienne for two pianos in September 1953 when he was 18 years old. He and his friend, Hugh Jones, gave the first public performance of the piece in the Music Room, Gregynog in December 1954. Just before his death in 1992, he rediscovered this early piece and revised it for publication. Philip Lane's orchestration is based on the revised version. {Rhiannon Mathias)
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Composer
William Mathias (1934-1992)
William Mathias CBE (1 November 1934 — 29 July 1992) was a Welsh composer.
Mathias was born in Whitland, Carmarthenshire. A child prodigy, he started playing the piano at the age of three and composing at the age of five. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music under Lennox Berkeley, where he was elected a fellow in 1965. In 1968, he received the Bax Society Prize of the Harriet Cohen International Music Award. He was professor of music and head of department at the University of Wales, Bangor, from 1970 until 1988.
His compositions include large scale works, including an opera, The Servants (1980), three symphonies and three piano concertos. Much of his music was written for the Anglican choral tradition, most famously the anthem Let the people praise Thee, O God written for the July 1981 royal wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales, which had a television audience of an estimated 1 billion people worldwide.
Mathias wrote his Sinfonietta – initially called Dance Suite – for the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra in late 1966, and it received its first performance at Leicester De Montfort Hall during the 1967 Schools Festival. It was also included in the orchestra's tour programme for Denmark and Germany later in the year. The LSSO made the first commercial recording of Sinfonietta for the Pye Golden Guinea label in July 1967 under the direction of the composer (see external links below).
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