Lennox Berkeley Timeline
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Below is a summary of the main events of Lennox Berkeley’s life. See also biographical essays by Professor Peter Dickinson, Tony Scotland and an essay by Winton Dean on the unfinished opera Faldon Park, with references to Berkeley's other works and insights into his life.
Age | Date | Events |
---|---|---|
1903 | Born 12 May at Sunningwell Plains, Boar’s Hill, Oxford, to Commander Hastings George FitzHardinge Berkeley, RN (eldest son of George, 7th Earl of Berkeley and Cécile née Drummond de Melfort), and his wife, Aline Carla (second daughter of Sir James Harris and Gerhardine née von Gall). | |
3 | c1906 | Shows an early interest in Schubert Lieder, as sung by his godmother, Sybil Jackson (step-daughter of his uncle Randal, 8th Earl of Berkeley) at Berkeley Castle. |
6 | 1909 | Enters the Dragon School, Oxford, and family moves to The Lodge, Woodstock Road, north Oxford. |
11 | 1914 | Starts at Gresham’s School, Holt, Norfolk. |
15 | 1918 | Leaves Gresham’s because of persistent illness, is tutored at home for nine months. |
16 | 1919 | Starts at St George’s School, Harpenden. |
17 | 1920 | 1st public performance of his music, at a school concert. |
19 | 1922 | Goes up to Oxford to read French, Old French and Philology at Merton College. Also studies organ with WH Harris and Henry Ley. Meets Ravel through family friends in London, shows him some of his work and Ravel suggests he studies with Nadia Boulanger. |
22 | 1925 | Cox of College VIII. Provides music for Evelyn Waugh’s Oxford film The Scarlet Woman. |
23 | 1926 | Introduction and Dance (lost)for small orchestra conducted by Anthony Bernard at a Chelsea concert broadcast on BBC. Takes a 4th Class degree in Modern Languages. Goes to France to study with Boulanger. |
24 | 1927 | The Thresher published by OUP. Concertino (lost) performed at BMS Concert, London. |
25 | 1928 | Accompanies Ravel to Oxford, as interpreter and minder, when Ravel is awarded doctorate of music. |
26 | 1929 | Received into the Roman Catholic Church, and takes the baptismal name François. Starts writing reports on music in Paris for Monthly Musical Record. |
29 | 1932 | Completes studies with Boulanger. Lives on the Riviera with invalid parents at Villa Melfort, Cap Ferrat. Tennis and golf, parties and concerts with Somerset Maugham and friends at neighbouring Villa Mauresque. |
30 | 1933 | Begins work on oratorio Jonah. Lord Berners introduces Berkeley to J. & W. Chester. |
31 | 1934 | Chester’s launch Berkeley with Violin Sonata No 2, and Polka for two pianos. Father, Capt. Berkeley, dies at Villa Melfort. |
32 | 1935 | Mother dies at Villa Melfort. |
33 | 1936 | Meets Benjamin Britten and critic Peter Burra, ISCM Festival, Barcelona, where his Overture for Chamber Orchestra is played. Berkeley and Britten holiday together in Cornwall, and discuss composition and pacifism. Premiere of Jonah. Begins work on First Symphony. |
34 | 1937 | With Britten, moves into a converted windmill at Snape near Aldeburgh. Britten writes Piano Concerto and dedicates it to Berkeley: Berkeley responds the following year by dedicating his Introduction and Allegro for two pianos and orchestra to Britten. Peter Burra dies in an air crash in Berkshire. |
35 | 1938 | First performance of Britten/Berkeley Mont Juic, orchestral suite based on Catalan tunes they heard in Barcelona in 1936. Psalm setting Domini est Terra (dedicated to Boulanger) chosen for ISCM Festival in London & repeated at Three Choirs Festival, Worcester. Ballet The Judgment of Paris (choreography Frederick Ashton) given at Sadler’s Wells gala. |
36 | 1939 | Britten goes to America with Peter Pears; Britten-Berkeley friendship cools. |
37 | 1940 | Spends summer with Dylan and Caitlin Thomas, Humphrey Searle, Arnold Cooke and William Glock, as guests of John & Natalie Davenport at Marshfield, Gloucestershire. Premiere, Serenade for Strings. |
39 | 1942 | Joins BBC, first as talks producer, French Section, then as orchestral programme planner, Music Department. |
40 | 1943 | Conducts LPO in first performance of Symphony No. 1 at Proms. Premiere, Divertimento. |
41 | 1944 | Freda Bernstein becomes Berkeley’s secretary in BBC Music Department. |
43 | 1946 | Leaves BBC. Awarded Collard Fellowship for Music. Becomes Professor of Composition at RAM. Marries Freda Bernstein, London, December 14. |
44 | 1947 | Berkeleys move into 8 Warwick Avenue, Little Venice, London. Conducts English Opera Group in first performance of Stabat Mater in Zurich. |
45 | 1948 | Kathleen Ferrier gives first performance, London, Four Poems of St. Teresa of Avila. Colin Horsley gives first performance with LSO of Piano Concerto, at Proms. Phyllis Sellick and Cyril Smith give first performance of Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra with LSO conducted by Malcolm Sargent. Birth of first son, Michael FitzHardinge (Britten a godparent). |
47 | 1950 | Premiere of Sinfonietta. Birth of second son, Julian Lennox (Boulanger a godparent). |
51 | 1954 | Premieres of operas A Dinner Engagement (instant success, Aldeburgh Festival) and Nelson (mixed reception, Sadler’s Wells). |
53 | 1956 | Premiere of opera Ruth, English Opera Group, London. Birth of third son, Nicholas Eadnoth. |
54 | 1957 | Awarded CBE. |
58 | 1961 | Premiere of Violin Concerto. |
59 | 1962 | Cobbett Medal for services to chamber music. |
61 | 1964 | Premiere, Mass for Five Voices, Westminster Cathedral. |
64 | 1967 | Awarded OBE. |
65 | 1968 | Leaves RAM after 22 years. |
67 | 1970 | Honorary Doctorate of Music, Oxford. |
70 | 1971 | Appointed Composer of the Year by Composer’s Guild of GB. Awarded Knighthood of St Gregory by Pope Paul VI. |
71 | 1974 | Knighted. Honorary Fellow of Merton College, Oxford. Opens new Department of Music at Keele University. |
72 | 1975 | President, Performing Right Society. Master of the Musicians’ Company. Honorary Professor of Music, Keele University. |
74 | 1977 | President, Cheltenham Music Festival. |
75 | 1978 | Unveils memorial stone to Benjamin Britten in Westminster Abbey. |
76 | 1979 | Begins last opera Faldon Park (libretto Winton Dean) commissioned by English National Opera. President, British Music Society. |
82 | 1985 | Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease. Abandons work on Faldon Park. |
84 | 1987 | President Emeritus, Cheltenham Festival. |
86 | 1989 | Death on December 26 in St Charles’ Hospital, Ladbroke Grove, London. |
1990 | Requiem Mass (in Latin), 4 January, at Church of Our Lady, Lisson Grove, London, celebrated by Fr Michael Hollings. Memorial Requiem Mass (broadcast live on BBC Radio Three), 20 March, at Westminster Cathedral, celebrated by Cardinal Basil Hume, Archbishop of Westminster. |