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George Dyson (composer)

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Sir George Dyson (18831964) was a well-known English musician and composer. His son is the physicist Freeman Dyson and his grandchildren are Freeman's children the science historian George Dyson and his sister Esther Dyson. He was born in Halifax, Yorkshire on May 281883 and died in Winchester September 281964.

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[edit] Biography

He attended the Royal College of Music and was a winner of the Mendelssohn Travelling Scholarship which enabled him to spend some years in Italy and Germany. He then worked for thirty years as a school music teacher (at Rugby, Wellington and Winchester), before being appointed as Director of the Royal College of Music in 1937.

He received a knighthood in 1941 and was made a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO) in 1953.

[edit] Musical works

His compositions include a symphony in G major (1937), a violin concerto, and a number of other works, many of them for choir. Ernest John Moeran's symphony of the same decade (and completed the same year) has some similarities of style and ambition with Dyson's (both are among their composers' longest works at about 45 minutes - though Dyson's violin concerto is longer still according to its publisher [1], and both show some influence, harmonically and in instrumental use, from Jean Sibelius.)

In the Oxford Companion to Music, Percy Scholes described his compositions as "skilful, sometimes deeply felt, but never forward-looking in idiom".

[edit] Bibliography

  • George Dyson, The New Music (1924)
  • George Dyson, The Progress of Music (1932)
  • George Dyson, Fiddling While Rome Burns (1954)

Dyson was also the author of the British Army's Manual of Grenade Fighting in World War I.

[edit] External links

ja:ジョージ・ダイソン

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