Working on our new Strings 2020-2023 syllabus gave us a great opportunity to explore what string teachers and players need, survey the landscape, and look at the ways in which we, as an assessment board, can reflect and shape a changing musical environment. Repertoire selection is a key element, and one of the aims throughout the development of this syllabus has been to include a greater number of pieces written by female composers.
Here we take a look at ten 19th and 20th century female composers featured in the new syllabus – all of whom were writing music at a time when the profession was almost entirely male- dominated, and women were being largely excluded from formal musical education and denied many of the musical opportunities open to their male contemporaries. Yet they persevered and made significant impact in the world of composition and performance during their time.
Where possible we have also included YouTube links to recordings of some of the composers' pieces so you can hear their work. Spotify playlists of selected repertoire from the syllabus are also available - see the link at the end of the page.*
A virtuoso pianist who composed much of her music for her own recitals, Ethel Barns was a professor at the Royal Academy of Music and a member of the first council of the Society of Women Musicians – a group founded in 1911 to build links between women composers and performers, in response to the limited professional opportunities for women musicians at the time.
Piece included in our syllabus:
A child prodigy who composed her first set of piano pieces in her head at the age of 4 while on holiday without a piano, Amy Beach is considered to be America’s first successful female composer; her Gaelic Symphony was the first symphony by a woman composer to be published. Well-known for the concerts she gave featuring her own music, she used her fame as a platform to encourage other female musicians, saying: “Music is the superlative expression of life experience, and woman by the very nature of her position is denied many of the experiences that colour the life of man.”
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Picture: By George Grantham, Bain Collection (Library of Congress), Public Domain
Piece included in our syllabus:
Picture: By unknown, Public Domain
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Picture: By Edmond Joaillier (1886-1939), Paris, Public Domain
She was a prolific composer, with more than 400 pieces published, and her music was very popular during her lifetime, despite the contemporary prejudices against female composers exemplified in this New York Times review of one of her 1908 Carnegie Hall performances: “On the whole this concert confirmed the conviction held by many that while women may some day vote, they will never learn to compose anything worthwhile.”
Piece included in our syllabus:
Picture: By unknown, Woman's Work in Music (1903), Arthur Elson, Public Domain
Originally a violinist, Alma Clarke later became a professional pianist. By the age of 29 she had married her third husband, architect Terence Rattenbury. They moved to Bournemouth, UK, in 1930, where she started to compose using the pseudonym 'Lozanne'.
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Picture: By Hopkins Studio, Denver, Colarado, Public Domain
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Picture: By unknown - Badische Landesbibliothek Karlsruhe, Public Domain
Despite being denied a scholarship from the Royal College of Music because she would “only get married and never write another note”, Elizabeth Maconchy is widely regarded as a highly skilled and versatile composer, and was described by the critic Martin Anderson as “one of the most substantial composers these islands have yet produced”. The first woman to chair the Composers’ Guild of Great Britain, she also served as president of the Society for the Promotion of new Music, and was appointed a Dame of the British Empire. Her works encompass a wide range of styles, and she is particularly noted for her cycle of 13 string quartets, composed between 1932 and 1983.
Pieces included in our syllabus:
Piece included in our syllabus:
Picture: By unknown, Public Domain
You can download a copy of the Strings 2020-2023 syllabus from our website. We also have a free sample booklet available with a selection of the pieces featured.
Listen to selected repertoire from our Strings 2020-2023 syllabus via our Spotify playlists.
*Please note that Trinity bears no responsibility for the availability, content or quality of the videos and/or audio, any advertising delivered or further suggested content provided by YouTube or Spotify. Please view the links at your own discretion.