George Marshall-Hall
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George William Louis Marshall-Hall (28 March 1862 – 18 July 1915) was an English-born musician, composer, conductor, poet and
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who lived and worked in Australia from 1891 till his death in 1915. According to his birth certificate, his surname was 'Hall' and 'Marshall' was his fourth given name, which commemorated his physiologist grandfather, Marshall Hall (1790–1857). George's father, a barrister – who, however, never practised that profession – appears to have been the first to hyphenate the name and his sons followed suit.


Early life

Marshall-Hall's father owned a 65-ton iron ocean-going yacht which, he said, was kept "in great measure to give my family fresh air, the opportunity of seeing foreign ports, of leading a healthy life such as cannot be led on shore". He was, he declared, a "family yachtsman who likes to see his youngsters' skin-tanned". As a child George probably participated in family trips on this vessel when it explored
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fjords and grappled for broken telegraph cable in the Atlantic Ocean. Born in London, Marshall-Hall began his schooling in Brighton. But then his family moved to Blackheath in London's southeast where in 1873 he enrolled in the
Blackheath Proprietary School The Blackheath Proprietary School was an educational establishment founded in 1830. In the 19th century, it had a profound influence on the game of football, in both Association and Rugby codes. In 1863, the school became one of the founders of T ...
and at much the same time began taking private music lessons. His interest in music, according to his brother, had first been aroused by his paternal grandmother and his great-uncle. The latter, it seems, was himself an organist and composer. In 1878 the family moved again, this time to
Montreux Montreux (, , ; frp, Montrolx) is a Swiss municipality and town on the shoreline of Lake Geneva at the foot of the Alps. It belongs to the district of Riviera-Pays-d'Enhaut in the canton of Vaud in Switzerland, and has a population of approxima ...
on the shore of
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in Switzerland, where George formed a choral society which met to practise in the family dining room. By 1880, having become proficient in both French and German, he was back in England teaching languages and music, first at the
Oxford Military College Oxford Military College was an all-male private boarding school and military academy in Cowley, Oxford, England, from 1876 to 1896. The military college opened on 7 September 1876. Prince George, Duke of Cambridge was the patron of the Oxfor ...
, Cowley, and afterwards at Newton College, South Devon. Then, late in 1886, bent now on devoting himself to a career in music, he returned briefly to Switzerland to take up a position as organist in Lausanne before becoming musical director of Wellington College in Crowthorne, Berkshire. In 1888 he was appointed orchestral and choral conductor as well as composition- and singing-teacher at the London Organ School and Instrumental College of Music. At the same time articles written by him on musical subjects began appearing in English newspapers and magazines. He was later to claim that his father disapproved of his choice of career, declaring that "he wouldn't want any damn fiddler in his family" and, when thwarted in this regard, cutting his son off without a shilling. So George apparently received no paternal assistance when, unable to get enough work in his chosen profession on occasions in the 1880s, he was compelled, he recalled, to sleep in the snow in
Trafalgar Square Trafalgar Square ( ) is a public square in the City of Westminster, Central London, laid out in the early 19th century around the area formerly known as Charing Cross. At its centre is a high column bearing a statue of Admiral Nelson comm ...
and to button his jacket up to the neck when in polite society to conceal his lack of a shirt collar and waistcoat. His fortunes took a turn for the better in 1890 when he was appointed as foundation Ormond Professor of Music to head the newly created
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music The Melbourne Conservatorium of Music is the music school at the University of Melbourne and part of the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music. It is located near the Melbourne City Centre on the Southbank campus of the University of Melbourne. Degree ...
at the University of Melbourne. He had few formal qualifications for the position. In 1883 he had enrolled at the
Royal College of Music The Royal College of Music is a conservatoire established by royal charter in 1882, located in South Kensington, London, UK. It offers training from the undergraduate to the doctoral level in all aspects of Western Music including performanc ...
in London but left after only a single term, having, according to a friend, become "impatient with the college's slow ways and slower Professors". This was the sum total of his tertiary education in music. His only other relevant achievement apart from his freelance music journalism had been a February 1888 performance by the
London Symphony Orchestra The London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) is a British symphony orchestra based in London. Founded in 1904, the LSO is the oldest of London's symphony orchestras. The LSO was created by a group of players who left Henry Wood's Queen's Hall Orc ...
of an excerpt from his opera ''Harold''. The appointment of Australian university professors at that time was usually based on recommendations from expert committees set up for the purpose in London. The deficiency of Marshall-Hall's formal qualifications for the Melbourne chair is reflected in the fact that, although he was one of 48 applicants when the post was first advertised in March 1888, the London committee declined to make a recommendation. One member, the Professor of Music at the
University of Oxford , mottoeng = The Lord is my light , established = , endowment = £6.1 billion (including colleges) (2019) , budget = £2.145 billion (2019–20) , chancellor ...
,
Frederick Ouseley Sir Frederick Arthur Gore Ouseley, 2nd Baronet (12 August 18256 April 1889) was an English composer, organist, musicologist and priest. Biography Frederick Ouseley was born in London, the son of Sir Gore Ouseley, and manifested an extraordinar ...
, conceded that there were "some eminently respectable men, and good musicians in the ordinary sense of the words" among the applicants, adding however that there were "certainly not five – hardly one – of whom I could honestly speak as first-class ... The best men have not become candidates." Certainly two other committee members, principal of the Royal Academy of Music Alexander Mackenzie and concert pianist Sir
Charles Hallé Sir Charles Hallé (born Karl Halle; 11 April 181925 October 1895) was an Anglo-German pianist and conductor, and founder of The Hallé orchestra in 1858. Life Hallé was born Karl Halle on 11 April 1819 in Hagen, Westphalia. After settling ...
, while echoing Ouseley's view, agreed that Marshall-Hall was the only candidate who was "near to the mark". But when later that year the job was re-advertised, Marshall-Hall was still not considered the most suitable applicant by the committee, which selected four names, including his, to send to the Council of the University of Melbourne, but declined to rank them. The impasse was broken in 1890 when the Council obtained private advice from Hallé (then on a concert tour of Australia) and (indirectly) from Mackenzie and the Director of the Royal College of Music, Sir
George Grove Sir George Grove (13 August 182028 May 1900) was an English engineer and writer on music, known as the founding editor of ''Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians''. Grove was trained as a civil engineer, and successful in that profession, b ...
, all of whom recommended the appointment of Marshall-Hall.


Family

Marshall-Hall was born on 28 March 1862 in
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
and died on 18 July 1915 in Fitzroy, Victoria. On 5 April 1884, he married May Hunt at St Matthew's Church, Bayswater, London. She died in 1901. On 6 March 1902, in Melbourne, Marshall-Hall married Kathleen Hoare, who for some time had been passed as his wife. George Marshall-Hall and May Marshall-Hall (née Hunt)'s daughter Elsa Mary Marshall-Hall was born on 17 August 1891. She married John Thomas Inman in
Traralgon Traralgon ( ) is a town located in the east of the Latrobe Valley in the Gippsland region of Victoria, Australia and the most populous city of the City of Latrobe. The urban population of Traralgon at the was 26,907. It is the largest and fastes ...
on 17 August 1917. She was a teacher at a number of Victorian country schools. She also taught piano and, like her father, she was a composer. 29 of her works have been preserved, many at the
Grainger Museum The Grainger Museum is a repository of items documenting the life, career and music of the composer, folklorist, educator and pianist Percy Grainger (b. Melbourne, 1882; d. White Plains, New York, 1961), located in the grounds of the University o ...
at the University of Melbourne. Elsa Marshall-Hall died in 1980, and is buried at
Brighton Cemetery Brighton General Cemetery is located in the Melbourne suburb of Caulfield South, Victoria, but takes its name from Brighton, Victoria. History The Cemetery pre-dates the Caulfield Roads Board - the first official recognition of the suburb of Ca ...
, where her father was also laid to rest.


Musical contributions in Australia

A flamboyant extrovert of immense vitality and exuberance, Marshall-Hall prized "constant activity ... constant striving" that absorbs one's "whole energy", arousing "a condition of ... superabundant life" and enabling one to partake "to the utmost of the joy of living". And this outlook was reflected in the way he lived his life. Contemporaries remarked on his loud laughter and his habit of humming operatic airs as he strode around town, of tapping his baton importunately on the podium and glaring at restive concert audiences to achieve silence when conducting, and of writing explosive comments – such as "O superfine Assiduity" and "monstrous ignorance" – in the margins of books he read, by way of showing his contempt for the writer. This same insatiable energy governed his musical activities in Melbourne, where he arrived to take up his new position at the beginning of 1891. During the following quarter of a century he was to exercise a wide-ranging and deep influence on music education, appreciation and performance in his new home. He soon showed that he would not be satisfied with simply presiding over the university's new music department with its degree and diploma courses. The former was focused on composition, the latter on performance, but there was little sustained demand for either. In the whole of the first decade of the chair's existence only three students obtained a degree in music and twenty-three acquired a diploma.''Melbourne University Calendar'', 1902, pp. 361–387 Moreover, Marshall-Hall complained that he had no control over the practical work of diploma students, as apart from himself the university employed no music staff, which meant that students had to take private lessons from teachers of their choice in the external community. To overcome this problem and increase enrolments Marshall-Hall called for the establishment of a university conservatorium, and on 19 July 1894, legislation was passed to create the first conservatorium in the British Empire within a university. With the professor as
ex-officio An ''ex officio'' member is a member of a body (notably a board, committee, council) who is part of it by virtue of holding another office. The term '' ex officio'' is Latin, meaning literally 'from the office', and the sense intended is 'by right ...
director it opened for business in 1895, renting premises initially in the unfinished Queen's Coffee Palace on the corner of Rathdowne and Victoria streets, Carlton, but moving soon afterwards to the ground-floor of the Victorian Artists' Society building in
East Melbourne East Melbourne is an inner-city suburb in Melbourne, Victoria (Australia), Victoria, Australia, east of Melbourne's Melbourne central business district, Central Business District, located within the City of Melbourne Local government areas of ...
. From the beginning enrolments boomed. In the meantime, George Marshall-Hall was also making his mark on the broader musical community outside the university. He established a largely professional orchestra which, after an initial public performance toward the end of 1891, began in the following year to give an annual series of concerts, mostly on Saturday afternoons under the professor's conductorship in the
Melbourne Town Hall Melbourne Town Hall is the central city town hall of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and is a historic building in the state of Victoria since 1867. Located in the central business district on the northeast corner of the intersection between ...
. When the last one had been performed in 1911, a total of 111 such concerts had been given – an average of more than five a year. In addition, from 1897 to 1902 he acted as honorary conductor of the Melbourne Liedertafel, a male choir. And all the time he continued to compose music, including a concert overture in G minor, an Idyll, a symphony in E-flat, incidental music for a performance of
Euripides Euripides (; grc, Εὐριπίδης, Eurīpídēs, ; ) was a tragedian of classical Athens. Along with Aeschylus and Sophocles, he is one of the three ancient Greek tragedians for whom any plays have survived in full. Some ancient scholars a ...
' ''
Alcestis Alcestis (; Ancient Greek: Ἄλκηστις, ') or Alceste, was a princess in Greek mythology, known for her love of her husband. Her life story was told by pseudo-Apollodorus in his '' Bibliotheca'', and a version of her death and return from t ...
'', a string quartet in D minor, a dramatic ballad based on
Keats John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) was an English poet of the second generation of Romantic poets, with Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley. His poems had been in publication for less than four years when he died of tuberculos ...
' ''
La Belle Dame sans Merci "La Belle Dame sans Merci" ("The Beautiful Lady Without Mercy") is a ballad produced by the English poet John Keats in 1819. The title was derived from the title of a 15th-century poem by Alain Chartier called '' La Belle Dame sans Merc ...
'', a study on
Tennyson Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson (6 August 1809 – 6 October 1892) was an English poet. He was the Poet Laureate during much of Queen Victoria's reign. In 1829, Tennyson was awarded the Chancellor's Gold Medal at Cambridge for one of his ...
's " Maud", a Capriccio for violin and orchestra, a choral ode, a music drama called ''Aristodemus'' and two operas. Most of these works were performed in Melbourne under his direction.


Controversialist

He also found time to publish numerous newspaper articles, four books of verse and a play called ''Bianca Capello'', as well as delivering many passionate and provocative speeches in the concert-hall and elsewhere which were widely reported in the press. Among other things, he preached a whole-hearted, sensuous enjoyment of living, extolling "the mighty immutable goddess of laughter and love" and "the splendour and vigour of ... immanent, multiplied, voluptuous vitality".''Musical Herald'', 1 May 1901 He encouraged his fellows "to taste life to the full" by throwing themselves with "extreme exuberance" into its "manifold sensations", allowing its joys to "pulse in the passionate blood and burst through the brain" until "body and mind quiver and bound as though interpenetrated by an instantaneous current of electric fluid". This won him friends and admirers in Melbourne's bohemian community, including such well-known artists as
Arthur Streeton Sir Arthur Ernest Streeton (8 April 1867 – 1 September 1943) was an Australian landscape painter and a leading member of the Heidelberg School, also known as Australian Impressionism. Early life Streeton was born in Mt Moriac, Victoria, sou ...
(with whom he shared digs for a time in St Kilda),
Tom Roberts Thomas William Roberts (8 March 185614 September 1931) was an English-born Australian artist and a key member of the Heidelberg School art movement, also known as Australian impressionism. After studying in Melbourne, he travelled to Europe ...
and Lionel and
Norman Lindsay Norman Alfred William Lindsay (22 February 1879 – 21 November 1969) was an Australian artist, etcher, sculptor, writer, art critic, novelist, cartoonist and amateur boxing, boxer. One of the most prolific and popular Australian artists of his ...
, who reacted favourably to his convivial exhortations to come "Be merry while we may" in the enjoyment of "the glorious ardours of the genial bowl". No doubt they also welcomed his pronouncements on the superiority of artists over ordinary mortals. But his abrasive personality gained him enemies, too. Former Victorian Lieutenant-Governor Sir William Robinson's 1890 warning to Melbourne University council that Marshall-Hall exhibited "a certain outspoken roughness in his manner" was something of an understatement. On taking up his new post in the following year, he was clearly intent on rousing his fellow citizens out of what he saw as their smug
philistinism In the fields of philosophy and of aesthetics, the term philistinism describes the attitudes, habits, and characteristics of a person who deprecates art and beauty, spirituality and intellect.''Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary of the ...
. He denounced local musical performances as "execrable" and deplored the vacuousness of Melbourne's concert-goers who, he declared, had "no taste ... and are profoundly ignorant of what music is". He proclaimed the city's music teachers to be "frightfully bad" and when private school principals grumbled about the high failure-rate in the matriculation music examination for which he was responsible, he retorted that it was fortunate that "our schools are the last places in the world to which our youth turn for light and understanding, otherwise they would grow up mentally akin to those monstrosities which I remember with dim horror upon the tables of boarding-houses and which go by the name of resurrection pies." And he complained rancorously about the "frivolous incapable buffooneries", "vicious emanations" and "sterile, unproductive mediocrity" of local music critics. People who disagreed with his literary judgements were also in danger of feeling his sharp tongue. At a Town Hall concert on 24 July 1893, he took time off from conducting to inform the audience that a recent article in '' The Argus'' condemning the "putrid ... mass of ... sensuality" in the plays of Henrik Ibsen was the "shameless and ignorant" work of a "scurrilous newspaper hack".


Legacy

A symphony by him was played at the
Queen's Hall The Queen's Hall was a concert hall in Langham Place, London, Langham Place, London, opened in 1893. Designed by the architect Thomas Knightley, it had room for an audience of about 2,500 people. It became London's principal concert venue. Fro ...
, London, in 1907 conducted by Sir Henry Wood. Though somewhat influenced by the work of
Wagner Wilhelm Richard Wagner ( ; ; 22 May 181313 February 1883) was a German composer, theatre director, polemicist, and conductor who is chiefly known for his operas (or, as some of his mature works were later known, "music dramas"). Unlike most op ...
,
Brahms Johannes Brahms (; 7 May 1833 – 3 April 1897) was a German composer, pianist, and conductor of the mid-Romantic period. Born in Hamburg into a Lutheran family, he spent much of his professional life in Vienna. He is sometimes grouped with ...
and
Puccini Giacomo Puccini ( Lucca, 22 December 1858Bruxelles, 29 November 1924) was an Italian composer known primarily for his operas. Regarded as the greatest and most successful proponent of Italian opera after Verdi, he was descended from a long ...
, George Marshall-Hall's compositions display pronounced individuality and sincerity. It was nevertheless as a teacher, enthusiastic and free from pedantry, and as an inspiring orchestral conductor that he did his most important work, and the value of his influence on the musical life of Melbourne can hardly be overstated. Marshall-Hall was tall, dark, witty, humorous and intolerant of pretence.


Works

* 1886 ''Die Blumen'', sextet for voice, two violins, viola, cello and double bass * 1880s ''Harold'', opera in four acts to a libretto by the composer based on Edward Bulwer-Lytton's historical novel, ''Harold: The Last of the Saxon Kings'' (1848); first Performance 1888 * 1891 ''Giordano Bruno'' (dedicated to
Arthur Streeton Sir Arthur Ernest Streeton (8 April 1867 – 1 September 1943) was an Australian landscape painter and a leading member of the Heidelberg School, also known as Australian Impressionism. Early life Streeton was born in Mt Moriac, Victoria, sou ...
) * 1894 ''Idyll'' * 1894 ''La Belle Dame sans Merci'' for violin and orchestra * 1898 ''Alcestis'', incidental music to the play by Euripides * 1898 "Choral Ode", a setting of the second part of Goethe's ''Faust'' for alto soloist, orchestra and mixed choir * 1899 "Australian National Song" for chorus (
SATB SATB is an initialism that describes the scoring of compositions for choirs, and also choirs (or consorts) of instruments. The initials are for the voice types: S for soprano, A for alto, T for tenor and B for bass. Choral music Four-part harm ...
) and piano * 1900 ''A Song Cycle of Life and Love'' * 1902 ''Aristodemus'', opera in 25 scenes * 1903 Symphony in E-flat recorded * 1906 ''Bianco Capello: A Tragedy'' * 1907 Two Violin Fantasies * 1909 Quartet in B Major for horn, violin, viola and piano; ABC Classics recording * 1910 Caprice for violin and orchestra * 1910 ''Stella'', one-act opera * 1912 ''Romeo and Juliet'', opera * ''Jubilum Amoris'' * ''Book of Canticles'' * ''Hymns Ancient and Modern'' * Phantasy for Horn and Orchestra


References


Further reading

* Joe Rich, ''His Thumb unto his Nose : the Removal of G. W. L. Marshall-Hall from the Ormond Chair of Music'', PhD thesis, Melbourne University 1986 * Joe Rich, "A Thoroughly Shameful Affair: The Removal of G. W. L. Marshall-Hall from the Ormond Chair of music" in '' Victorian Historical Journal'', vol 61, no. 1, March 1990 * * Thérèse Radic and Suzanne Robinson (eds) ''Marshall-Hall's Melbourne: Music, Art and Controversy 1891–1915'' Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2012


External links


Review of George Marshall-Hall's music
Christopher Fifield , musicweb-international.com
George William Louis Marshall-Hall (1862–1915)
grave site at Brighton General Cemetery (Victoria) {{DEFAULTSORT:Marshall-Hall, George 1862 births 1915 deaths Australian conductors (music) Australian opera composers Australian male composers Australian composers English emigrants to Australia Australian poets Alumni of the Royal College of Music People educated at Blackheath Proprietary School