Henry Raynor
Henry Broughton Raynor (29 January 1917 – 23 July 1989[1]) was a musicologist and a British author.
Biography
[edit]He was born at 11 Mellor Street, Moston, Manchester, in England, to Gertrude Raynor, an examiner of waterproof garments.[2] The Raynor family was poor and Raynor's formal education was limited by the family's lack of resources.[1] Poor health in childhood left him with time to listen to music and to read extensively.[1]
Music biography
[edit]He wrote several books, mainly relating to classical music. His opus magnum, The Social History of Music, ranges from ancient to 20th-century music, placing composers and their work in cultural and economic contexts.[3]
An example of Raynor's thought is his thesis that the orchestral bombast that developed in nineteenth-century Romantic music was spurred by the need to capture and maintain a fickle, musically untrained paying audience. The demise of aristocratic patronage after the Napoleonic Wars left composers and performers in search of new ways to sustain a career in music.
Bibliography
[edit]- Franz Joseph Haydn; his life and work, [London]: Boosey and Hawkes, [c1961]
- Radio and Television
- Social History of Music from the Middle Ages to Beethoven (London: Barrie and Jenkins, 1972; New York: Schocken Books, 1972.)
- Music and society since 1815, (New York: Schocken Books, 1976.)
- Music in England (1980)
- Mahler (1975)
- The Orchestra : a History, (New York: Scribner, 1978.)[4]
- Mozart
- Pelican History of Music (Volume 2 - Contributor)
- Yehudi Menuhin: the story of the man and the musician, (Contributor - Volume 2 by Robert Magidoff) with
Magidoff, Robert, 1905-1970; (London, Hale, 1973.)[5]
- Grove's Dictionary (Contributor to Volume 6)
- Dictionnaire de la Musique (Edited by M. Honneger with Contributions)
- Music in England [6]
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ a b c Mitchell, Donald, "Counterpoint from Manchester", The Guardian, Monday 7 Aug 1989, page 37
- ^ Birth certificate
- ^ Weber, William (Autumn 1973). "Reviewed Work: A Social History of Music from the Middle Ages to Beethoven by Henry Raynor (book review)". Journal of Social History. 7 (1): 107–110. doi:10.1353/jsh/7.1.107. JSTOR 3786504.
- ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (18 June 1978). "The Orchestra; A History (book review)". New York Times.
- ^ Blyth, Alan Blyth (April 1974). "Yehudi Menuhin (book review)". The Musical Times. 115 (1574): 307. doi:10.2307/958248. JSTOR 958248.
- ^ The above bibliographic detail taken from a copy of Music in England first published by Robert Hale London in 1980