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Gerald Finzi was born in London on 14 July 1901 and spent his early childhood in London. When he was aged seven his father died and, following the outbreak of war, Finzi moved with his mother to Harrogate, in Yorkshire. There Finzi was able to study with the composer Ernest Farrar, until his departure for the war, and from 1917 with Edward Bairstow at York Minster. Much attracted to the beauties of the English countryside, Finzi moved in 1922 to Painswick, in Gloucestershire, where he was able to compose in tranquility. His first published work was By Footpath and Style, a song-cycle for baritone and string quartet to texts by Thomas Hardy, who had already become his most favoured poet.

Rural and musical isolation soon became oppressive and in 1926 Finzi moved back to London. He began studying with R. O. Morris, one of the most outstanding British teachers of the interwar years, and got to know Vaughan Williams, whose example he was always to acknowledge, and who in 1928 conducted Finzi’s Violin Concerto, whose central Introit provides a typical illustration of Finzi’s calm, reflective lyricism. Other acquaintances in London included Holst, Bliss, Rubbra and Ferguson who was to become a life-long friend. In 1930 Finzi gained a teaching appointment at the Royal Academy of Music, but in 1933 gave up the post after his marriage to the artist Joy Black and moved back to the country, to Aldbourne in Berkshire. The same year saw a complete performance of the song-cycle A Young Man’s Exhortation, his first noted success in London.

His burgeoning career was soon thwarted by the outbreak of the Second World War, causing the cancellation of the song-cycle Dies natalis at the Three Choirs Festival, a performance that could have established him as a composer. In 1939 the Finzis moved to Ashmansworth Farm, near Newbury, in Wiltshire. During the war years Finzi was drafted into the Ministry of War Transport and opened his house to a number of German and Czech refugees. He founded the Newbury String Players, initially using local amateurs, and conducted them until his death, reviving much neglected eighteenth-century string music as well as giving several premieres by his contemporaries. With the return of peace, Finzi began to receive a series of important commissions: Lo, the full, final sacrifice, a festival anthem, in 1946, a larger-scale ode For Saint Cecilia in 1947, a clarinet concerto for Frederick Thurston in 1949 (it is perhaps his best-known work) and, completed a year later, his masterpiece Intimations of Immortality, for tenor, chorus and orchestra.

In 1951 Finzi learned that he was suffering from Hodgkin’s Disease, a form of leukaemia, and was given between five and ten years to live. The discovery in no way lessened his activities, particularly those undertaken for other composers. He had championed Ivor Gurney in the 1930s and those efforts continued; he was also working on the music of Hubert Parry and editing the overtures of William Boyce for Musica Britannica. An all-Finzi concert in the Royal Festival Hall in 1954 at last acknowledged his standing in Britain’s musical life, and a commission from Sir John Barbirolli for the 1955 Cheltenham Festival brought forth the Cello Concerto, Finzi’s most ambitious purely instrumental work. He finally lost his fight against illness on 27 September 1956.

Gerald Finzi is published exclusively by Boosey & Hawkes.

This biography can be reproduced free of charge in concert programmes with the following credit: Reprinted by kind permission of Boosey & Hawkes

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