Female Composers??

rojo

(Ret)
Hiya some guy. :) It is nice, ain`t it.

Glad to see you here; maybe you can help bring this place into the 21st century. :grin:
 

some guy

New member
Well, all the women on my short list are alive, and they're all still active. And it is 2007. So...

(I just heard Beatriz' latest piece at its world premiere. Very nice, indeed.)
 

some guy

New member
My apologies for double posting, but I just noticed rojo's location: Montreal.

Why, that's one of the big Canadian hotbeds of electroacoustic activity. Francis Dhomont taught there for many years. Robert Normandeau is there, as is Christian Calon. Montreal is the home of empreintes DIGITALes, which is one of the largest labels in the world devoted to electroacoustic music.

You're right in the thick of it, there!!
 

rojo

(Ret)
See, you`re helping already!

No law against double posting here; on the contrary, feel free.

And yes, ccm is alive and well here in Mtl., I believe. It appears however that you know more about it than I do! Shame on me.
 

Phillip Wilcher

New member
I am from Australia and one of my mentors was the composer Miriam Hyde. If you care to visit my website you can read a little about her with a special remembrance in the "Tribute" section:

www.phillipwilcher.com

There was Dame Ethyl Smythe (I think i have her name correct!) who was english and had associations with the Bloomsbury group. Here in Australia we had Peggy Glanville-Hicks also and if you care to visit the Australia Music centre website you'll find there are many female composers working here.
Best wishes,
PW
 

hanako sappho

New member
hi rune vejby, there are lots of female classical composers. Clara Schumann (1819–1896) & Fanny Mendelssohn (1805–1847) are 2 of the first female classical composers (european) I've come across with. Here are some other female composers (asian, japanese to be exact) who have contributed (and are still contributing...) to music history. They work mostly on video game/anime and film music but the still, they're really good composers:

>Toshiko Akiyoshi (mostly jazz compositions, she has very nice piano compositions for that genre)
>Yoko Kanno (anime/video game composer. she has worked with nobuo uematsu *Final Fantasy Fans will probably know this girl*)
>Yoko Shimomura (anime/video game composer. also in league with nobuo uematsu)
Their compositions are sort of symphonic-like and they use a very wide range of instruments. sometimes they fuse classical orchestras with either japanese folk instruments and/or modern rock/metal instruments. ^_^
 

tomato

New member
When I was a kid, my favorite hymn was this one:

http://www.breadsite.org/psheet4/open my eyes, that i may see.jpg

I liked it partly for its multiplicity of dominant seventh chords,
although at the time, I didn't know enough music theory to know what a dominant seventh chord was.

I recently looked up Clara H. Scott's name on the Internet.
She was a music instructor at a women's college.
She was also the first woman to compile a hymnal.
 

methodistgirl

New member
What about Fanny Crosby? In this day and age you have Dolly Pardon,
Carole King, and here in kentucky two are Loretta Lynn, and Dottie Rambo.
Just listen and look around. That's all that"s all I know about right now.
judy tooley:confused:
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Then there is Elfrieda Andree - the first woman organist of a Diocesan Cathedral in Sweden. She wrote organ symphonies, masses, chamber music, and other interesting fare.
 

methodistgirl

New member
female composers

The ones that I mentioned earlier in another answer are the only ones
that I know of. Amy Grant is another one.
judy tooley
 

Ouled Nails

New member
Second try. First post didn't get through on this busy Thanksgiving Day.

Of course there are lots of female composers, male composers too! In fact, the vast majority of composers are not any more familiar to classic music lovers than your neighborhood plumber. But which female composers stand out during the Early Music, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Post-Romantic, Modern, and Contemporary periods?

That is the unanswered question!
 
In my judgement, some of Clara Schumann's music can be considered outstanding, although it seems that she, as her letters attest, did not feel that she was particularly gifted as a composer, and she clearly saw her talents as being inferior to those of her husband and her friend Brahms. As Ms. Schumann wrote in her diary in 1839: "I once thought that is possessed creative talent, but I have given up this idea; a woman must not desire to compose. There has never been one able to do it. Should I expect to be that one?" And while one might not be so quick as to place her on the same pedestal as Brahms, I would not write her off completely. But since the title of this post is "female composers" I feel that it is valuable to remember that any distinction between music written by women or music written by men is mere polemic, unless it supersedes an initial distinction between "good" and "bad" music. Schumann, is an extraordinary composer, not quite as "good" as Brahms or her husband Robert. I think I am correct in making the judgement that the majority of female composers are very bad when judged in comparison to the male composers of their respective eras. The issue of gender should arise only after the aesthetic achievement is judged as such.
 

Ouled Nails

New member
As I stated, above, the fast majority of all composers remain mostly unknown today. Hence, the dichotomy between "very bad" female composers and outstanding male geniuses is a smokescreen proportionate to forest fires in this era of global warming. It isn't a matter of comparing male and female composers but of determining the proportion of memorable composers in each gender groups. As women composers were, until recently, far fewer than males, then the question becomes how many memorable female composers are there in proportion to the total number of female composers. If somebody can figure that out, in both gender groups, then will it be possible to assess who fared the best.
 
I agree with you, BUT I really do not see how gender enters into it, not even to assess who fared the best in their respective gender groups. Example: I really don't think it matters that there are more females composing now than ever, as in my judgement there are no modern composers, male or female, in either gender, that meet the highest aesthetic and cognitive standards that music can exemplify - i.e. MOZART. Personally I do not think there has been any good music since Shostakovich and Stravinsky. But back to my point, music should NEVER be taught or studied on the basis of gender - i.e. a course called "female composers through-out the centuries". Using gender IN ANY WAY to evaluate the artistic merit of validity of a work is to say the least, a horrible absurdity and a debasement of the arts. HENCE, while I do concur with your statement, I will go one further and say that it is not even a matter of determining the proportion of "memorable"* composers in each gender group, but rather determining the proportion of good composers - composers who wrote music of the highest cognitive and aesthetic standards regardless of gender - to mediocre composers. To do as you propose, would be an exercise in futility as one will inevitably be able to assess "who fared the best."
 

ALGERNON

Banned
But which female composers stand out during the Early Music, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Post-Romantic, Modern, and Contemporary periods?

That is the unanswered question!

If representation-by-category is to be the law, then the demise of music criticism and appreciation cannot be far off. Mozart and Bach were European males; is that really worth remarking? It is not ironical that, in these dark ages, music is not of a higher quality than its criticism. While it is true that Schubert had little authentic critical response in his lifetime, he at least did not have to endure a cultural situation fundamentally hostile to aesthetic and cognitive standards of judgement. Whatever the case may be, I really do not understand the function of this topic.

It seems to me
merely to be
meaningless prate.

And this further validates Clarissa's and D'Epinay's claim that this board is hardly the royal road to enlightenment. If someone has an argument, I welcome them to air it.
 

Ouled Nails

New member
Reply to Franz d'Epinay and to Algernon:
You are both trying, in your respective discourses, to pass on the very judgemental opinion that no classical music of worth was created after the nineteenth century (when female composers became more noticeable).

Answer: I disagree totally and entirely, however "cultivated" the rhetoric.
It's not even worth arguing.
 
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