Early career
Prout was born inTheory
Also to this period belong his principal theoretical works, many of which became standard text books and were translated into multiple languages. In 1877 he contributed a text on instrumentation to Novello's series of music primers. Then came a series of treatises, including ''Harmony, its Theory and Practice'' (1889), which reached a twenty-fourth edition, ''Counterpoint, Strict and Free'' (1890), which ran to nine editions, ''Fugue'' (1891), and ''The Orchestra'' (1898-9, two volumes). Prout produced editions of many of the classics, not least theComposition
For a period, Prout was regarded as one of the most promising English composers. He produced four symphonies between 1867 and 1886, and a series of dramatic cantatas, commissions from the Birmingham, Norwich and Bristol Festivals. Other choral works were written for his local choir, the Hackney Choral Association, and given under the composer's direction at prominent venues in London. Among several performances at the Crystal Palace, London, the Organ Concerto in E minor was performed by John Stainer in 1871. He also composed orchestral overtures, chamber music (including two string quartets and two piano quartets) and instrumental sonatas, such as the Clarinet Sonata in D (1882). The ''Concertante Duet'' in A major for piano and harmonium, written in 1872 and published by Augener in 1900, achieved particular popularity. His music generally secured good reviews: :"The Symphony o.2in G minor is, as regards construction and style, built on the noblest lines of the great masters, and, if for this reason alone, presents a claim to our regard. If on account of its Finale alone, the Symphony deserves a cordial welcome and ungrudged honour. To sum up, we have in this work a capital specimen of finished and classical musicianship, only needing profound intellectuality and intense emotionalism to be great. Will Mr. Prout, equipped as he is with all that art can bestow, move up into the higher regions of breathing thought and burning word? Who knows? He is in the vigour of his powers and the full flush of his ambition. Anyhow, there is every reason to cheer him on his course." :" he chorus ''Weep for the Viking Slain'' at the close of the cantata ''Hereward''is most remarkable for genuine pathos and power ndworthy of any living composer, we care not who he may be. ''Hereward'' is an honour to native art ndthe result was that the audience received the work with unbounded applause." :"In the music of 'Alfred''Mr. Prout has made a decided advance upon ''Hereward'', into the choruses of which he threw his great strength. ''Alfred'', on the contrary, although containing some effective and well-planned choruses, is distinguished by solo music of remarkable merit. A Triumphal March too, (the only purely orchestral movement in the work) claims notice, both from its intrinsic excellence and the skilful manner in which the instruments are treated. At the conclusion of the performance the composer was called forward and received quite an ovation." :"Mr. Prout, given time and the continued literary assistance on Mr. Grist, will provide a musical illustration of every stirring epoch in the early history of England. A story of English chivalry and manhood such as this naturally suggests bold, vigorous, and straight-forward musical treatment, and that being so, we could not name a composer more capable of rendering it justice than Mr. Prout. The careering of the steeds, the shock of combat, and the growing excitement of the spectators are graphically portrayed in this splendid chorus 'Laissez aller! Heaven guard the right!'' which we have little hesitation in predicting will be pronounced the composer's finest effort. That ''The Red Cross Knight'', as a whole, will fully sustain and even enhance Mr. Prout's reputation there can be little doubt. The orchestration is certain to be masterly – the composer's name is a guarantee for that; and with so many points in its favour, it will be strange indeed if the work is not destined to enjoy the tide of success for a lengthy period." By 1891, Prout's musical style had come to be regarded as outmoded: following the first performance of his ''Suite de Ballet'' the ''Musical Times'' thought that :"It is in three unpretentious movements, written in a somewhat quaint and old-English style. The final "Tempo di Valse" is trivial." In a modern survey of Prout's symphonic works, Jürgen Schaarwächter judged that :" n Symphony No.2the thematic development is more progressive than might be expected. The instrumentation is predictable, but foreshadows orchestration techniques that can be found in several inferior compositions of the 1880s, for example the youthful Richard Strauss symphonies. ith the Symphony No.3, Proutcomposed a rather humdrum work, whose themes are quite dull. The finale ..combines the qualities of careful overall conception and inspired instrumentation. However, formally speaking, the piece is disappointingly predictable; Prout uses his technical abilities largely in favour of academically "correct" composition. lthough Symphony No.4 isdoubtlessly a charming composition, sequencing is again an important means of developing the thematic material, and Prout's compositional techniques remain strongly rooted in the first half of the 19th century. The slow movement is a pensive, lyrical piece echoing Schumann at times. Perhaps the most inspired movement (although the thematic material remains down-to-earth), the scherzo is spirited, charming, elegant. An energetic finale closes a light, though obviously rather fine composition."Last years
Although performances of his works greatly diminished towards the close of the nineteenth century, the occasional concert included his music: on 30 December 1897, at Bournemouth, Dan Godfrey played the Symphony No.3. Among Prout's many students were Arthur Thomas, Eugen d'Albert, John Waterhouse,Personal life
Prout married Julia West in 1861, and they lived at 246 Richmond Road, Hackney. There were five children: Florence (1862–1921), Louis Beethoven (1864–1944), Edith Julia (1867–1913), Alice (1869–1870) and Alice Ellen (1871–1957). Louis Beethoven was a writer on musical theory, having trained under his father at the Royal Academy, and becoming professor at the Guildhall School. Louis Beethoven Prout's principal works are an ''Analysis of Bach's 48 Fugues'' (Weekes); ''Harmonic Analysis'' (Augener); ''Sidelights on Harmony'' (Augener); and ''Time, Rhythm and Expression'' (Augener). Like his sister Alice Ellen, he was also anWorks
Operetta
* 1883 – ''Love and Taxation''Incidental music
* 1862 – ''The Doom of Devorgoil'' (unfinished)Orchestral
* 1867 – Symphony No.1 in C (revised version 1873, Crystal Palace, London, 28 February 1874) * 1876 – Symphony No.2 in G Minor (Crystal Palace, London, 1 December 1877) * 1878 – Minuet and Trio for orchestra, Op.14 (St James's Hall, London, 5 March 1878) * 1878 – Suite in D * 1881 – ''Twelfth Night'', overture (Colston Hall, Bristol, 14 February 1881) * 1885 – Symphony No.3 in F, Op.22 (Birmingham Festival, 28 August 1885) * 1886 – Symphony No.4 in D (Queen's College, Oxford, 4 June 1886) * 1889 – ''Rokeby'', overture (Crystal Palace, London, 23 March 1889) * 1891 – ''Suite de Ballet'' in E, Op.28 (Westminster Orchestral Society, London, 27 May 1891) * 1906 – Suite for small orchestra, Op.33Solo instrumentalist and orchestra
* 1870 – Organ Concerto No.1 in E minor, Op.5 (Crystal Palace, London, 19 October 1872) * 1885 – Organ Concerto No.2 in E flat major, Op.35 (Colston Hall, Bristol, 6 April 1885) * Clarinet Concerto in B flat (world premiere, 4 March 2023, Peter Cigleris, Greenwich Chamber Orchestra)Choral and vocal
* 1857 – Requiem Mass * 1875 – Magnificat for solo voices, chorus, and orchestra, Op.7 (Crystal Palace, London, 15 January 1876) * 1875 – Evening Service in E flat for solo quartet, chorus, orchestra and organ, Op.8 * 1876 – Magnificat and Nunc dimittis in F, Op.9 * 1876 – ''When the Lord turned'', anthem, Op.27 * 1877 – ''Hail to the Chief'' for chorus and orchestra, Op.10 (Alexandra Palace, London, 10 May 1877) * 1877 – ''Happy is the man'', anthem, Op.11 * 1878 – ''Hereward'', cantata, Op.12 (Hackney Choral Association, St James's Hall, London, 4 June 1879) * 1879 – Morning and Evening Service in F, Op.13 * 1882 – ''Alfred'', cantata, Op.16 (Hackney Choral Association,Vocal soloist and orchestra
* 1887 – ''The Song of Judith'', scena for contralto soloist and orchestra (Norwich Festival, Norwich, 12 October 1887)Chamber works
* 1860 – Piano Quintet in G, Op.3 * 1862 – String Quartet No.1 in E flat, Op.1 * 1865 – Piano Quartet No.1 in C, Op.2 * 1870 – ''Romance'' in F for viola and piano, Op.32 * 1872 – ''Duo Concertante'' in A for piano and harmonium, Op.6 * 1881 – String Quartet No.2 in B flat, Op.15 * 1882 – Sonata for flute and piano, Op.17 * 1882 – Sonata in D for clarinet (or viola) and piano, Op.26 * 1883 – Piano Quartet No.2 in F, Op.18Instrumental works
* 1870 – Postlude in C minor for organ * Organ Sonata, Op.4Scores and manuscripts
Many works by Prout were published. Several autograph scores are missing.Published
* Addison, Hollier & Lucas, London, published a set of parts for String Quartet No.1. * Augener & Co., London, published the full score and a piano duet arrangement of the Minuet and Trio, the full score of Organ Concerto No.1, the full score of the ''Suite de Ballet'', the full score and a piano score of the ''Triumphal March'' from ''Alfred'', the vocal score of ''Alfred'' and ''We give Thee Thanks, O Lord God Almighty'', together with scores and sets of parts for String Quartet No.2, the Piano Quintet, Piano Quartet No.1 and Piano Quartet No.2, the Organ Sonata, the ''Duo Concertante'' and the Clarinet Sonata. * Novello, Ewer & Co., London, published the full orchestral score and a piano duet arrangement of Symphony No.3, together with vocal scores of ''Hereward'', ''Freedom'', ''Queen Aimée'', ''O be joyful in the Lord'' (Psalm 100), ''The Red Cross Knight'' and ''Damon and Phintias''. * Stanley Lucas, Weber & Co, London, issued the full score of the Magnificat, Op.7, circa 1876. * Vincent Music Co., London, published the full score of Organ Concerto No.2 together with a piano score of the Suite for small orchestra and vocal scores of ''Salve Regina'' and ''Jesu Dulcis memoria''.Autograph
* The autograph full scores of both versions of Symphony No.1 are held by the Library of Trinity College Dublin (Prout G.147/ Prout G.148) together with autograph scores of Organ Concerto No.1 (Prout G.139), String Quartet No.1 (Prout G.145 no.1), Piano Quartet No.1 (Prout G.145 no.2), ''The Doom of Devergoil'' (Prout G.145 no.3) and the ''Salve Regina'' (Prout H.199 no.2). * The full score of Symphony No.2 is at Cambridge University Library (MS Add. 9151) together with String Quartet No.1 (MS Add.9066(1)) and String Quartet No.2 (MS Add.9066(2)). * The full score of Symphony No.3 is at the Bodleian Library, Oxford (MS. Tenbury 325). * The full score of Symphony No.4 is held by Queen's College, Oxford where the first performance took place on 4 June 1886. * The full score of the Minuet and Trio is held by the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (MU.MS.788). * Autograph full orchestral scores of ''Hail to the Chief'', ''Freedom'', ''O be joyful in the Lord'' (Psalm 100) and ''The Red Cross Knight'' are held by the Library of the Royal College of Music, London (Add.Mss 5158a-e). * The full score of ''Damon and Phintias'' is at the British Library, London (Add MS 50779). * The full score of the Clarinet Concerto is held by the Library of the Royal Academy of Music, London (MS 1155).Theoretical works
* ''Instrumentation'' (Novello Music Primer, 1877) * ''Harmony, its Theory and Practice'' (1889, rev. 1901: 20 editions by 1903) * ''Counterpoint'' (1890) * ''Double Counterpoint and Canon'' (1891) * (1891) * ''Fugal Analysis'' (1892) * ''Musical Form'' (1893) * ''Applied Forms'' (1895) * ''The Orchestra, Vol. I'' (1898) * ''The Orchestra, Vol. II'' (1899) * ''Mozart'' (1905)References
Sources
*A. Eaglefield-Hull, ''A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians'' (Dent, London 1924).External links
* * *