Herbert Antcliffe

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Herbert Antcliffe (30 July 1875 – 11 September 1964) was a British musicologist, music critic, teacher and author on musical subjects, who established his career in Sheffield and later moved to The Hague in Holland.

Antcliffe was born in Sheffield, son of Herbert Antcliffe of Eckington, Derbyshire and his wife Cordelia Staniforth (younger sister of the hymn composer Thomas Worsley Staniforth, whose music Antcliffe later edited).[1] Antcliffe attended Sheffield University in its formative years,[2] where he first encountered the conductor and composer Henry Coward, who remained a friend. From 1895 he established himself as a music critic for the Sheffield Telegraph.[3] He was also organist at St Matthew's Church, Carver Street, Sheffield Treeton Parish Church and St Wilfrid's Church, Sheffield. As a music tutor in Sheffield he taught piano, organ, singing and music theory from his home at 136 Crookesmoor Road,[4] and later at 102 Cell Street.[5]

Antcliffe left Sheffield in 1915, joining the staff of the Evening Standard in London.[6] He took up an organists position at St Alban's Church, North Finchley. After World War 1 he moved to The Hague, where he lived at 73, van Merlenstraat[7] to further his long-standing expertise in Dutch music.[8] He was awarded the Queen Wilhelmina Honour for services to Dutch music in 1939.[3]

Antcliffe was a regular contributor to British, European, American and South African musical journals from the early 1900s until the 1950s.[9] He was also an occasional composer of songs, part songs and church music.[10][2] His choral setting of Wordsworth's A song for the spinning wheel was published in 1914 by Bayley & Ferguson.[11]

Caught in Holland by the Nazi invasion, Antcliffe was unable to continue his journalistic activities, and with his Dutch wife Helena Borsboom suffered from near-starvation.[6] They returned to Britain in January 1949. In recognition of his services to British music he was awarded a Civil List Pension. Antcliffe died in 1964, aged 89. A collection of his archives and manuscripts are held at Sheffield University.[6]

His books include:

  • Brahms (G. Bell & Sons, 1905)
  • Schubert (G. Bell & Sons, 1910)
  • Living Music (1912)
  • The Successful Music Teacher (1912)
  • A Study of Modern Harmony, by René Lenormand, translated Antcliffe (1915)
  • The Amateur Singer (1920)
  • How to Enjoy Music (1921)
  • Musiek in Europa na Wagner (1925)
  • Art, Religion and Clothes (self-published, 1926)
  • The Chorus Master (Paxton, 1928)
  • Short Studies in the Nature of Music (1929)
  • Beethoven's own words, complied and annotated by Philip Kruseman, translated Antcliffe (Hinrichsen's miniature surveys, 1947)

References[edit]

  1. ^ 'A local composition', in The Penistone, Stocksbridge and Hoyland Express, 16 July 1910, p. 8
  2. ^ a b Who's Who in Music, 1950 edition, p. 5
  3. ^ a b 'Sheffield Musician Honoured', in The Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 5 May 1939, p. 10
  4. ^ Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 23 April 1910, p. 15
  5. ^ Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 11 January 1913, p. 6
  6. ^ a b c Herbert Antcliffe Manuscripts, University of Sheffield Library
  7. ^ Herbert Antcliffe. 'Holland and British Music', in The Daily Telegraph, 15 October, 1927, p. 6
  8. ^ Obituary, The Musical Times, Vol. 81, No. 1163 (January 1940), p. 40. (Note: this premature obituary is most likely based on mistaken reports of his death in occupied Holland during World War II)
  9. ^ A late example is: Antcliffe, Herbert (October 1949). "What Music Meant to the Romans". Music & Letters. 30 (4). Oxford University Press: 337–344. doi:10.1093/ml/XXX.4.337. JSTOR 730675.
  10. ^ 'Dedication: a new Cradle Song, Dundee Evening Telegraph, 4 June 1938, p. 2
  11. ^ Lieder.net