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14 - The Royal College of Music, 1947-52: Rebuilding, Development and Endgames

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

Paul Spicer
Affiliation:
Composition student of Herbert Howells, whose biography he wrote in 1998. He is well-known as a choral conductor especially of British Music of the twentieth century onwards, a writer, composer, teacher, and producer
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Summary

The winter of 1947 was one of the most severe on record. The College suffered for a particularly bad fortnight in sub-zero temperatures. As in the war, life went on as normal. Nothing was cancelled, nothing changed. But the event was notable. ‘It was a fine triumph of will and devotion’, said Dyson. ‘Almost equally heroic were the concert audiences. I was one of the weak ones who sat swathed in rugs.’ He went on: ‘the effect of this blizzard was in some ways like the effect of the air-raids during the war. The challenge of danger and discomfort seems to pull people together in a most remarkable way. All one's minor fads and troubles appear to vanish.’ Dyson then gives an overview of the state of College and its finances:

… our main worries to-day are food, fuel and repairs, in that order. The food we can supply here is a very important addition to the scanty rations many of you get outside. I am therefore very interested in your Beethoven sonatas, but cauliflowers are now half-a-crown and cabbages not much less. I enjoy your spirited orchestral playing, but I am also listening anxiously for the rumble of a load of coke. I like you to read our music and books, but there is a horrible patch of dry rot in our library on the top floor, and you can put your hand through some of the panels.

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Sir George Dyson
His Life and Music
, pp. 291 - 321
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2014

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