Edith Harrhy
British-born Australian composer and entertainer (1893–1969) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edith Mary Harrhy became Edith Mary Daly (19 December 1893 – 24 February 1969) was a British-born Australian composer and entertainer.
Edith Mary Harrhy | |
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Born | |
Died | 24 February 1969 75) | (aged
Nationality | United Kingdom |
Children | at least two |
Biography
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Perspective
Harrhy was born in 1893 in London. Her father, Jonathan Harrhy, came from Monmouthshire and her mother was Annie Harrhy (born Rose).[1] She was proud of her Welsh roots. She went to school on London and she was taking music exams with Trinity College when she was seven years old.[2] She joined the Guildhall School of Music where she studied singing mezzo-soprano and the piano. She gained expertise in harmony, opera and counterpoint and came to know the violinist Mary Law.[3]
In 1914 she left the Guildhall School of Music which had been overseen by Landon Ronald to tour as a duo with Mary Law. They would make recording of their performances[4] and Mary who would go on to record her performances on the violin.[5] They toured Australia in 1915 and South Africa in 1916.
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Harrhy had met William Constant Beckx Daly in Australia and after they married in London they settled in Melbourne where they lived with her husband's family. Her husband travelled as a pharmaceutical representative and she would arrange broadcasts and performances with accompanying artists in the places that he had to visit.[3]
She became a musical director in Australia.[6] Gertrude Johnson who had been a singer began the National Theatre Movement in Melbourne in 1935. Harrhy was soon involved and in the 1940s she was its musical director until 1948.[3]
Edith Harrhy wrote about a thousand songs and about 200 of them were published.[3] The Thrush was a test piece in the 1953 Grace Bros. National Eisteddfod, in Sydney.[7]
Edith Harrhy also created the light operas, Alaya and The Jolly Friar.
Harrhy died in Oxley near Brisbane in 1969.[1][8]
In the 1990s her daughter, Honor Coutts, published her biography, Edith Harrhy, Consummate Musician: A Personal Memoir by Her Daughter Honor.[9]
Edith Harrhy's papers are with the National Library of Australia.[10]
Musical compositions (incomplete)
Songs
- An Australian Lullaby (voice and piano) - words by Charles Souter[11]
- Autumn Leaves (soprano and piano) - words by Helen Dames[11]
- Summer is Dying (soprano and piano) - words by Helen Dames[11]
- The Thrush (soprano and piano) - words by Charles Souter[11]
- What The Red Haired Bosun Said
- You Came to Me in May (voice and piano) - words by Will Foster[11]
Solo piano
- On the Wanganui (1939)[11]
Light operas
References
External links
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