Katharine Emily Eggar

Katherine Emily Eggar (5 January 1874 - 15 August 1961) was an English pianist and composer. Eggar was born and died in London, England, the daughter of Thomas Eggar and Katherine MacDonald. Eggar was active member of the feminist movement especially in terms of opportunities for women in music. At the inaugural meeting of the Society of Women Musicians, Eggar stated, "The conventions of music must be challenged. Women are already challenging conventions in all kinds of ways… We believe in a great future for women composers." (Katherine Emily Eggar, at the inaugural meeting in 1911 of the Society of Women Musicians which she helped found)

Life

She studied piano in Berlin at the Klindworth-Scharwenka Conservatory with Klindworth, Brussels at the Conservatoire Royal de Musique with De Greef, and London, and studied composition with Frederick Corder at the Royal Academy of Music, Graduating in 1895. At 19 she became the first woman to perform her own chamber works at a London public concert.

With singer Gertrude Eaton and musicologist Marion M. Scott, she founded the Society of Women Musicians in London in 1911[1] and served as its president in 1914-1915. Eggar ran fortnightly meetings for women composers in the Society. With Marion Scott, she wrote a column in the Chamber Music (a supplement to the periodical The Music Student) called "Women's Doings in Chamber Music."

Eggar was also a Shakespeare archivist and the author of the pamphlets “Shakespeare in His True Colors”(1951) and “The Unified Shadow” (1954). She later bequeathed her 253 volume collection to Senate House Library of the University of London.[2][3] Eggar also spent over thirty years researching the life of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Interestingly, she actually believed Lord Oxford to be the real author of Shakespeare’s work. She planned to publish her writings, but she died before the preparatory work for her book could be made.[4]

She was a chairman of the Society of Women Musicians. In an opening address, “she expressed the conviction that a strong body of high-principled women musicians might do a great deal to reform public opinion on music and raise the standard of musical politics.” [5] She was very aware of the disadvantages of female composers and musicians, and actively worked to create opportunities for women in the realm of music.

Works

Eggar composed songs and chamber music. Selected works include:

Chamber

Piano

Voice and Instruments

Six songs from Forbes 'Cantus, and I Fancies' (17thC.)

Voice and Piano

References


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