William Hayes (1708-1777)
- O Worship The Lord
Performers: Choir of New College Oxford; Edward Higginbottom (conductor)
Further info: William Hayes (1708-1777) - Orpheus & Euridice (1735)
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Composer, organist and singer. He showed an early talent for music and
in 1717 became a chorister of Gloucester Cathedral under William Hine,
to whom he was later articled. In 1729 he was appointed organist of St
Mary’s, Shrewsbury, and in 1731 he obtained the post of organist of
Worcester Cathedral. Three years later he succeeded Thomas Hecht as
organist and informator choristarum of Magdalen College, Oxford. On 8
July 1735 he received the BMus, for which he wrote the ode When the fair
consort, and he was unanimously elected to the professorship of music
on 14 January 1741, after the death of Richard Goodson, whom he also
succeeded as organist of the university church. Burney considered him to
have been ‘a very good organ player’ and a ‘studious and active
professor’. A notable event of his tenure of the professorship was the
opening of the Holywell Music Room in 1748, in which weekly concerts
were presented under Hayes’s direction. He received the DMus on 14 April
1749 during the celebrations marking the opening of the Radcliffe
Library, which included the first known performance in Oxford of
Handel’s Messiah. Hayes was an ardent Handelian, and was one of the most
active conductors of the composer’s oratorios and other large-scale
works outside London. He was musical director of the meetings of the
Gloucester Music Meeting in 1757, 1760 and 1763, and often combined the
roles of conductor and tenor soloist. He was one of the first enrolled
members of the Fund for the Support of Decay’d Musicians (later the
Royal Society of Musicians), and advanced plans for a scheme, funded by
the Society, to establish a co-educational music academy for the
training of gifted young musicians for a period of 14 years from the age
of seven or eight. In 1765 he was elected a ‘priviledged member’ of the
Noblemen’s and Gentlemen’s Catch Club, having already won several of
the prize medals offered by the club.
Of his children, three sons and three daughters survived infancy. His
wife, Anne, died on 14 January 1786. A portrait by John Cornish is in
the Oxford University Faculty of Music. Hayes’s musical style is much
indebted to Handel, especially in his large-scale works. Nevertheless,
his vocal music shows a typically English preference for non-da capo
aria forms, and his contemporary reputation as a composer was founded on
genres largely ignored by Handel: English cantatas, organ-accompanied
anthems, and convivial vocal music. A firm command of both harmonic and
contrapuntal writing characterizes all his music, which is never less
than technically assured. A self-consciously learned strand in his music
can be observed in his assiduous cultivation of the full anthem, his
many ingenious canons, and the strict fugal movements of his concertos
and trio sonatas. Although he chose to publish little of his
instrumental music, it is generally of high quality. Several of his trio
sonatas seem to have been designed for orchestral performance and mix
movements in a late Baroque style with others which show a clear
awareness of galant idioms (including small-scale sonata forms). The
early G major harpsichord concerto is remarkable for the detailed
written-out ornamentation and cadenzas of its slow movement, and his
concerti grossi depart from usual English practice in their addition of a
viola to the usual concertino trio of two violins and cello. His odes,
oratorios and masques demonstrate a sure command of large-scale
resources, and the ode The Passions, the one-act oratorio The Fall of
Jericho, and the Six Cantatas confirm that Hayes deserves to be regarded
highly among English composers of the 18th century. His sons Philip
Hayes (1738-1797) and William Hayes (1741-1790) were also singers and
composers.
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