William Sterndale Bennett (1816-1875)
- Symphony (No.5) in g (1835)
Performers: Milton Keynes Chamber Orchestra; Hilary Davan Wetton (conductor)
Further info: Piano Concerto In F Minor - Symphony In G Minor
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English composer. His father, Robert Bennett (1788-1819), an organist,
and his mother, Elizabeth Donn (1791-1818), died when he was a child,
and he was then placed in the care of his grandfather, John Bennett
(1754-1837), who was also a musician. At the age of eight he was
admitted to the choir of King's College Chapel, Cambridge, and at ten he
became a pupil at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he
studied theory with Charles Lucas and piano with William Henry Holmes,
and played violin in the academy orchestra under Cipriani Potter. He
later studied music theory there with William Crotch. Soon he began to
compose; he was 16 years old when he was the soloist in the first
performance of his Piano Concerto No.1 in Cambridge on 28 November 1832.
In 1836 he made an extensive visit to Leipzig, where he became a close
friend of Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann; also appeared as a
pianist and conductor of his own works with the Gewandhaus Orchestra
there. He continued to compose industriously, and played his Piano
Concerto No.4 with the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig on 17 January
1839. He visited Germany again in 1841-42. From 1843 to 1856 he gave a
series of chamber music concerts in London; in 1849 he founded the Bach
Society. From 1856 to 1866 he conducted the Philharmonic Society of
London; concurrently he held the post of professor of music at the
University of Cambridge; in 1866 he assumed the position of principal of
the Royal Academy of Music. His reputation as a composer grew. He
amassed honors: in 1856 he received the honorary degree of D.Mus. from
the University of Cambridge, which also conferred on him the degree of
M.A. in 1867; he received the degree of D.C.L. from the University of
Oxford in 1870; in a culmination of these honors, he was knighted by
Queen Victoria in 1871. The final honor was his burial in Westminster
Abbey. He ranks as the most distinguished English composer of the
Romantic school.




