Anna Groff Bryant

American singer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anna Groff Bryant (1860 — January 27, 1941) was an American concert singer and voice educator.

Anna Groff Bryant, from a 1915 publication
Anna Groff Bryant, from a 1917 publication

Early life

Anna Groff was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the daughter of Michael Groff and Anna Kirch Groff. She studied music at Downer College and at Northwestern University.[1]

Career

Bryant opened her own school, the Anna Groff-Bryant Institute of Vocal Art, in Chicago in 1903. In 1912, she moved her program to Lombard College in Galesburg, Illinois, where she was given a custom-built studio for her work.[2] She continued to hold a summer school for music teachers in Chicago.[3] She was also musical director of the Galesburg Woman's Club.[4] Many of her students were employed as church soloists in the Chicago area.[5] She also taught voice in southern California.[6]

She lectured[7] and wrote articles about vocal education, including "Concerning the Musicianship of Singers" (1908),[8] "The Compass of the Voice and the Singing Range" (1909),[9] and "A Scientific Analysis of the Contralto Voice Instrument" (1909).[10] She also published and edited a journal, The Institute, about vocal music and pedagogy,[11] and organized a visiting artists' series in Galesburg.[12]

Personal life

Anna Groff married Chauncy Earle Bryant, a tenor and voice teacher, in 1897.[1]

She died in 1941, aged 80, in Chicago.[13]

References

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