Anne Macnaghten

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Born(1908-08-09)9 August 1908
Whitwick, Leicestershire, UK
Died31 December 2000(2000-12-31) (aged 92)
Genresclassical
Instrumentviolin
Anne Macnaghten
Born(1908-08-09)9 August 1908
Whitwick, Leicestershire, UK
Died31 December 2000(2000-12-31) (aged 92)
Genresclassical
Instrumentviolin

Anne Macnaghten, CBE (9 August 1908 – 31 December 2000) was a British classical violinist and pedagogue.[1][2]

Anne was the youngest daughter of high court judge Sir Malcolm Macnaghten. She was born in Whitwick, Leicestershire,[3] and grew up in Northern Ireland and Kensington, London. She began her violin studies at the age of six with Hungarian soloist Jelly d'Arányi. Macnaghten later stated in an interview with The Strad that d'Arányi "wasn't really a very good teacher".[1] At the age of seventeen she travelled to Germany to study at Leipzig Conservatory (now University of Music and Theatre Leipzig) with German pedagogue Walther Davisson, who later became the director of the conservatory. She later returned to London for further study with Andre Mangeot.[4]

Macnaghten Concerts and String Quartet

In 1931 she co-founded the Macnaghten Concerts together with composer Elisabeth Lutyens and conductor Iris Lemare, which aimed to promote contemporary classical composers. The concert series was based at the Mercury Theatre, Notting Hill Gate and originally ran from 1931 to 1937.

In the same year Macnaghten founded the (then all-female) Macnaghten String Quartet, which played in many of the series' concerts. The quartet consisted of Macnaghtan, Joan Wordsell, Violet Brough and Joan Bonner. By 1932 the personnel had changed to Macnaghten, Elise Deprez, Beryl Scawen Blunt and Mary Goodchild.[5] The quartet premièred works of several well-known composers as part of the concert series, including Sinfonietta, Op. 1 by Benjamin Britten in 1933, Tippet's String Quartet No. 1 in 1935, the String Quartet No 3 by Mary Lucas[6] and works by Gerald Finzi, Elizabeth Maconchy, and Alan Rawsthorne.[7]

After the war the Quartet re-formed, with Arnold Ashby as cellist. He became her second husband in 1947. The ensemble became involved in music education activities, holding a series of demonstration concerts in schools, initially in Barking (1945-7), then in Ealing (1948-53), Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire.[3] The Macnaghten String Quartet are still an active quartet and regularly coach chamber music at Benslow Music Trust.[1]

Later career

Personal life

References

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