Linda Phillips (musician)

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Linda Phillips in about 1933

Rosalind Phillippa Phillips, OBE (8 June 1899 – 8 October 2002), known as Linda Phillips, was an Australian composer, pianist and music critic.

Linda Phillips was born in Melbourne in 1899 to Joseph Phillips (1859 – 6 April 1929) who was born in Lithuania of Russian descent and became a naturalized Australian in 1891, and Augusta Polack (25 December 1872, Melbourne – 12 October 1940).[1] She was the eldest child and had three brothers.

Linda Phillips attended Lauriston Girls' School.[2] She then studied piano at the University of Melbourne's Conservatorium of Music under Edward Goll, and subsequently composition at the private Albert Street Conservatorium in East Melbourne (Melba Memorial Conservatorium of Music) where she studied under the English composer and conductor Fritz Hart.[3][4]

Career

Phillips was a popular composer and performer on Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio but was most well known as the music critic for The Sun News-Pictorial or Sun (Melbourne) newspaper (1949–1976).

She was Chief Adjudicator for the annual Sun Aria Contest, where she helped launch the careers of many singers including Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, who won the Contest in 1966.[4] The Sun Aria (now Herald Sun Aria) is Australia's oldest and most prestigious prize for emerging opera singers. It forms the aria section of the Royal South Street Eisteddfod.

Compositions

Phillips' compositions have been divided into two main styles, work in the English Pastoral style, and compositions influenced by ancient Judaic music. She wrote the lyrics of many of her songs.[2] Her interest in poetry as a child led her to publish a collection of her poems in 1922, From a City Garden. Her compositions were performed by Dame Joan Sutherland,[1] Dame Joan Hammond, and Sylvia Fisher.

Her compositions include:

Songs with lyrics from the poetry of James Joyce:

  • Strings in the Earth and the Air
  • The Twilight Turns from Amethyst
  • Golden Hair
  • Apple Trees
  • Who Goes Amid the Greenwood
  • Winds of May
  • Bright Cap and Streamers
  • Go Seek Her Out All Courteously
  • Arise, My Dove
  • Monotone
  • The Charioteers (lyrics from "I Hear an Army" from Chamber Music).

Instrumental and chamber:

  • Rhapsody-Sonata in G – for violin and piano
  • Piano Suite, Sea Impressions: Waves, Mermaid and Harp, and The Dancing Sunlight
  • Cradle Song
  • Serenade for Violin and Piano
  • Two Moods for Clarinet and Piano – Grave and Giocoso
  • The Golden Bird
  • Plum Tree
  • Daydreams
  • Bracken Brown
  • Bush Evening
  • Iris Marshes
  • Shadow Dance
  • Evening Canticle
  • Serenade
  • Festival Trio in D Minor
  • Music from Lamentations – for violin, cello and piano
  • Exaltation (Chassidic Air and Dance) – quartet for oboe, violin, cello and piano
  • Purim
  • Ash Trees
  • Two Hebrew Songs

Her papers were donated to Monash University and these included her vocal music, piano music and chamber music works.[5]

Discography

Honours

Personal life

References

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