Charles Swinnerton Heap
Charles Swinnerton Heap (10 April 1847 - 11 June 1900) was an English organist and composer.[1]
Life
Born in Birmingham in 1847, he was educated at King Edward VI School, Birmingham. In 1862 he went to study under Dr. Edwin George Monk at York Minster. In 1865 he won the Mendelssohn Scholarship for young composers.
He then studied at the Leipzig Conservatoire, and then St John's College, Cambridge where he was awarded Mus Bac. in 1871 and Mus.D in 1872.[2]
In 1884 he was appointed Examiner for Music Degrees at his alma mater, Cambridge University. He later taught at the Royal College of Music where one of his notable pupils was organist Herbert Sanders.
He was a friend of Edward Elgar, who dedicated his Organ Sonata to him.[3]
His memorial was sculpted by Albert Toft, and is in Walsall Town Hall.
Appointments
- Organist of Queen's College, Birmingham (a predecessor college of the University of Birmingham) 1859 - 1862
- Organist of St John's Church, Wolverhampton1868 - ????
- Conductor of the Birmingham Philharmonic Union 1870 - 1886
- Conductor of the Wolverhampton Festival Choral Society 1881 - 1886
- Conductor of the North Staffordshire Festival, Hanley 1888 - 1899
- Conductor of the Birmingham Festival Choral Society 1895
- Conductor of the Birmingham Triennial Music Festival 1897
- Conductor of the Walsall Philharmonic Union.
Compositions
His compositions include cantatas, anthems, songs, overtures, organ music.
References
- ↑ British Musical Biography. Stephen Samuel Stratton and James Duff Brown 1897
- ↑ "Heap, Charles Swinnerton (HP869CS)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ↑ English Musical Renaissance, 1840-1940 By Meirion Hughes, Robert A. Stradling