Herbert Hughes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert Hughes (born 1882 Belfast, Ireland - died 1937 Brighton, England) was an Irish-English composer, music critic and collector of folk songs.
He was brought up in Belfast but completed his formal music education at Royal College of Music, London, graduating in 1901. Subsequently he worked as a music critic most notably for The Daily Telegraph from 1911 to 1932.
Apart from writing about music, Hughes composed chamber music and for the stage and film. A supporter of the Gaelic Revival he was one of the founders with Charles Wood of the Irish Folksong Society in 1904, and himself collected and set down hundreds of traditional melodies.
[edit] Partial bibliography
- Songs of Uladh, (1904}
- Irish Country Songs (four volumes 1909, 1915, 1934 and 1936)
- Historical Songs and Ballads of Ireland (1922)
[edit] External links
- The Modernist Journals Project - biographical entry
- The Contemporary Music Centre - biographical entry
- Choral Public Domain Library - biographical entry with links to two music scores.