85 Facts About Benjamin Britten

1.

Edward Benjamin Britten, Baron Britten was an English composer, conductor, and pianist.

FactSnippet No. 766,087
2.

Benjamin Britten was a central figure of 20th-century British music, with a range of works including opera, other vocal music, orchestral and chamber pieces.

FactSnippet No. 766,088
3.

Benjamin Britten studied at the Royal College of Music in London and privately with the composer Frank Bridge.

FactSnippet No. 766,089
4.

Benjamin Britten first came to public attention with the a cappella choral work A Boy was Born in 1934.

FactSnippet No. 766,090
5.

Benjamin Britten took a great interest in writing music for children and amateur performers, including the opera Noye's Fludde, a Missa Brevis, and the song collection Friday Afternoons.

FactSnippet No. 766,091
6.

Benjamin Britten was a celebrated pianist and conductor, performing many of his own works in concert and on record.

FactSnippet No. 766,092
7.

Benjamin Britten performed and recorded works by others, such as Bach's Brandenburg Concertos, Mozart symphonies, and song cycles by Schubert and Schumann.

FactSnippet No. 766,093
8.

Together with Pears and the librettist and producer Eric Crozier, Benjamin Britten founded the annual Aldeburgh Festival in 1948, and he was responsible for the creation of Snape Maltings concert hall in 1967.

FactSnippet No. 766,094
9.

Benjamin Britten was born in the fishing port of Lowestoft in Suffolk, on the east coast of England on 22 November 1913, the feast day of Saint Cecilia.

FactSnippet No. 766,095
10.

Benjamin Britten was the youngest of four children of Robert Victor Britten and his wife Edith Rhoda, nee Hockey .

FactSnippet No. 766,096
11.

Consensus among biographers of Benjamin Britten is that his father was a loving but somewhat stern and remote parent.

FactSnippet No. 766,097
12.

Music was the principal means by which Edith Benjamin Britten strove to maintain the family's social standing, inviting the pillars of the local community to musical soirees at the house.

FactSnippet No. 766,098
13.

When Benjamin Britten was three months old he contracted pneumonia and nearly died.

FactSnippet No. 766,099
14.

Benjamin Britten recovered more fully than expected, and as a boy was a keen tennis player and cricketer.

FactSnippet No. 766,100
15.

Benjamin Britten made his first attempts at composition when he was five.

FactSnippet No. 766,101
16.

Benjamin Britten started piano lessons when he was seven years old, and three years later began to play the viola.

FactSnippet No. 766,102
17.

Benjamin Britten was one of the last composers brought up on exclusively live music: his father refused to have a gramophone or, later, a radio in the house.

FactSnippet No. 766,103
18.

The headmaster, Thomas Sewell, was an old-fashioned disciplinarian; the young Benjamin Britten was outraged at the severe corporal punishments frequently handed out, and later he said that his lifelong pacifism probably had its roots in his reaction to the regime at the school.

FactSnippet No. 766,104
19.

Benjamin Britten himself rarely fell foul of Sewell, a mathematician, in which subject Britten was a star pupil.

FactSnippet No. 766,105
20.

When his Simple Symphony, based on these juvenilia, was recorded in 1956, Benjamin Britten wrote this pen-portrait of his young self for the sleeve note:.

FactSnippet No. 766,106
21.

Benjamin Britten's friends bore with it, his enemies kicked a bit but not for long, the staff couldn't object if his work and games didn't suffer.

FactSnippet No. 766,107
22.

Robert Benjamin Britten, supported by Thomas Sewell, doubted the wisdom of pursuing a composing career; a compromise was agreed by which Benjamin Britten would, as planned, go on to his public school the following year but would make regular day-trips to London to study composition with Bridge and piano with his colleague Harold Samuel.

FactSnippet No. 766,108
23.

In September 1928 Benjamin Britten went as a boarder to Gresham's School, in Holt, Norfolk.

FactSnippet No. 766,109
24.

Benjamin Britten remained there for two years and in 1930, he won a composition scholarship at the Royal College of Music in London; his examiners were the composers John Ireland and Ralph Vaughan Williams and the college's harmony and counterpoint teacher, S P Waddington.

FactSnippet No. 766,110
25.

Benjamin Britten won the Sullivan Prize for composition, the Cobbett Prize for chamber music, and was twice winner of the Ernest Farrar Prize for composition.

FactSnippet No. 766,111
26.

Benjamin Britten used his time in London to attend concerts and become better acquainted with the music of Stravinsky, Shostakovich and, most particularly, Mahler.

FactSnippet No. 766,112
27.

Benjamin Britten intended postgraduate study in Vienna with Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg's student, but was eventually dissuaded by his parents, on the advice of the RCM staff.

FactSnippet No. 766,113
28.

In February 1935, at Bridge's instigation, Benjamin Britten was invited to a job interview by the BBC's director of music Adrian Boult and his assistant Edward Clark.

FactSnippet No. 766,114
29.

Benjamin Britten was not enthusiastic about the prospect of working full-time in the BBC music department and was relieved when what came out of the interview was an invitation to write the score for a documentary film, The King's Stamp, directed by Alberto Cavalcanti for the GPO Film Unit.

FactSnippet No. 766,115
30.

Auden was a considerable influence on Benjamin Britten, encouraging him to widen his aesthetic, intellectual and political horizons, and to come to terms with his homosexuality.

FactSnippet No. 766,116
31.

Pears was inclined to disregard the advice and go back to England; Benjamin Britten felt the urge to return, but accepted the embassy's counsel and persuaded Pears to do the same.

FactSnippet No. 766,117
32.

Already a friend of the composer Aaron Copland, Benjamin Britten encountered his latest works Billy the Kid and An Outdoor Overture, both of which influenced his own music.

FactSnippet No. 766,118
33.

In 1940 Benjamin Britten composed Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, the first of many song cycles for Pears.

FactSnippet No. 766,119
34.

In 1941 Benjamin Britten produced his first music drama, Paul Bunyan, an operetta, to a libretto by Auden.

FactSnippet No. 766,120
35.

In 1942 Benjamin Britten read the work of the poet George Crabbe for the first time.

FactSnippet No. 766,121
36.

Benjamin Britten knew that he must write an opera based on Crabbe's poem about the fisherman Peter Grimes.

FactSnippet No. 766,122
37.

Benjamin Britten had grown away from him, and Auden became one of the composer's so-called "corpses" – former intimates from whom he completely cut off contact once they had outlived their usefulness to him or offended him in some way.

FactSnippet No. 766,123
38.

Benjamin Britten spent much of his time there in 1944 working on the opera Peter Grimes.

FactSnippet No. 766,124
39.

Pears joined Sadler's Wells Opera Company, whose artistic director, the singer Joan Cross, announced her intention to re-open the company's home base in London with Benjamin Britten's opera, casting herself and Pears in the leading roles.

FactSnippet No. 766,125
40.

Colin Matthews comments that the next two works Benjamin Britten composed after his return, the song-cycle The Holy Sonnets of John Donne and the Second String Quartet, contrast strongly with earlier, lighter-hearted works such as Les Illuminations.

FactSnippet No. 766,126
41.

Benjamin Britten recovered his joie de vivre for The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, written for an educational film, Instruments of the Orchestra, directed by Muir Mathieson and featuring the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Sargent.

FactSnippet No. 766,127
42.

Benjamin Britten wrote the comic opera Albert Herring for the group in 1947; while on tour in the new work Pears came up with the idea of mounting a festival in the small Suffolk seaside town of Aldeburgh, where Benjamin Britten had moved from Snape earlier in the year, and which became his principal place of residence for the rest of his life.

FactSnippet No. 766,128
43.

New works by Benjamin Britten featured in almost every festival until his death in 1976, including the premieres of his operas A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Jubilee Hall in 1960 and Death in Venice at Snape Maltings Concert Hall in 1973.

FactSnippet No. 766,129
44.

Unlike many leading English composers, Benjamin Britten was not known as a teacher, but in 1949 he accepted his only private pupil, Arthur Oldham, who studied with him for three years.

FactSnippet No. 766,130
45.

When redundant Victorian maltings buildings in the village of Snape, six miles inland, became available for hire, Benjamin Britten realised that the largest of them could be converted into a concert hall and opera house.

FactSnippet No. 766,131
46.

The hall was destroyed by fire in 1969, but Benjamin Britten was determined that it would be rebuilt in time for the following year's festival, which it was.

FactSnippet No. 766,132
47.

Benjamin Britten conducted the first performance outside Russia of Shostakovich's Fourteenth Symphony at Snape in 1970.

FactSnippet No. 766,133
48.

Benjamin Britten composed his cello suites, Cello Symphony and Cello Sonata for Rostropovich, who premiered them at the Aldeburgh Festival.

FactSnippet No. 766,134
49.

Benjamin Britten had been asked four years earlier to write a work for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral, a modernist building designed by Basil Spence.

FactSnippet No. 766,135
50.

Benjamin Britten decided that his work would commemorate the dead of both World Wars in a large-scale score for soloists, chorus, chamber ensemble and orchestra.

FactSnippet No. 766,136
51.

Benjamin Britten's text interspersed the traditional Requiem Mass with poems by Wilfred Owen.

FactSnippet No. 766,137
52.

In September 1970 Benjamin Britten asked Myfanwy Piper, who had adapted the two Henry James stories for him, to turn another prose story into a libretto.

FactSnippet No. 766,138
53.

At an early stage in composition Benjamin Britten was told by his doctors that a heart operation was essential if he was to live for more than two years.

FactSnippet No. 766,139
54.

Benjamin Britten was determined to finish the opera and worked urgently to complete it before going into hospital for surgery.

FactSnippet No. 766,140
55.

In June 1976, the last year of his life, Benjamin Britten accepted a life peerage – the first composer so honoured – becoming Baron Benjamin Britten, of Aldeburgh in the County of Suffolk.

FactSnippet No. 766,141
56.

When Rostropovich made his farewell visit a few days later, Benjamin Britten gave him what he had written of Praise We Great Men.

FactSnippet No. 766,142
57.

Benjamin Britten died of congestive heart failure on 4 December 1976.

FactSnippet No. 766,143
58.

The authorities at Westminster Abbey had offered burial there, but Benjamin Britten had made it clear that he wished his grave to be side by side with that, in due course, of Pears.

FactSnippet No. 766,144
59.

Benjamin Britten told Pears that he always voted either Liberal or Labour and could not imagine ever voting Conservative, but he was never a member of any party, except the Peace Pledge Union.

FactSnippet No. 766,145
60.

Benjamin Britten walked and swam regularly and kept himself as fit as he could, but Carpenter in his 1992 biography mentions 20 illnesses, a few of them minor but most fairly serious, suffered over the years by Britten before his final heart complaint developed.

FactSnippet No. 766,146
61.

Benjamin Britten was not always confident that he was the genius others declared him to be, and though he was hypercritical of his own works, he was acutely, even aggressively sensitive to criticism from anybody else.

FactSnippet No. 766,147
62.

Benjamin Britten was, as he acknowledged, notorious for dumping friends and colleagues who either offended him or ceased to be of use – his "corpses".

FactSnippet No. 766,148
63.

Benjamin Britten did not want to hurt anyone, but the task in hand was more important than anything or anybody.

FactSnippet No. 766,149
64.

Benjamin Britten loved music, and loved youngsters caring about music.

FactSnippet No. 766,150
65.

Benjamin Britten described as "complete rubbish" Kildea's allegation that the surgeon who operated on Britten in 1973 would or even could have covered up a syphilitic condition.

FactSnippet No. 766,151
66.

Benjamin Britten discovered the music of Debussy and Ravel which, Matthews writes, "gave him a model for an orchestral sound".

FactSnippet No. 766,152
67.

Benjamin Britten was impressed by Delius, and thought Brigg Fair "delicious" when he heard it in 1931.

FactSnippet No. 766,153
68.

Benjamin Britten's music reflects the eroticism in Rimbaud's poems; Copland commented of the section "Antique" that he did not know how Benjamin Britten dared to write the melody.

FactSnippet No. 766,154
69.

Benjamin Britten's orchestration has an individuality, incisiveness and integration with the musical material only achieved by the greatest composers.

FactSnippet No. 766,155
70.

Benjamin Britten's youthful jeux d'esprit the Simple Symphony is in conventional symphonic structure, observing sonata form and the traditional four-movement pattern, but of his mature works his Spring Symphony is more a song cycle than a true symphony, and the concertante Cello Symphony is an attempt to balance the traditional concerto and symphony.

FactSnippet No. 766,156
71.

In 1945 Benjamin Britten revised it, replacing a skittish third movement with a more sombre passacaglia that, in Matthews's view, gives the work more depth, and makes the apparent triumph of the finale more ambivalent.

FactSnippet No. 766,157
72.

String quartets featured throughout Benjamin Britten's composing career, from a student work in 1928 to his Third String Quartet .

FactSnippet No. 766,158
73.

For Osian Ellis, Benjamin Britten wrote the Suite for Harp, which Joan Chissell in The Times described as "a little masterpiece of concentrated fancy".

FactSnippet No. 766,159
74.

Benjamin Britten got into the valley of the shadow of death and couldn't get out.

FactSnippet No. 766,160
75.

Whittall believes that one reason for Benjamin Britten's enduring popularity is the "progressive conservatism" of his music.

FactSnippet No. 766,161
76.

Benjamin Britten generally avoided the avant-garde, and did not challenge the conventions in the way that contemporaries such as Tippett did.

FactSnippet No. 766,162
77.

Singers and players admired Benjamin Britten's conducting, and David Webster rated it highly enough to offer him the musical directorship of the Covent Garden Opera in 1952.

FactSnippet No. 766,163
78.

Benjamin Britten declined; he was not confident of his ability as a conductor and was reluctant to spend too much time performing rather than composing.

FactSnippet No. 766,164
79.

In May 1943 Benjamin Britten made his debut in the Decca studios, accompanying Sophie Wyss in five of his arrangements of French folk songs.

FactSnippet No. 766,165
80.

Decca's first major commercial success with Benjamin Britten came the following year, with Peter Grimes, which has, at 2013, never been out of the catalogues since its first release.

FactSnippet No. 766,166
81.

From 1958 Benjamin Britten conducted Decca recordings of many of his operas and vocal and orchestral works, including the Nocturne, the Spring Symphony and the War Requiem .

FactSnippet No. 766,167
82.

State honours awarded to Benjamin Britten included Companion of Honour in 1953; Commander of the Royal Order of the Polar Star in 1962; the Order of Merit in 1965; and a life peerage in July 1976, as Baron Benjamin Britten, of Aldeburgh in the County of Suffolk.

FactSnippet No. 766,168
83.

Benjamin Britten received honorary degrees and fellowships from 19 conservatories and universities in Europe and America.

FactSnippet No. 766,169
84.

Benjamin Britten's awards included the Hanseatic Goethe Prize ; the Aspen Award, Colorado ; the Royal Philharmonic Society's Gold Medal ; the Wihuri Sibelius Prize ; the Mahler Medal ; the Leonie Sonning Music Prize ; the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize ; and the Ravel Prize .

FactSnippet No. 766,170
85.

Benjamin Britten was played in the premiere production by Alex Jennings.

FactSnippet No. 766,171