Edward Joseph Collins

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Edward Joseph Collins (November 10, 1886 – December 1, 1951) was an American

conductor and composer of classical music in a neoromantic
style.

Life and career

Collins was born in

Berlin Hochschule für Musik under Max Bruch and Engelbert Humperdinck. Upon graduation, he had a successful concert piano debut in Berlin. He returned to the United States in 1912 and toured with the contralto Ernestine Schumann-Heink. He was an assistant conductor with the Century Opera Company in New York City and with the Bayreuth Festival
in Germany.

During World War I, Collins served in the U.S. Army (88th Division of the Intelligence Unit in France) as an interpreter and entertained the troops as pianist. From Private he rose up to the rank of Lieutenant during the war.[citation needed]

After the war he returned to Chicago and joined 1919 the faculty of Chicago Musical College as one of the principal piano teachers. Collins married a voice student, Frieda Mayer, whose father, Oscar, owned a meatpacking company and was well to do. Collins and his wife had four children namely Dorothy Louise, Marianna Louise, Louise Joan and Edward Joseph junior. Having married into a family of wealth, they lived in the Mayer residence on Sheridan Road in Chicago.

He later joined the faculty of the American Conservatory of Music.[1] He died in Chicago, Illinois in 1951.[2]

Music

Collins belonged to a group of conservative Chicago composers whose influence did not reach far beyond the city. His music includes twelve major orchestral works (incl. three piano concertos), a secular cantata, an opera, several chamber works, more than 20 songs and a dozen piano solo and duo scores. For a number of years he was preoccupied with his Irish heritage and wrote several long scores for large orchestra involving traditional Irish melodies.[3]

Family

While at Chicago Music College, Collins met and married, on July 21, 1920,

Chicago, Illinois - December 7, 1965 Birmingham, Michigan),[5][6] daughter of meat-packing magnate Oscar Mayer
.

Compositions

Stage

  • Who Can Tell (operetta)
  • Daughter of the South (1939), opera

Cantata

  • Hymn to the Earth (1928) for solo voices, chorus and orchestra

Orchestral works

  • 1914. Tragic Overture (1914; rev. 1926 and 1942)
  • Piano Concerto No. 1 in E-flat major (premiered 1925)
  • Symphony in B minor "Nos habeit humus" (1925)
  • Irish Rhapsody (1927)
  • Set of Four (1927)
  • Hibernia (Irish Rhapsody, Variations on an old Irish Song) (1929)
  • Concert Piece for Piano and Orchestra (Piano Concerto No. 2) (1931)
  • Variations on an Irish Folksong (1931)
  • Ballet Suite: The Mask of the Red Death (1932)
  • Mardi Gras (1933)
  • Valse elegante (1933)
  • Lament and Jig (1941)
  • Piano Concerto No. 3 in B minor (1942)
  • Cowboy's Breakdown (1944)

Chamber music

  • Piano Trio (Geronimo) op. 1
  • Arabesque
  • Cello Suite
  • Prayer

Other

  • More than a dozen piano solo and duo scores
  • 15 songs for voice and piano

Recordings

References

  1. ^ Edward Joseph Collins Papers, Newberry Modern Manuscript Collections, Newberry Library, Chicago
  2. ^ "ancestry.com". Ancestry.com. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  3. ^ Axel Klein: "Collins, Edward Joseph", in: The Encyclopaedia of Music in Ireland, ed. by Harry White and Barra Boydell (Dublin: UCD Press, 2013), p. 219.
  4. ^ Edward J Collins & Frieda J Mayer, Cook County, Illinois Marriage Indexes, 1912-1924, July 21, 1920
  5. ^ "Death Notices: Frieda Mayer Collins", Chicago Tribune, December 8, 1965
  6. ^ "ancestry.com". Ancestry.com. Retrieved October 8, 2018.

External links