Roland Bocquet
Roland Bocquet | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Saharanpur, India | 3 June 1878
Origin | Bedford Modern School |
Died | 16 October 1956 Zürich, Switzerland | (aged 78)
Occupations | Composer |
Roland Bocquet (3 June 1878 – 16 October 1956) was a British composer, pianist and teacher who for most of his career was based in the city of
Early life
Roland Bocquet was born Hugh Rowland Bocquet in Saharanpur, India on 3 June 1878. His father was William Sutton Bocquet, a prominent railway engineer, and his mother Jessie van Zuylen of Nyvelt Gasbeke was a Flemish baroness. He was educated in England at Bedford Modern School and after entering the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich seemed destined for an Army career. However, a year after gaining a commission in the Royal Engineers he resigned from the Army and entered the Royal Academy of Music.[2]
Career
Bocquet moved to Dresden in 1900 and whilst earning his living as a teacher of Music and Mathematics entered the city's bohemian artistic circle. His compositions date from 1902, writing virtuoso piano pieces and Lieder drawn from the poetry of
In 1913 he toured America accompanied by the opera singer Leon Rains (1870-1954) who performed Bocquet's work.[citation needed] In 1914. however, he was interned at the Ruhleben internment camp in Berlin, created to house non-German subjects during the War. The camp became something of a creative melting-pot due to the large number of artists and musicians, some of them left stranded in Germany whilst visiting Bayreuth in 1914, held prisoner there. Two of Bocquets's best known works Juninacht and Lied an einen gefallenen Freund date from this period.[5] The Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (Germany) keeps a score of his Ballad No. 1 (Opus 22) as arrangement by Frederick Charles Adler (1889–1959), set for the symphony orchestra of Ruhleben internment Camp.[6]
In the 1920s his reputation was consolidated and the Roland Bocquet Society, created in Dresden to encourage the publication and appreciation of his work, flourished. His music was performed at concerts throughout Germany and also in Paris. His Four Songs (Opus 35) was also performed at the
Later life
From the late 1930s Bocquet becomes an increasingly obscure figure and no new compositions date from this time. He also seems to have developed sympathies for the Nazis, although as he never joined the Party this may not be attributable to a genuine conviction.[11] He remained in Germany during World War II, later removing to Meißen and 1954 to Zürich in Switzerland.[12] He died suddenly from a heart attack at Zürich on 16 October 1956.[12]
References
- ^ Roland Bocquet 'Lied an einen gefallenen Freund' "German Radio listings 22/07/2014" (PDF). Roland Bocquet – Gesang des Lebens (Concert). "www.noctenytor.de/roland-bocquet.html 01/12/2014".
- ^ A. Underwood, The School of the Black and the Red (Revised edn. Bedford, 2010), p. 285.
- ^ "Biografie von Roland Bocquet (1878-1945) - Sächsische Biografie | ISGV e.V." saebi.isgv.de. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- S2CID 159836059.
- ^ 'In Ruhleben Camp'
- ^ Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden Abt. 3037 Nr. 240. See also Rouven Pons, Archivalische Klänge. Konzert mit Werken von Roland Bocquet (1878–1945) im Hessischen Hauptstaatsarchiv, (Archivnachrichten aus Hessen 14/2, 2014, p.18-20); Rouven Pons, Esoteriker des Klangs. Das Leben des Dresdner Komponisten Roland Bocquet (1878–1945?), in: Neues Archiv für Sächsische Geschichte 86 (2015), S. 145–176
- ^ "BBC Proms Archive". Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ "Radio Times, 28/10/1934".
- ^ "Radio Times, 5/6/1936". Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ "Roland Bocquet in Saxony online Biographies". Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ "Roland Bocquet, Saxony online Biographies". Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ a b The Eagle, Magazine of Bedford Modern School, Vol. XXXI(I) No.233, Christmas 1956