Lucy Broadwood

Lucy Etheldred Broadwood (9 August 1858 – 22 August 1929) was an English folksong collector and researcher during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As one of the founder members of the Folk-Song Society and Editor of the Folk Song Journal, she was one of the main influences of the English folk revival of that period. She was an accomplished singer, composer, piano accompanist, and amateur poet. She was much sought after as a song and choral singing adjudicator at music festivals throughout England, and was also one of the founders of the Leith Hill Music Festival in Surrey.

Life and work

Early life and family

She was born at 2am on 9 August 1858, at the Pavilion, the summer residence that her father rented at Melrose in Scotland,[1] the daughter of the piano manufacturer Henry Fowler Broadwood (1811–1893) (eldest son of James Shudi Broadwood) and his wife Juliana Maria,[2] and great granddaughter of John Broadwood, the founder of Broadwood and Sons, piano manufacturers. She was the youngest of eleven children (two boys and nine girls).[3] Henry's mother was of Scottish descent and from her he had learnt the ballad "The wee little croodin' doo", which he would sing to the young Lucy. She recalled later: "The first musical impression that I ever remember came from this song, sung by my father as I sat astride his knee when little more than two years old and in our Tweedale home."[4]

For a number of years the family maintained a home in London, where the Broadwood piano manufacturing factory was situated. In 1864, however, following the death of Lucy's uncle the Rev. John Broadwood (17981864) the family moved to Lyne House, in the parish of Capel in Surrey, just across the county border from the Sussex village of Rusper.

Sussex Songs

John Broadwood had been responsible in 1847 for self-publishing what is now recognised as the first true collection of English folk songs (comprising both words and music as collected from "rustics" in Surrey and Sussex). Other works had appeared before, but none married actual words and music as collected together. The work, which is more commonly known today by the shortened title Old English Songs, comprised a small number of songs which Broadwood had personally collected and noted down, and which were provided with arrangements by W.A. Dusart, an organist from Worthing, a few years before publication.

Lucy was inspired by his example when she learnt of it around 1870 (several years after his death).[5] This did not lead immediately to emulation; but in 1890 a revised edition of the collection was published by Leonard and Co, with new arrangements by Herbert F. Birch Reynardson, Lucy's cousin, under the title of Sussex Songs. It was produced with her assistance, and also contained an additional sixteen songs that she was recorded as having collected. (It now appears that at least one of these was collected by her father, Henry Fowler Broadwood.) The publication sold for 2/6d. It is notable that, although Lucy had worked on it, her name is not credited in its contents.

English County Songs and English Traditional Carols and Songs

Lucy was also heavily involved in the early music movement, and in editing Purcell works, and was a member of the Purcell Society. Through this association she was to become acquainted with, and was also distantly related, by the marriage of one of her cousins, to J.A. Fuller Maitland (1856–1936), a music critic and musician. Her friendship and collaboration with him was to last for the rest of her life. As a result of her work on Sussex Songs she was invited to collaborate with him on preparation of what was to become one of a number of influential folksong publications in the late 1880s/early 1890s. This was English County Songs, and this time Lucy was fully credited as joint editor of the work. The song arrangements were provided by both herself and Fuller Maitland. The book was published to much acclaim in the summer of 1893, and is a milestone in English folksong studies. In the words of Ralph Vaughan Williams:[6] "This may be said to be the starting point of the modern folk song movement". Shortly after the book's publication, her father died and she and her mother moved to a flat in London in 1894. Following her mother's death Lucy was to continue to live in a succession of London flats until her death in 1929.

Her other principal publication was English Traditional Carols and Songs which was published in 1908. On this occasion all of the song arrangements were her own, and all of the songs had been collected by her. (In the previous publication, English County Songs the majority of songs were actually gleaned from earlier publications, or had been submitted to the editors by other collectors). An important source was the Horsham shoemaker Henry Burstow, from whom she had collected many songs, the first on 2 May 1892.[7]

Folk-Song Society

As a result of the success of a number of folksong publications (including English County Songs) in the late 1880s and early 1890s, moves were made to found the Folk-Song Society, and at its inaugural meeting in 1898, Lucy was elected to the committee, together with Fuller Maitland. In 1904 she was to become the Honorary Secretary, following the illness and subsequent death of her predecessor in the post, Kate Lee, and her diary records that she held a meeting with Cecil Sharp and Ralph Vaughan Williams to plan for the resurrection of the Society and "fan its dying embers". Their work was evidently successful as the Society was to continue in existence until its amalgamation with the English Folk Dance Society in 1932, which gave rise to the English Folk Dance and Song Society, which exists to this day. Lucy also took on the mantle of Editor of the Folk Song Journal at this time. Although her Secretaryship of the Society was to last for only a short while, she retained her post as editor of the Journal (with the exception of a very short period of relinquishment) until her resignation from the work in 1926. Her work as Editor, and her research scholarship were recognised internationally, and, in his subsequent obituary of her, Vaughan Williams (amongst others) noted that it was principally her work which had ensured the existence and revival of the Society.

During her song collecting career Lucy was to collect songs from many areas - for example, from her home area of Surrey/Sussex; from Hertfordshire (where members of her family lived); from Arisaig in summer 1906 and again in summer 1907, when, inspired by Percy Grainger, she used a phonograph to collect Gaelic songs;[8] from Peebles in 1907;[9] from Lincolnshire (where she collected jointly with Grainger in 1906);[10] and from Devon (where she undertook a collecting trip with Sabine Baring-Gould in 1893).[11]

In 1929 she was elected President of the Society, but was only to hold this position for less than 12 months, as she died unexpectedly and suddenly on 22 August 1929 at the age of 71 in Dropmore, Kent, where she was visiting relatives in order to attend an arts festival in Canterbury.

Other activities

In addition to her work as a folksong collector and researcher, Lucy was also a performer who gave many recitals from the concert platform of both classical works, and folksongs; an accomplished accompanist, working with both professional singers and amateurs;and a composer in her own right, having had a number of works published in her early 20s, as well as acting as an editor for works by Purcell, and as translator of works by Bach. She was also a poet (although perhaps not a particularly notable one).

Legacy

She was buried in the churchyard at Rusper, and the family commissioned an alabaster plaque from Thomas Clapperton, which is situated on the wall just inside the entrance door of the church. On 1 May each year, the Broadwood Morris men, named after her, dance inside the church, and hang a wreath on the plaque in her honour.

To celebrate the deposit of Lucy Broadwood's diaries in January 2000, archivists at Surrey History Centre prepared an exhibition of her songs, diaries and papers which aimed to reveal some of the many facets of Lucy's life and personality in her own words and those of her friends.

Notes

  1. On the Pavilion, see e. g. Thomas Tod Stoddart, The Angler's Companion to the Rivers and Lochs of Scotland (Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons, ed. 2 1855), 235; J.M. Wilson, Nelson's Hand-book to Scotland for Tourists (London: T. Nelson and Sons, 1855), 63; Campbell (2007), 219-20.
  2. Mould (2004).
  3. Mould (2004); de Val (2004).
  4. Bassin (1969), 150-1; Campbell (2007), 219.
  5. Gregory (2008), 373.
  6. Vaughan Williams (2008), 258.
  7. Gregory (2008), 392-3.
  8. Bassin (1965); de Val (2000), 355-6.
  9. See Campbell (2007).
  10. de Val (2004), 355-6.
  11. de Val (2000), 349.

References

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