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AMY MARCY BEACH
(1867-1944)
Born Amy Marcy Cheney in Henniker, NH. in 1867, Mrs. H.H. Beach,
as she styled herself after her marriage to a prominent physician in 1885, became the first woman composer
to achieve wide recognition in America. A child prodigy on the piano, she made her Boston concert debut at age
sixteen. Within two years she had performed Chopin's F MINOR CONCERTO FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA with the Boston Symphony
and had begun to tour widely as a soloist.
After marriage to Dr. Beach, however, she curtailed her concertizing in favor of homemaking.
It was during this period until her husband's death in 1910 that Mrs. Beach first began to compose.
Her FESTIVAL JUBILATE, written for the dedication of the Women's Building at Chicago's Columbian Exposition of 1892,
won recognition for her as a serious composer in the Romantic genre. She followed this success with a GAELIC SYMPHONY,
performed by the Boston Symphony in 1896, and her PIANO CONCERTO IN C-SHARP minor in 1899, which she herself premiered
with the same orchestra.
As a widow, Mrs. Beach resumed her concertizing in America and Germany and increased her compositional output.
In addition to her piano music and large scale orchestral works, she created more than 150 songs, almost all in
the grand, operatic, heart-on-sleeve vein of the late 19th century.
Settings like AH, LOVE, BUT A DAY! and THE YEAR'S
AT THE SPRING became staples of the early 20th century concert repertory.

Listen to "Ah, Love But A Day" in the Songbook
After her death in 1944, Mrs. Beach's music, like so many other Romantic works, endured a period of neglect,
which recently is being reversed by the efforts of committed singers and musicologists.
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First Woman
Composer to Achieve Serious Acclaim
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Neither the first nor the last American woman to write concert music,
Amy Beach retains a certain cachet as the first to achieve serious acclaim both in this
country and abroad. Considered in her day to be the equal of Paine, Parker, Chadwick, Foote
and the other members of the Second New England School, it is may seem ironic that until
recently her reputation has been kept alive largely through amateur societies and women's clubs.
Yet, one must consider the role that domestic music making had in shaping all of
19th century American musical taste.
If one remembers that virtually every middle class American home had a piano;
that a young lady's accomplishments were expected to include playing and singing;
and that amateur music making (in which women played a dominant role) figured significantly
in creating a public for professional classical music, then it is less surprising that Amy Beach,
despite her formal training and professional achievements,
remained connected to this tradition throughout her life and even after her death.
Sometimes criticized for the sentimentality of her writing,
like so many other composers of her day, Amy Beach was simply
exploring her roots and her cultural context; she was a child of
the great Romantic era which swept Europe and America, and she was
also a student of that more intimate kind of romanticism--the sentiment
born of hearth and home and the individual heart.
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