Guirne Creith


Guirne Creith was an English composer and pianist most active in the 1920s and 1930s. She received the Charles Lucas Prize in 1925, having entered the Royal Academy of Music just two years before under the pseudonym Guirne M Creith. As a student at the Academy she studied composition under Benjamin Dale and conducting under Sir Henry Wood. She later studied piano with the Swiss pianist and renowned Bach interpreter Edwin Fischer.
After her death she became known for her Concerto in G minor for Violin and Orchestra, which had been premiered by Albert Sammons, conducted by Constant Lambert, on 19 May 1936. It was revived in 2008 by Lorraine McAslan and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, conducted by Martin Yates. A recording was issued on the Dutton label.

Works

Katharine Copisarow's worklist includes four orchestral pieces, six works of chamber music, six songs, and one ballet. The recently-recorded concerto was discovered by family members in full-score manuscript. In all, of these, only her published songs and the violin concerto are known to survive, and the latter only because the manuscript was rediscovered.
BBC broadcast listings and newspaper reviews show that Creith's time in the public spotlight was limited. Her Ballet Suite in Four Movements was broadcast on 8 February, 1928, with the composer conducting. The orchestral tone poem May Eve was broadcast on 3 June, 1928, and her one movement String Quartet in E minor on 28 November, 1928, performed by the Stratton String Quartet. During the 1930s Creith was appearing as a recitalist rather than a composer, though occasionally she would include her own works in the programmes, such as the Violin Sonata in Bb, which she played with Albert Sammons on 27 June, 1933 at the Wigmore Hall. The Violin Concerto, written between 1932 and 1934 and performed in a BBC studio broadcast in 1936, was dedicated to Sammons. It's been described as "a full-blown concerto based on the French model, in a style that recalls the later Russian Romantics, such as Glazunov and Arensky."

Later career

In 1940, she married Walter Hunter Coddington, by whom she had two sons: Robin and Jeremy. They were divorced after a few years. Following an accident in 1952 that resulted in a permanent injury to her right hand, Creith became a singer, studying with Reinhold Gerhardt at the Guildhall School of Music, before turning to teaching from her mews flat in Swiss Cottage, Hampstead, London. During this period some songs were published under the name Guirne Javal. Her piano students included the young David Fanshawe. In later years Creith reinvented herself once again. After a five year spell living in France, she became a French food and wine expert, publishing two books under the name Guirne Van Zuylen: Eating with Wine and Gourmet Cooking for Everyone.