The best works by Ethel Smyth

We look at some of the best pieces of music by the leading composer and suffragette Ethel Smyth

Published: January 16, 2024 at 11:07 am

Ethel Smyth (1858-1944) was an English composer and suffragette. A leading musical figure of her era, she became the first female composer to be awarded a damehood. Her March of the Women became the official anthem of the Women's Social and Political Union.

Despite the wishes of her father, she was determined to pursue a career in music. Smyth's studies took her to the Leipzig conservatory at the age of 17. There, she studied with Reinecke, and met composers including Dvořák, Grieg, Tchaikovsky, Clara Schumann and Brahms.

Smyth wrote everything from songs and piano works to orchestral pieces and large-scale works. Her operatic success saw her become the first woman to have an opera performed at the New York Metropolitan Opera. She was also a gifted writer, publishing works of non-fiction and autobiography.

But where should you begin with getting to know her music? Here are six of the best pieces by Ethel Smyth.

Best works by Ethel Smyth

Variations on an Original Theme (Of an Exceedingly Dismal Nature) in D flat (1878)

This is one of Smyth’s earliest surviving works, dating from her time at the Leipzig Conservatory (1877-78). One of the variations is a humorous depiction of her spirited horse, Phyllis, who once threw Smyth into a ditch. This event was illustrated in pencil on the score by the composer.

If the title suggests this is not an altogether serious work, Smyth's writing already shows a mastery of both light, fluent melody and a flair for drama.

Listen to the full piece here:

String Quintet in E, Op. 1 (1883)

For her Opus One, Smyth turned to chamber music. Her String Quintet in E was first heard in public at the Leipzig Gewandhaus. This five-movement Brahmsian work rooted in her training at the conservatory.

As with her other early chamber works, the Quintet shows an assured approach to form. It also has a winning expressiveness that is most telling in the slow movements.

Serenade in D (1890)

Written after she returned to England from Germany, this striking four-movement orchestral Serenade is influenced by Brahms. Premiered at the Crystal Palace, the work brought Smyth public success.

The Serenade in D was Smyth's first orchestral work. It was premiered by conductor August Manns at the Crystal Palace and, along with the Overture to Anthony and Cleopatra, brought Smyth's music to London audiences for the first time.

The general belief in that era was that women were not able to compose as well as men – something that Smyth was determind to disprove. Her genial, large-scale work is cast in four movements and is symphonic in scope.

Mass in D (1891)

This substantial six-part Mass was premiered at the Royal Albert Hall and was, George Bernard Shaw came to believe, ‘magnificent’. Yet after writing it, Smyth lost her religious (High Anglican) faith.

Smyth’s Mass in D helped put her on the map, as one of her first pieces with a distinctive individual style. It dates from a period in her life when she experienced a renewal in her religious belief, thanks to her close friend Pauline Trevelyan, to whom the Mass is dedicated – although she later said that writing the Mass ‘sweated religious or at least dogmatic fervour out of me’.

The premiere took place at the Royal Albert Hall in 1893, and the piece was described by George Bernard Shaw as 'magnificent'.

The Wreckers (1902-4)

Smyth believed that English composers were well suited to writing light opera, so it's perhaps no surprise that one of her best known works falls into this category.

The Wreckers is a lyrical drama that tells the tale of a Cornish community whose livelihood depends on luring ships onto rocks during storms and collecting the bounty.

Intertwined within this narrative is a love story between Mark, who wants to save the ships and the lives of those on board, and Thirza, who wants to protect Mark from the disapproving villagers.

Thomas Beecham conducted the English premiere of Smyth’s salty Cornish opera in 1909, after the opera got off to a stormy start, in German translation, in Leipzig.

Although Mahler was reputedly considering the piece for Vienna State Opera before he was fired it was never staged there, but it did make it Covent Garden in 1910.

The March of the Women (1911)

Smyth wasn't just a musician: she was also a suffragette. She devoted herself to the cause for two years, giving up her music in order to focus on it completely. In 1911, her piece The March of the Women became the anthem of the women’s suffrage movement.

The piece became a symbol of the movement, and was sung not only at rallies, but also in prisons when the women were on hunger strike. The Votes for Women newspaper described the song as ‘at once a hymn and a call to battle’.

The Boatswain's Mate

This comic two-acter was Smyth’s most successful opera in her lifetime. The sparkling score features the tune that became The March of the Women.

Concerto for Violin and Orchestra

By the time Smyth penned this concerto, she was dealing with deafness. The craggy opening movement leads to a lyrical Elegy and a dancing finale.

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