Arthur Bliss
1891 - 1975
British
Summary
Bliss was an important voice in the England musical renaissance of the early twentieth century. A pupil of Stanford, much of his music embodies a specifically English, late-Romantic expression; however the influence of neo-classicism is heard in his early works, and his often colour-based style also shows the influence of Debussy. He was a prolific composer, writing over 140 works in all genres, including film music (most notably his 1935 score to Things to Come), though it is perhaps in his ballet scores such as Checkmate and Adam Zero that Bliss's music is heard at its finest.
Biography
Arthur Bliss was born in London on 2 August 1891. For over 50 years he was a familiar and central figure on the English musical scene. He was educated at Rugby and at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he studied with Charles Wood. He attended the Royal College of Music for a single term before the First World War broke out and interrupted his studies for the duration. After demobilisation in 1919, he soon won a reputation as a cosmopolitan and advanced composer.
In Madame Noy (1918), Rhapsody (1919) for two voices and chamber ensemble, and Rout (1920), he experimented with instrumental uses of the voice, in wordless vocalisation and nonsense syllables. In 1921, Bliss became conductor of the Portsmouth Philharmonic Society and two years later he moved to California. The Introduction and Allegro (1926), dedicated to the Philadelphia Orchestra and Stokowski, was the first of many works written for virtuoso ensembles or soloists, a series that included the Clarinet and Oboe Quintets, the Viola Sonata, and the Piano, Violin and Cello Concertos.
1930 saw the production, at the Norwich Festival, of one of the most deeply personal of Bliss' works, the choral symphony Morning Heroes (1930), written as a tribute to those who died in World War I. In 1934-35 he moved into a new field: ballet and film music. In the music for H.G. Wells' Things to Come (1935) and the ballet Checkmate (1937), Bliss showed striking ability to write vivid illustrative music in a relatively simple and direct style.
Bliss was in the USA when war broke out in 1939, and he remained there to teach at the University of Berkeley until 1941, when he returned to England, soon becoming Director of Music at the BBC (1942-44). He was knighted in 1950, and appointed Master of the Queen's Music in 1953. His later works include cantatas, several orchestral works, amongst which the Meditations on a Theme of John Blow (1955) stands out as one of his finest scores, and opera for television and many occasional pieces.
He died in London on 27 March 1975. Using original 78 discs recently discovered among Henry J. Wood's papers at the Royal College of Music, Philip Lane has reconstructed and re-arranged Bliss' complete score for the 1936 Alexander Korda film 'Things to Come' in a form as faithful as possible to the composer's original orchestration and intentions. Conductor Ruman Gamba has recorded the score with the BBC Philharmonic, this cd was released by Chandos in March 2001.
In Madame Noy (1918), Rhapsody (1919) for two voices and chamber ensemble, and Rout (1920), he experimented with instrumental uses of the voice, in wordless vocalisation and nonsense syllables. In 1921, Bliss became conductor of the Portsmouth Philharmonic Society and two years later he moved to California. The Introduction and Allegro (1926), dedicated to the Philadelphia Orchestra and Stokowski, was the first of many works written for virtuoso ensembles or soloists, a series that included the Clarinet and Oboe Quintets, the Viola Sonata, and the Piano, Violin and Cello Concertos.
1930 saw the production, at the Norwich Festival, of one of the most deeply personal of Bliss' works, the choral symphony Morning Heroes (1930), written as a tribute to those who died in World War I. In 1934-35 he moved into a new field: ballet and film music. In the music for H.G. Wells' Things to Come (1935) and the ballet Checkmate (1937), Bliss showed striking ability to write vivid illustrative music in a relatively simple and direct style.
Bliss was in the USA when war broke out in 1939, and he remained there to teach at the University of Berkeley until 1941, when he returned to England, soon becoming Director of Music at the BBC (1942-44). He was knighted in 1950, and appointed Master of the Queen's Music in 1953. His later works include cantatas, several orchestral works, amongst which the Meditations on a Theme of John Blow (1955) stands out as one of his finest scores, and opera for television and many occasional pieces.
He died in London on 27 March 1975. Using original 78 discs recently discovered among Henry J. Wood's papers at the Royal College of Music, Philip Lane has reconstructed and re-arranged Bliss' complete score for the 1936 Alexander Korda film 'Things to Come' in a form as faithful as possible to the composer's original orchestration and intentions. Conductor Ruman Gamba has recorded the score with the BBC Philharmonic, this cd was released by Chandos in March 2001.
News
Performances
7th September 2025
- SOLOISTS
- Elizabeth Watts, soprano Laurence Kilsby, tenor
- PERFORMERS
- BBC Singers; BBC Symphony Chorus and Orchestra
- CONDUCTOR
- Sakari Oramo
- LOCATION
- Royal Albert Hall, London, United Kingdom
17th September 2025
- SOLOISTS
- April Fredrick; Eric McElroy; Kate Romano; Ian Buckle
- PERFORMERS
- Pixels Ensemble
- LOCATION
- Pembroke College, Cambridge , United Kingdom
12th October 2025
- PERFORMERS
- Capella Edina
- CONDUCTOR
- Luis Schmidt
- LOCATION
- Usher Hall, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
17th October 2025
- PERFORMERS
- Sinfonia of London
- CONDUCTOR
- John Wilson
- LOCATION
- Glasshouse, Gateshead Scotland, United Kingdom
18th October 2025
- PERFORMERS
- Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra
- LOCATION
- Llandaff Cathedral, Barry, United Kingdom
Features
- 50th Anniversary of the death of Sir Arthur Bliss
- 2025 marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Sir Arthur Bliss. In recognition of this, hundreds of performances of his work take place internationally across the 24/25 and 25/26 seasons.
- Catalogue Classics: Witold Lutosławski's Concerto for Orchestra
- Discover Witold Lutosławski's Concerto for Orchestra and a selection of our suggested repertoire pairings.
- Catalogue Classics: Igor Stravinsky - The Soldier's Tale
- Discover the enduring appeal of Igor Stravinsky's enchanting 'L'Histoire du Soldat' (The Soldier's Tale) and a selection of our suggested repertoire pairings.