Showing 13542 results

Authority record

Avison, Charles, 1709-1770

  • https://lccn.loc.gov/n82003133
  • Person
  • 1709-1770

Charles Avison was baptized on February 16, 1709, at St. John the Baptist Church in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

He was an English composer, organist, educator, and writer on musical aesthetics during the Baroque and Classical periods. Avison's father was a musician and likely his first teacher. In his twenties, Avison moved to London to further pursue his career as a musician and began to study with Francesco Geminiani. His first documented musical performance was a benefit concert in London on March 20, 1734. In 1736, Avison accepted a position of an organist at St. John’s and later at St. Nicholas’ churches in Newcastle, where where he became director of the Newcastle Musical Society. He held both positions until his death. He also taught harpsichord, flute, and violin. Avison organized some of the earliest subscription concerts in the country. His work "An Essay on Musical Expression" (1752) is believed to be the first book of music criticism in English. The bulk of his output consists of some 50 Concerti Grossi for various instruments, published in six volumes between 1747 and 1769, as well as 12 Concerti Grossi (1744) arranged from keyboard works of Domenico Scarlatti. Curiously, for a man so long associated with the church, he wrote almost no religious music. Over a century after Avison's death, poet Robert Browning paid him tribute in his book "Parleyings with Certain People of Importance In Their Day" (1887).

In 1737, he married Catherine Reynolds ( -1766). He died on May 9 or 10, 1770 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

Axton, Hoyt

  • n 91072440
  • Person
  • 1938-1999

Folk music singer-songwriter Hoyt Axton, with a distinctive bass-baritone, was the son of a football-coach father and song writing English-teacher mother, Mae Boron Axton (she co-wrote Elvis Presley’s 1956 first hit, Heartbreak Hotel). He was born in Duncan, Oklahoma, but the family soon moved to Comanche in the same state; then in 1949 it went to Jacksonville, Florida, where Hoyt’s father, now a naval officer on the U.S.S. Princeton, was stationed. He got a football scholarship at Oklahoma State University and had been considering an athletic career, but left early and enlisted in the Navy instead. After discharge from the Navy, he headed west and began singing in San Francisco nightclubs; he had studied piano as a teen, later switching to guitar. He recorded his first album in the early 60s and many more during the 70s; he also sang and composed commercials and began making TV and film appearances. In 1978 he formed his own record label, Jeremiah, which did not last. He struggled with alcohol and cocaine addiction (noted in several of his songs), and had several unsuccessful marriages. Despite this busy career, his most notable successes were songs he wrote that others made famous; these included the Kingston Trio’s rendition of his song “Greenback Dollar” (1963) and Three Dog Night’s performance of his “Joy to the World” that topped the charts for 6 weeks, the top hit of 1971. Dozens of artists covered his songs over the next decades: Steppenwolf, Ringo Starr, Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, John Denver, Anne Murray. It was this legacy of song writing rather than his 45 film and movie appearances, or his own singing, that will be remembered. He was confined to a wheelchair after a stroke in 1995, and he and his fourth wife were arrested in 1997 for marijuana possession. In 1999, poor health led to two heart attacks, the second of which he did not survive. Both he and his mother were posthumously inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame in Muskogee in 2007.

Results 521 to 530 of 13542