Robert Donington in the context of "Early music"

Play Trivia Questions online!

or

Skip to study material about Robert Donington in the context of "Early music"




⭐ Core Definition: Robert Donington

Robert Donington OBE (4 May 1907 – 20 January 1990) was an English musicologist and instrumentalist. He was influential in the early music movement and in Wagner studies.

↓ Menu

In this Dossier

Robert Donington in the context of Galpin Society

The Galpin Society was formed in October 1946 to further research into the branch of musicology known as organology, that is the history, construction, development and use of musical instruments. Based in the United Kingdom, it is named after the British organologist and musical instrument collector, Canon Francis William Galpin (1858–1945), who had a lifelong interest in studying, collecting, playing, making and writing about musical instruments. The membership in 1999 was around a thousand.

The society's founder members were keen to form a society to promote the historical study of all kinds of musical instruments. The founding members included academics, professional and amateur performers, and private collectors, including Anthony Baines, Robert Donington, Hugh Gough, Eric Halfpenny, Edgar Hunt, Eric Marshall Johnson, Lyndesay Langwill, Reginald Morley-Pegge, F. Geoffrey Rendall and Maurice Vincent. Philip Bate was the inaugural chairman of the society and Professor Jack Westrup, Heather Professor of Music at the University of Oxford, served as its first president. One of the inaugural vice-presidents was the widow of Arnold Dolmetsch, and the others included Walter F. H. Blandford, Adam Carse and Rosamond E. M. Harding. Bate later served as president (1977–99).

↑ Return to Menu