Q.1
British music enthusiasts will be well aware of Benjamin Britten, whose centenary we marked in 2013; but Bela Bartok (1881-1945) was a partial contemporary of Britten and who also specialised in collecting and using folk tunes from his native country. From which country did he come?
  • Bulgaria
  • Hungary
  • Czechoslovakia
  • Romania
Q.2
This Russian composer is remembered for his lush romantic writing for orchestra, voices and chamber instruments; but his original 'day-job' was as an international chemist and researcher: according to Wikipedia, his final piece of chemical research was on organic compounds in animal urine. But many people these days could probably still hum you some of his tunes which were turned into a stage musical in the early 1950s, around the time of in the US and and back here. Who was he?
  • Balakirev
  • Borodin
  • Bohuslavsky
  • Bliss
Q.3
(as mentioned in our previous question) is an updated stage-musical version of the Romeo and Juliet story, written in the early 1950s by a then very much living composer and conductor: who was he?
  • Anton Bruckner
  • Leonard Bernstein
  • Pierre Boulez
  • Arnold Bax
Q.4
This composer was one of the German Romantic 'heavyweights', although there is a telling anecdote from his younger years in Hamburg, where as a jobbing musician he used to play the piano in 'salons and taverns' ( probably, 'dives' and brothels) along the waterfront. On one occasion he was playing a piece while looking at a book on the piano's music-stand, but this wasn't a copy of the music (which he was playing from memory), it was an anthology of literary verse that he was reading to pass his own time, with a potential view to setting some of the poems as songs later on. This composer became a great symphonist and is perhaps best remembered for some concerti and the wonderful (German Requiem). Who was he?
  • Johannes Brahms
  • Anton Bruckner
  • Leon Boellmann
  • Ludwig van Beethoven
Q.5
This man ~ originally a guitarist and who never learnt to play the piano ~ once became so infatuated with an Irish actress that he wrote an entire, and justly famous, symphony to explore his obsession. At one later point, he was all set to travel back from Rome to France to kill his former fiancee (another woman) and her family, disguising himself 'in drag' as a woman but armed with pistols and phials of poison. This composer was a towering symphonist and opera writer, whose works also include a groundbreaking treatise on orchestration (the deployment of different instruments and tone colours by composers) and a monumental (Great Mass of/for the Dead) which, besides large choir/s and orchestra, calls for no fewer than four offstage brass bands. France recognised his genius to the extent that his portrait appeared on its 10 Franc banknote (then worth about £1) until that national currency was superseded by the Euro. Wow! Who was he?
  • Leon Boellmann
  • Gaston Berthier
  • Claude de Bussy
  • Hector Berlioz
Q.6
By his two wives (not simultaneously) he had 20 children, many of whom followed him into the musical profession. Many people regard him as the first and foremost Western classical composer, though he saw himself as God's servant through his regular church work and was not widely known beyond his own region in his lifetime; his music was recognised and rescued from obscurity about 3/4 of a century after his death, by Felix Mendelssohn. In his own younger days he had been known to take leave from his other duties and walk 200 miles to catch a recital in North Germany by an organist he admired. Who was this determined young man?
  • Dietrich Buxtehude
  • Johann Sebastian Bach
  • Anton Bruckner
  • Ludwig van Beethoven
Q.7
He was born on 22 November, the feast-day of St Cecilia who is the patron saint of music and musicians ~ as had been Purcell, to whom this 20th-century composer felt he owed a great debt. His music included film-scores, church cantatas, chamber works, opera and a massive whose premiere formed part of the commissioning of the new cathedral at Coventry, 20 years after the old one had been bombed almost out of existence during a Luftwaffe raid: he was also a committed pacifist. He lived most of his adult life in an openly creative and homosexual relationship with his partner, the singer Peter Pears, at a time when such things were not formally allowed in this country. Who was he?
  • Arthur Bliss
  • York Bowen
  • Benjamin Britten
  • George Thalben-Ball
Q.8
A family of composers and musicians moved from Venice to London hundreds of years ago to form, at one stage, the backbone of the royal wind band: a direct descendant was recently Head of Brass at the Royal College of Music. Their name comes from a town near Venice; a character with a similar name appears in a key role in Shakespeare's , while a female member of the original family has also been put forward as the likely 'dark lady of the Sonnets'. What is the linking surname?
  • Battista
  • Bassano
  • Belch
  • Borgia
Q.9
Three of the composers listed below were handicapped, as their personal and professional lives wore on, by deafness; which is the only one, so far as we know, who did NOT suffer from this problem?
  • Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Johann Sebastian Bach
  • William Boyce
  • Luigi Boccherini
Q.10
When he died in 1975 he was a Knight of 25 years' standing and also Master of the Queen's Music (since 1953), though his own output is more remembered from earlier times in his life ~ such as his response, as a composer, to losing many musical and other friends in the Great War. Possibly his best-known single piece is the startling March he wrote for the score of the film of HG Wells' . Who was he?
  • Edgar Bainton
  • Arthur Benjamin
  • Arthur Bliss
  • Arnold Bax
0 h : 0 m : 1 s