Robin Milford - A biography
                  by Peter Hunter
                Robin Milford was born in Oxford on 22
nd January, 1903, 
                to cultured parents, Humphrey and Martha Milford (Humphrey Milford 
                was later knighted for his work with the Oxford University Press 
                from 1900 to 1945, and founded the Music Department of the OUP 
                in 1923).  Having attended preparatory school at West Downs (near 
                Winchester) and Rugby, Milford (a nervous and insecure young man) 
                gained a place at the Royal College of Music in 1921 to study 
                with R. O. Morris, Henry Ley, Gustav Holst and Ralph Vaughan Williams.   
                
                
Milford’s 
                    output suggests three distinct periods of style and influence 
                    (the 1920s; the 1930s; and the 1940s and 1950s).  The 1920s 
                    can be viewed in terms of ‘youthful expectation and apprenticeship’ 
                    with the works of this period clearly demonstrating a keen 
                    sense of creativity, imagination and craftsmanship (employing 
                    a cross-style influenced by the Parry/Stanford school and 
                    English folk-song).  The first of Milford’s compositions date 
                    from the early years of this decade when, through the encouragement 
                    of Vaughan Williams, Milford directed two family concerts 
                    of his works (the second of which included the children’s 
                    opera 
The Shoemaker, pre-1924) .  It was at these that 
                    Milford met Kirstie Newsom (governess to the grand-daughters 
                    of Sir John Stainer).  Kirstie was an able viola player and 
                    singer with a fine voice and, along with Gerald Finzi, became 
                    an important musical mentor.  Marriage in 1927 gave the composer 
                    much needed emotional stability.  
                The Shoemaker shows the composer’s already developed 
                ability and interest in writing serious works for children (involving 
                distinctive recitative, aria, carols, two- part choruses with 
                antiphonal answering, and dances), thus anticipating some of the 
                ideas of Benjamin Britten (the earlier 
Three Sea Pictures 
                and
 A Fairy Revel for piano,
 both dating from 1924, 
                were also written for children).  A profound lover of English 
                literature (particularly poetry), Milford composed his first well-known 
                songs for solo voice and piano during the 1920s.  These songs 
                (including 
The Moor, pre-1924,
 The Fiddler of Dooney, 
                pre-1925, 
On His Mistress, 1925 and 
Old Age, pre-1928
,) 
                show the composer struggling to find his own style, with these 
                works showing a mixture of influences, including Parry, Stanford 
                and Bach [1].  
Suite in D minor for oboe and strings (pre-1924) 
                ingeniously combines the influence of this English folk-song with 
                a format, itself, influenced by the Baroque composers.  
My 
                Lady’s Pleasure for piano (pre-1925), on the other hand, consists 
                of three movements totally based upon features derived from English 
                folk-song (repeating melodic and rhythmic motifs, repeating melodic 
                phrases, and strong modal implications). 
   
                
                
                One of the final works of the 1920s (
The Darkling Thrush, 1929) 
                heralds the beginning of Milford’s second compositional period.  
                Here, the composer demonstrates the profound influence of Vaughan 
                Williams and English folk-song.  Based on Hardy’s poem of the 
                same name, this work reflects 
A Lark Ascending not only 
                through its use of solo violin and orchestra but also through 
                its melodic contours and modal harmony. 
                
                The 1930s can be viewed in terms of ‘happy maturity’ and repesent 
                Milford’s second period of composition.  A happy marriage to Kirstie, 
                the birth of his son (Barnaby), successes in composition and publication, 
                recognition amongst professional musicians, and a close professional 
                and family friendship with Finzi, all allowed Milford to develop, 
                both musically and personally.  Musical development is keenly 
                seen in Milford’s compositions of the 1930s in terms of melody, 
                harmony and textures. 
                
                The fine solo songs of the second period, such as the settings 
                of Bridges, 1933, (‘So sweet love seemed’, ‘Elegy’ and ‘Love on 
                my heart’) and Hardy, 1938, (‘To Sincerity’, ‘The Colour’, ‘If 
                it’s ever spring again’ and ‘Tolerance’) show the total ease with 
                which Milford composed in a style profoundly influenced by English 
                folk-song alongside his own developing personal language (involving 
                gentle dissonance and chromatic harmonic ‘side-steps’ within a 
                mainly tonal and modal canvas).  Interestingly, the song ‘Daybreak’, 
                1930, derives from another influence, the ayre, through its melodic 
                constructions, lute-like accomaniment and delicate melisma.  The 
                oratorio, 
A Prophet in the Land  (first performed at the 
                1931 Three Choirs Festival), demonstrates the composer comfortably 
                juxtaposing the influences of English folk-song, his contrapuntal 
                training with Morris at the RCM, prominent Baroque features (as 
                in Milford’s first publically performed works, 
Concerto for 
                Strings Violin and Viols, 1925, and 
Double Fugue for 
                Orcheastra, 1926 – both performed as part of the Patron’s Fund 
                Concerts at the RCM) and the ‘classical’ style of Parry, Stanford 
                and Elgar.   
                
                The second period also shows Milford’s developing maturity through 
                his writing for larger genres and more varied forms, including 
                orchestral works (such as the 
First Symphony, 1933, 
Concerto 
                Grosso, 1936, and 
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in 
                G Minor, 1937), a more profound oratorio entitled 
The Pilgrim’s 
                Progress, 1931 (again, influenced by Vaughan Williams), chamber 
                music (e.g. 
Phantasy Quartet, 1933 for clarinet and string 
                quartet), cantatas for ladies’ voices and strings (e.g. 
Easter 
                Morning 1, 1933), a cantata for mixed voices with orchestra 
                (
The Passing Year, [2] 1935) and a 
Christmas Cantata 
                – 
Midwinter, pre-1931, for baritone and soprano soli and 
                full orchestra, including harp and organ.  Milford continued to 
                write interesting and challenging works for children during this 
                second period (e.g. the canata 
Rain, Wind and Sunshine, 
                pre-1930, for treble voices, flute, strings and piano). 
                
                
                One of the final works of the second period to be influenced completely 
                by English folk-song is 
Idyll, 1941.  Written for violin 
                and piano, this work employs wonderful undulating melodic contours, 
                a strong sense of modality, and developed dialogue (including 
                canon) between violin and piano. 
                
                By 1939, Milford had commenced a transition into a third, and 
                final, period of composition.  This period can be considered in 
                terms of 'darkness descending'.  War was declared, and Milford 
                (instantly and quite inappropriately for his temperament) volunteered 
                for the army, had a complete breakdown after a short spell in 
                the army, subsequently suffered mercilessly at the hands of war 
                officials before his release from duty, escaped from Guernsey 
                with Kistie and Barnaby before the Nazi invasion, experienced 
                the tragedy of Barnaby’s death in a road accident during 1941, 
                supported Kirstie in a breakdown after Barnaby’s death, and spent 
                the remainder of his life coping with his insecurities and developing 
                depression (both in and out of hospital and with electric shock 
                treatment.) 
                
                The third period of composition is one of greater musical experimentation 
                with the composer openly admiting that it was time for him to 
                approach a more challenging style.  Examples include the song 
                ‘I will not let thee go’, 1939, the song cycles 
In Tenebris, 
                1940-44, and 
Swan Songs, 1948-51, choral works (including 
                
This Year, Next Year, 1943-46, and 
Days and Moments, 
                1951, both for soprano solo, ladies’ chorus and piano, and 
Mass 
                for Five Voices, 1945-47), 
Threne for cello and piano, 
                1946-47), and orchestral works such as 
Elegiac Meditation, 
                1946-47, for solo viola and string orchestra and 
Fishing By 
                Moonlight, 1952, for piano and string orchestra.  Throughout 
                these works, Milford employs more angular melody and dense textures, 
                fragmentary melodic construction, greater chromaticism, tonal 
                ambiguity, dissonance, prominent falling contours, rejection of 
                tonal unity and lack of tonal centres in works of more than one 
                movement.  Milford, however, never abandoned the influence of 
                folk-song, often juxtaposing these two styles of writing within 
                the larger works just mentioned. 
                
                Following the deaths of his two great friends, Finzi in 1956 and 
                Vaughan Williams in 1958, and the deletion of many work from the 
                catalogues of his publishers, Milford gave up on life and died 
                on the 29
th December, 1959 
                
© 2011 Peter Hunter 
                Footnotes
                  1. Discussed in ‘Robin Milford (A composer illuminated 
                  by his songs), Animus Music Publications, 2009
                  
                  2. A developed form of Rain, Wind  and Sunshine, 1930, 
                  for treble voices 
                See also
                  List of works by Peter Hunter 
                  & Martin Anderson
                  
                  The 
                  Milford Centenary by Martin Anderson