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Margaret Balfour

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English classical contralto This article is about the English singer. For the Scottish doctor and campaigner, see Margaret Ida Balfour. For Margaret Balfour, his mother, see Robert Louis Stevenson. For the Scottish witch, see Allison Balfour.

Margaret Balfour (1889 – January 1961) was an English classical contralto of the 1920s and 1930s. She is best remembered as the angel in Elgar's own recorded excerpts of The Dream of Gerontius (1927) and one of the 16 soloists in the original performance of Vaughan Williams's Serenade to Music (1938).

She was also recorded by HMV singing Bach's Mass in B Minor with Elisabeth Schumann and the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Albert Coates in sessions in 1929 at Kingsway Hall, London. She sang in the St Matthew Passion in November 1929 (with Keith Falkner and Elsie Suddaby) at Westminster with the Bach Cantata Club under Charles Kennedy Scott. She sang in Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 with the BBC Choral Society and the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini at the Queen's Hall, London, on 22 May 1939. She was a soloist at the Handel Festival conducted by Sir Henry Wood at Alexandra Palace in 1939.

Sources

References

  1. "Serenade to Music".
  2. "BBC Programme Index".
  3. Not to be confused with the published Toscanini 1937 performance with the BBC Choral Society and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, for which his contralto soloist was Mary Jarred.


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