Hugh Ottaway


Hugh Ottaway was a prominent British writer and lecturer on classical music.
Ottaway studied history at Exeter University from 1944. His career began as a teacher, freelance writer and from the 1950s as a presenter of musical talks on BBC Radio. His most significant contributions to music criticism were as a commentator on that portion of twentieth-century music which retained an allegiance to tonality; thus Nielsen, Shostakovich, Sibelius and William Walton featured largely in his output.
Ottaway was especially associated with British composers such as Edmund Rubbra and Robert Simpson, and a staunch supporter of the politically active Alan Bush. But David Scott has pointed out that he "was not limited by a nationalist outlook. His ability to view English composition in a broader context also made his reviews valuable".
Ottaway was active in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the Labour Party.
He died in Malvern, aged 54. An archive of his papers is held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.

Books

Articles

  • ‘The Piano Music of John Ireland’, Monthly Musical Record 84, pp. 258–66
  • 'Nielsen's Sixth Symphony'; The Musical Times, Vol. 95, No. 1337, pp. 362–363
  • 'Clues and Keys' - Hugh Ottaway on the music of Robert Simpson'; The Listener, 21 May 1970
  • ‘Rubbra’s Symphonies’, Musical Times 112, pp. 430–32, 549–52
  • Review: 'Simpson's New Symphonies'; Tempo, No. 105, pp. 53–54