John Rippiner Heath


John Rippiner Heath was a British composer, violinist and physician who lived and worked for most of his life in Wales.

Life

Heath was born in Birmingham the son of Professor Robert Heath, principal of Birmingham University's Mason College. He was educated at Clifton College before studying medicine at Trinity College, Cambridge. As a musician he was largely self taught, though he led many string quartets for the University Musical Club. In 1913 he became a medical practitioner in Barmouth, Wales. During the Great War he served as a doctor in the Royal Army Medical Corps, stationed in the Balkans.
Returning to his Barmouth practice after the war, Heath became associated with musicians including Alfred Perceval Graves, Joseph Holbrooke and Granville Bantock. In April 1919, A P Graves' son, the poet Robert Graves, asked Heath to set his poems for children to music, but the music never materialised. In 1922 he established and became the conductor of the Barmouth Choral Union, a choir which entered choral competitions around the country. He wrote for the Meirion Welsh Ballet Company and helped organize the Harlech Festival, whose driving force was Walford Davies.
Heath continued to practice as a doctor until a few days before his death in 1950 and was highly valued for his humanity and compassion, which earned him the epitaph "The Beloved Physician". He was survived by his wife, son and daughter. His son Kenneth Heath became principal cellist with the London Symphony Orchestra, and first performed his father's Cello Concerto in 1938 when he was 19 years old. Kenneth was also a founder member of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. His son Nicholas Heath is an opera director.

Music

Heath was a prolific composer, influenced both by Wales and his time in Salonica during the first war. Earlier in his career he was considered a forward looking composer, and enjoyed considerable success in Britain during the period 1919–24, with support and performances from the conductor Henry Wood, the singer Astra Desmond and the pianist Benno Moiseiwitsch. Writing in 1924, Arthur Eaglefield Hull described him as a composer who wrote "in a modern style which eliminates all literary and philosophical interest and relies on the purely musical appeal". Some 20 of his works were published over this period.
Two pieces inspired by his time in Salonica - the Serbian Quartet and the Three Macedonian Sketches - were particularly popular, and used themes and rhythms he heard while there. Performances at The Proms and on BBC radio helped him gain national attention. The Slopes of Kaimactchalen, an orchestral overture, was heard at The Proms, Queen's Hall in October 1919 with the composer conducting. A second Proms appearance came in October 1923 with his orchestral Scherzo. And there were further significant performances in London, Birmingham and Liverpool.
But after 1925 his profile outside of Wales went into sharp decline, even though he continued to compose. The Lamp, a symbolic drama for actors, singers and chamber ensemble, was written during the early 1920s, but not broadcast by the BBC until July 15, 1938. Later works include his Symphonic Study No. 2, written in response to the Second World War and dedicated to the men on the beaches at Dunkirk, inspired by John Masefield's poem Nine Days' Wonder. The Cello Concerto, written in 1938 for his son Kenneth, was revived in 1962, and again on 1 October 2019 at St John's Smith Square.
Some scores have been lost, including multiple violin sonatas and trios. But a substantial archive of manuscripts are held in the National Library of Wales and the Hugh Owen Library, Aberystwyth University.

Works

OrchestraThe Slopes of Kaimactchalen Scherzo Three Characteristic Dances Three Picturesque Pieces Three Pieces for String Orchestra: Overture, Romance, and Rondel
  • Concerto for flute, clarinet and bassoon May Eve: A Phantasie for OrchestraWelsh Fantasy
  • Cello Concerto
  • Symphonic Overture
  • Symphonic Study No. 1
  • Symphonic Study No. 2
  • Symphony for String Orchestra
  • Triple Concerto
Chamber and instrumental musicFive Pictures of the Night for piano Serbian string quartet Three Macedonian Sketches for violin and piano
  • Violin Sonata
  • Septet for strings and wind In the Heart of the Country, for violin and piano Six Inventions for pianoReflexions for piano Four Humoresques for pianoA Child's Night, suite for pianoA Rune, for piano
DramaticThe Lamp, for actors, dancers, chorus and wind quintet, libretto W A Stokes In the Valley of White Poppies, choreographic opera The Nut Tree, children's ballet Pannyra of the Golden Heel, ballet The Harp of Caergia, Welsh ballet
Choral and songThe Enchanted Hour, song cycle Admiral Death, for baritone and orchestra Il Bosco Sacro, three part female voices, string quartet and harp Three Welsh Landscapes Three Short Love Songs A Summer Song
  • Over 100 songs