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By

Duncan Honeybourne

Opinion

The JC essay: Reviving the music of a lost composer

May 16, 2014 15:47
The rich culture of Viennese café society in which Archy Rosenthal flourished
5 min read

As a pianist specialising in British and Irish music, I first noticed the name of Archy Rosenthal as that of the dedicatee of two of E J Moeran's liveliest piano pieces.

Later, as a frequent visitor to Dublin, I encountered Rosenthal in archive material detailing that city's vibrant musical past, and I noted references in the pages of historic journals at home and abroad to this character whose illustrious career spanned more than half a century.

I was intrigued on several counts: here was a virtuoso pianist who had also been a composer, a vigorous and engaging figure who had moved among the leading musical and artistic personalities of his day and a restless spirit who had never stayed in the same place for long.

An Irish Jew by birth, whose relaxed and gregarious whimsy was bred in his native city of Dublin, Rosenthal grew to maturity in the stimulating cafe culture of fin-de-siècle Vienna. Although chiefly a solo performer of international fame, he composed prolifically and his works are stylish, lyrical and beautifully crafted, combining Celtic melancholy and wistful, yearning melodies with the schmaltz and gemütlichkeit of the Austrian capital.