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Colin Mason – A Memoir

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Extract

It is now just over a year since Colin Mason died at the age of 47. I first met him in 1964 when, as chairman of the Macnaghten Concerts Society, he asked me to compose a new work for the forthcoming season. The occasion was a concert including Roberto Gerhard's Nonet, and Colin suggested that I might like to write a piece featuring the piano accordion, an instrument much favoured by Gerhard (and used in his Nonet) but for which virtually no other chamber music repertoire existed. I subsequently wrote The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo for trumpet, piano and piano accordion, given its first performance at a Macnaghten Concert in October 1964. I was then still a student, and this was the first commission I had ever received. I have no idea how Colin lighted upon my name; but it is well known that as a critic he did not have his head in the clouds, but kept his ear firmly to the ground, the better to detect the rumblings of burgeoning compositional talent.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

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