Kathleen Schlesinger (1862, in Holywood, Ireland – 1953, in London) was a British music archaeologist and curator of musical instruments at the British Museum.[1] She specialized in the history of musical instruments and was called in 1911 "the greatest authority on the subject".[2] In 1939, her Greek Aulos presented her analysis of the modes used on aulos instruments in ancient Greek music.
She was editor of The Portfolio of Musical Archaeology. She was responsible for "practically all of the articles" about musical instruments in the Encyclopædia Britannica of 1911.[2]
Schlesinger was a friend of and close collaborator with “forgotten Australian modernist” composer Elsie Hamilton,[3] who was working with just intonation as early as the 1920s.[4]
Bibliography
edit- Kathleen Schlesinger, The instruments of the modern orchestra & early records of the precursors of the violin family, with over 500 illustrations and plates, London: W. Reeves, 1910. [1]
- --, A bibliography of musical instruments and archaeology, intended as a guide to the study of the history of musical instruments, London: W. Reeves, 1912. [2]
- --, The Greek Aulos: A Study of Its Mechanism and of Its Relation to the Modal System of Ancient Greek Music, Followed by a Survey of the Greek Harmoniai in Survival Or Rebirth in Folk-music, Methuen, 1939
Notes
edit- ^ A. R. Meuss, Intervals, Scales, Tones and the Concert Pitch C, 2004 ISBN 1902636465, p. 27
- ^ a b The Reader's Guide to the Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica Company, 1913 p. 185
- ^ Goh, Talisha (2014). Australia’s Microtonal Modernist: The Life and Works of Elsie Hamilton (1880-1965) (thesis). Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. pp. 1–2.
- ^ Lee, Brian (2006). Kathleen Schlesinger and Elsie Hamilton: Pioneers of Just Intonation (PDF).