Born: Au­gust 12, 1838, York, Eng­land.

Died: Jan­u­a­ry 28, 1896, Lon­don, Eng­land.

Buried: Nor­wood Cem­e­te­ry, Lon­don, Eng­land. Charles Spur­geon lies near­by.

Barnby was a com­pos­er, con­duct­or and (like his fa­ther Thom­as Barn­by) an or­gan­ist. He en­tered the choir of York Min­ster at age se­ven, and was an or­gan­ist and choir­mas­ter at twelve. In 1854 he went to Lon­don and en­tered the Roy­al Acad­e­my of Mu­sic, where he stu­died under Cip­ri­ani Pot­ter and Charles Lu­cas. In 1856, he com­pet­ed for the first Men­dels­sohn Schol­ar­ship. When the ex­am­in­a­tions were over, of the nine­teen ap­pli­cants, he was tied for first place with Ar­thur Sul­li­van. After a sec­ond test, Sul­li­van won.

Barnby was or­gan­ist at Mitc­ham, St. Michael’s, Queen­hithe, and St. James’ the Less, West­minster, be­fore he was ap­point­ed to St. An­drew’s, Wells Street, where he re­mained from 1863 to 1871, es­tab­lish­ing the mu­sic­al rep­u­ta­tion of the serv­ices. From 1871 to 1886 he was or­gan­ist of St. Anne’s, Soho, where he in­sti­tut­ed the an­nu­al per­form­ances of Bach’s Pass­ion Mu­sic ac­cord­ing to St. John, with or­ches­tral ac­comp­a­ni­ment. In 1867, Messrs. No­vel­lo, to whom he had been mu­sic­al ad­vis­er since 1861, es­tab­lished Barn­by’s Choir, which gave “or­a­tor­io con­certs” from 1869 to 1872, when it was amal­ga­mat­ed with the choir formed and con­duct­ed by M. Gou­nod at the Albert Hall, under the ti­tle of the Roy­al Al­bert Hall Chor­al So­ci­e­ty (now the Roy­al Chor­al So­ci­ety). The same pub­lish­ing firm al­so gave dai­ly con­certs in the Al­bert Hall, 1874-75, which Barn­by or­ches­trat­ed.

Barnby con­duct­ed the St. Mat­thew Pass­ion in West­min­ster Abbey in 1871. He was ap­point­ed pre­cen­tor of Eton in 1875, a post he kept until 1892, when he suc­ceed­ed Thomas Weist-Hill as prin­ci­pal of the Guild­hall School of Mu­sic.

In 1878, Barn­by mar­ried Edith Ma­ry Sil­ver­thorne. Al­so that year, he helped found the Lon­don Mu­sic­al So­ci­e­ty, be­com­ing its first di­rect­or and con­duct­or. Un­der his ba­ton, the So­ci­e­ty pro­duced Dvorak’s Sta­bat Ma­ter for the first time in Eng­land.

In 1884, Barn­by con­duct­ed the first per­for­mance in En­gland of Wag­ner’s Par­si­fal as a con­cert in the Al­bert Hall. From 1886-88 he con­duct­ed re­hears­als and con­certs of the Roy­al Acad­e­my of Mu­sic, of which he was a fel­low.

Barnby was knight­ed in 1892, and in the same year con­duct­ed the Car­diff Fes­ti­val. He con­duct­ed the fes­ti­val again in 1895.

Barnby’s com­po­si­tions in­clude an ora­tor­io (Re­be­kah, 1870), a psalm (The Lord Is King, Leeds Fes­ti­val, 1893), an enor­mous num­ber of ser­vices and an­thems, part songs and vo­cal so­lo, tri­os, etc. He al­so wrote a ser­ies of Eton Songs, 246 hymn tunes (pub­lished in one vol­ume in 1897), and ed­it­ed five hymn­als, the most im­port­ant of which was The Hym­nary (1872).

Biography courtesy of Thomas and Mary Barnby Hedges.

Sources

Music

  1. Abba
  2. Adoro Te
  3. Alverstoke
  4. Barnby
  5. Burleigh
  6. Carlton
  7. Cheshunt Col­lege
  8. Children’s Praise
  9. Chiselhurst
  10. Cloisters
  11. Crossing the Bar
  12. Crucis Um­bra
  13. Diadema
  14. Dunstan
  15. Emmaus
  16. Eton
  17. Eton Col­lege
  18. Flensburg
  19. Galilean
  20. Golden Chain
  21. Good Shepherd
  22. Holy Trin­i­ty
  23. Horeb
  24. Irae
  25. Jordan
  26. Joseph
  27. Joy and Light
  28. Last Sleep, The
  29. Laudes Domini
  30. Longwood
  31. Mansfield
  32. Merrial
  33. Monsell
  34. Nightfall
  35. Nomen Tersanctum
  36. O Voice
  37. Perfect Love
  38. Power
  39. Roseate Hues
  40. Sarum
  41. Sheltering Wing
  42. Sinai
  43. Soho
  44. St. Anselm
  45. St. Andrew
  46. St. Boniface
  47. St. Fabian
  48. St. Hilda
  49. St. Ignatius
  50. Stand Up
  51. Stanley
  52. Sunset
  53. Via Pacis
  54. Victim Divine
  55. Waring
  56. We March to Victory
  57. Winter Cold
  58. Winterton