Born: Ju­ly 9, 1805, Well­ing­ton, Shrop­shire, Eng­land.

Died: Feb­ru­a­ry 21, 1876, Lon­don, Eng­land.

Buried: Ken­sal Green Cem­e­te­ry, Lon­don, Eng­land. Ad­e­laide Proc­ter & Will­iam Wall­ace lie near­by.


An exceptionally gift­ed or­gan­ist, Gaunt­lett was well known in 19th Cen­tu­ry Eng­lish mu­sic cir­cles. He was al­so, in turn, law­yer, au­thor, or­gan de­sign­er, and or­gan re­ci­tal­ist.

His fa­ther, Hen­ry Gaunt­lett, was Cur­ate at Well­ing­ton Par­ish Church, Sa­lop, Eng­land, where Hen­ry John was born. Hen­ry had two sis­ters, Ly­dia and Ar­a­bel­la, both ac­comp­lished mu­si­cians. When his fa­ther moved to Ol­ney, Buck­ing­ham­shire, in 1814, he int­end­ed the two girls to share the post of or­gan­ist, but the young Gaunt­lett per­suad­ed his fa­ther to ap­point him ins­tead. With­in six months, be­ing taught by his mo­ther, he was pro­fi­cient enough to take up the post. Lat­er, he took less­ons from Wes­ley. Att­wood, a pu­pil of Mozart, want­ed to ap­point him as his as­sist­ant at St. Paul’s Ca­thed­ral, Lon­don. Gaunt­lett the el­der dis­cour­aged his son from be­com­ing a pro­fess­ion­al mu­si­cian, be­liev­ing they were sub­ject to too ma­ny tempt­a­tions of the flesh! Con­se­quent­ly, Hen­ry the young­er be­came a law­yer and moved to Lon­don, where he prac­ticed with his br­other.

In 1827 he took up his first post as or­gan­ist at St. Olave, South­wark. It was here he be­gan his cam­paign for the re­form of or­gan de­sign, which was to bring him in­to such con­flict with the es­tab­lished or­gan world. Ne­ver­the­less, he per­sist­ed to the point where he int­ro­duced the “Grand Chor­us” based on con­ti­nent­al style or­gans, ex­tend­ing the pe­dal com­pass and pa­tent­ing elec­tri­ci­ty to pow­er the in­str­ument.

His collabora­tion with or­gan de­sign­er Will­iam Hill last­ed from the late 1830’s to 1860. Dur­ing this per­i­od, Gaunt­lett ed­it­ed The Mu­sic­al World and lat­er pro­vid­ed ar­ti­cles for var­i­ous pub­li­ca­tions. He was al­so much in de­mand as a per­form­er. In 1846, Men­dels­sohn chose him to play the or­gan part in the first per­for­mance of Elijah in Birm­ing­ham Town Hall. It was about this time he was grant­ed a Lam­beth Doc­tor­ate by the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. How­ley.

Gauntlett was a pro­li­fic hymn writ­er; it is said he wrote 10,000 hymns. As this would re­quire him to write three hymns a day for thir­ty years, this fig­ure is doubt­ful. He did, how­ev­er, ed­it var­i­ous hymn books and was “ac­tive­ly con­cerned with ev­ery ma­jor col­lect­ion of hymns made over the course of about fif­ty years” (Bishop, 1971).

Gauntlett has been de­scribed as “The Fa­ther of Church Mu­sic” for he was the cre­at­or of the school of four-part hymn tunes. Whe­ther he de­serves this ac­co­lade is de­bat­a­ble. Yet he was ad­mired by Men­dels­sohn no less who wrote of him, “His li­ter­a­ry at­tain­ments, his know­ledge of the his­to­ry of mu­sic, his ac­quaint­ance with acous­ti­cal law, his mar­ve­lous mem­o­ry, his phil­o­so­phi­cal turn of mind as well as prac­ti­cal ex­per­i­ence—these ren­der him one of the most re­mark­a­ble pro­fess­ors of the age.”

A portrait of Gauntl­ett, cir­ca 1840, hangs in the Roy­al Coll­ege of Or­gan­ists, Lon­don, and is re­pr­oduced in The Mak­ing of the Vic­tor­i­an Or­gan (This­tle­waite: Cam­bridge Un­i­ver­si­ty Press, 1990).

Sources


Music

  1. Audley
  2. Constance
  3. Cry of Faith
  4. Evermore
  5. Gauntlett
  6. Hawkhurst
  7. Houghton
  8. I Love to Hear the Story
  9. In Viam Rectam
  10. Irby
  11. Newland
  12. Oklahoma City
  13. Riseholme
  14. Sherwood
  15. Southwold
  16. St. Albinus
  17. St. Alphege
  18. St. Barnabas
  19. St. Fulbert
  20. St. George (Gauntlett)
  21. St. Mark
  22. Stuttgart
  23. Triumph
  24. Un­i­ver­si­ty Coll­ege