List of female composers by birth date

Nineteenth-century composer and pianist Clara Wieck (Schumann)

The following is a list of female composers in the Western concert tradition, ordered by their year of birth.[1] Women composers' names are still largely absent from music textbooks and concert programs that constitute the Western canon, even though a large number of women have composed music. The reasons for women's exclusion are various.

The musicologist Marcia Citron speculated that women composers were deemed less important than men because women typically wrote smaller works, such as art songs, rather than large works, such as symphonies, for public performance in large halls. Female composers were long barred from the profession, owing in part to the essentialist notion that women could not, in Citron's words, "control emotion with logic and reason, masculine attributes requisite for composition." Women were systematically denied access to compositional training and musical performances, and were castigated by critics for writing music that was either too feebly feminine or too unbecomingly masculine.[2] Because the discrimination against women composers is related to general societal attitudes about gender or perceived roles of men and women, many musicologists and critics have come to incorporate gender studies in assessing the history and practice of the art.

Some notable Western composers and musicians include: Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179), a German Benedictine abbess, writer, composer, philosopher, Christian mystic, visionary, and polymath; Fanny Mendelssohn (1805–1847); Clara Schumann (1819–1896); Ethel Smyth (1858—1944); Amy Beach (1867—1944); Rebecca Clarke (1886—1979); Nadia Boulanger (1887—1979); Germaine Tailleferre (1892—1983); Lili Boulanger (1893–1918); and Sofia Gubaidulina 1931—.

Female composers are also listed alphabetically at List of female composers by name.

Before 16th century

16th century

17th century

1701–1750

Princess Anna Amalia of Prussia

1751–1800

1801–1850

1851-1875

1876-1900

1900s

1910s

1920s

1930s

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Unknown

See also

Sources

  • List partially created using Grove's "Explore" function, Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed 23 September 2006), grovemusic.com (subscription access).
  • "Women Composers: A Database by the Kapralova Society." (accessed 23 July 2013),

References

  1. Print sources include the Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers, ed. by Julie Anne Sadie & Rhian Samuel (New York; London: W.W. Norton, c1995), Barbara Garvey Jackson, 'Say Can You Deny Me': A Guide to Surviving Music by Women from the 16th Through the 18th Centuries (Fayetteville: Univ of Arkansas Press, 1994), and Aaron I. Cohen, International Encyclopedia of Women Composers (NY: Books & Music, 1987).
  2. Citron, Marcia J., "Gender and the Musical Canon," Journal of Musicology 8, no. 1 Winter 1990).
  3. Burkholder, J. Peter; Grout, Donald Jay; Palisca, Claude V. (2014). A History of Western Music (International Student Edition, 9th ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-393-93711-4.

Further reading

  • THE WOMAN COMPOSER QUESTION: PHILOSOPHICAL AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES by Eugene Gates, Kapralova Society Journal.
  • Historical Anthology of Music by Women. James R. Briscoe, ed. Indiana University Press, 1986 ( ISBN 0-253-21296-0)
  • "Les Compositrices en France au XIXe siècle", by Florence Launay, Fayard, Paris, 2006. ISBN 2-213-62458-5
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