Elgar manuscript sells for £5,400
AN UNDISCOVERED melody written and signed by Sir Edward Elgar has been sold for £5,400 by Richard Winterton.
The ‘andante’ dating to 1924, pictured, was notated on musical manuscript and then signed by the great composer, who was responsible for some of the most stirring music to ever come from England.
Believed to be scored for a string quartet, the swelling tune could be a brief overture for a more comprehensive piece.
The manuscript featured in Richard Winterton’s Library Sale at The Lichfield Auction Centre, Fradley Park, Staffordshire, on March 26.
Mr Winterton – auctioneer of BBC Bargain Hunt and Dickinson’s Real Deal – discovered the music paper tucked inside an autograph book, which is itself bulging with impressive signatures dated to 1923 and 1924.
The autograph sold as a separate lot in the same auction for £3,600.
Mr Winterton said: “The excitement built. With more than 1,000 watching it online and 35 registered bidders on this lot at any one time, plus bidders on the telephones and a packed room, it just showed what an incredible find this was.
“And the vendors were in the room, which put extra pressure on!
“We are absolutely delighted with these results – a very well-deserved total hammer price of £9,000 for the manuscript and the autograph book.”
He added: “We understand that the purchaser intends to make the manuscript available to Elgar scholars in case anyone wants to examine it musically. The manuscript will initially be in Winchester and people will have access in due course.”
The signatures were all collected by Lydia Tabb, a matron at Barnardos, during her time fundraising for the charity.
Relatively little is known about Lydia – at one point she possibly lived in Chertsey; her maiden name was Probyn and in 1939 she married Herbert Edward Tabb, who was described in a contemporary newspaper wedding report as assistant superintendent at the school of handicrafts.
Lydia, who was born in 1897 and died in 1983, worked tirelessly for Barnardos and at one point travelled to Australia on behalf of the charity.
She also had links to Godalming in Surrey but in her later years lived in a flat at Gravelly Hill, Birmingham.
Lydia’s great niece Linda Brewer and Linda’s sister Jane Coombs remember visiting her there as children.
“My dad would mow the lawn while we would sit with her eating sandwiches and watching the wrestling,” said Linda, from Solihull.
“But I don’t remember her ever mentioning the autograph book or the Elgar manuscript.
“It’s a bit of a mystery as to how Lydia compiled the signatures of so many famous and influential people and we would love to find out more.”
Sir Edward William Elgar (June 2 1857 – February 23 1934) is regarded as one of England’s greatest composers, with many of his compositions featuring in classical concert repertoires all over the world.
Orchestral works such as the Enigma Variations and Pomp and Circumstance marches sit among his best-known compositions alongside two symphonies and concertos for violin and cello.
The autograph album dates from 1923 and contains approximately 69 signatures including five Prime Ministers (Herbert Henry Asquith, David Lloyd George, Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay MacDonald and Winston Churchill) and four important authors (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, HG Wells, Sir JM Barrie and Rudyard Kipling). Elgar’s last large-scale composition from the WW1 period was musical settings of verses by Rudyard Kipling.
Other signatures in the book include those of Charlie Chaplin, the future King George VI (1923 was the year he married Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon) and many important figures from the First World War including Marshal Ferdinand Foch, the supreme Allied Commander during WW1, and Field Marshal Earl Haig.