Antony Hopkins CBE (born 21 March 1921) is an
English composer,
pianist,
conductor, and
radio broadcaster.
Born in
London under the name Ernest William Antony Reynolds (it was changed in childhood to Hopkins), his works include the operas
Lady Rohesia (1947) (based on the
Ingoldsby Legends of sixteenth-century England),
The Man from Tuscany, and
Three's Company (1953); the ballet
Café des Sports; and
Scena for soprano and strings (which was later arranged for three solo voices and full orchestra).
He has written extensively for films, including
Here Come the Huggetts (1948),
The Pickwick Papers (1952),
Cast a Dark Shadow (1955), and
Billy Budd (1962).. In the 1970s he revived the long forgotten oratorio
Ruth (infamous as 'the Worst Oratorio in the World') by English composer
George Tolhurst; this was heard again in 2009 on
BBC Radio 3 programme "The Choir".
However, he is perhaps best-known for his books of musical analysis and, particularly, for his radio programmes
Talking About Music broadcast for many years by the
BBC.
He was appointed a CBE in 1976.
Books
- Beating Time
- Downbeat Music Guide
- Music all Around Me
- Musicamusings
- Music Face to Face (with André Previn)
- Pathway to Music
- Sounds of the Orchestra: A Study of Orchestral Texture
- Talking About Concertos
- Talking About Sonatas
- Talking About Symphonies
- The Dent Concertgoer's Companion
- The Nine Symphonies of Beethoven
- The Seven Concertos of Beethoven
- Understanding Music
Articles
- 'Talking About Hopkins':......
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