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George Onslow

George Onslow

(1784 - 1853)

The "French Beethoven"

André George Louis Onslow (July 27, 1784 - October 3, 1853) is a very special figure in the history of music: widely and unanimously acknowledged when he was alive, he is now nearly forgotten and his works, mainly devoted to string chamber music, are almost missing from the repertoire, partly due to the fact that they haven't been available in a modern edition for more than a century.

Stemming from an old aristocratic British family, several members of whom played an important part in British political life (his grand-father, first Earl of Onslow, was the Speaker at the Chamber of Commons), George Onslow was born in Clermont-Ferrand (center of France) in 1784. His father, Edward, had settled there after a family scandal which pushed him to leave his mother country.

Quickly integrated into the Clermont nobility, the Onslows lead a peaceful life until the Revolution of 1789 which compromised their safety. Jailed in 1793 because of his nationality and in spite of his friendship with Couthon, whose freemason brother he was, Edward Onslow was forced into exile in 1797. His first stops were in Rotterdam and Hamburg. His older son, George, joined him in what prove to be a grand study tour. Between 1798 and 1806 George studied the piano with several masters, especially Johann Baptist Cramer, Jan Ladislav Dussek and Nicolas-Joseph Hüllmandel who were teaching in London. Stays in Germany and Austria enable him to improve his training as an instrumentalist. His father's exile ended in 1804.

Onslow did not mean to become an artist, even less a composer: studying the piano was only part of his education; as well as mathematics, history, fencing, horse riding, drawing (two of his brothers devoted themselves to painting), etc. In his parent's opinion, it was more a drawing-room gift than a professional ability. Onslow never gave a recital as a pianist: he only performed in the provincial town of Clermont (which he never did in Paris)to demonstrate he could improvise, and he also studied the cello as an amateur in order to be part of a quartet of friends with whom he played the masters' repertoire (Mozart, Haydn, and young Beethoven).

Onslow discovered his vocation as a composer while listening to the Overture to the opera Stratonice by Etienne-Nicolas Méhul. He is then 22 years of age. His first attempts, a set of three string quintets, is so successful that his friends, his publisher Pleyel, and his interpreters induce him to persevere. Many other chamber pieces follow, but soon Onslow realized what was missing. Thus he decided to complete his theoretical knowledge by studying with Anton Reicha, who was his only master in composition. His influence would be decisive esthetically as well as stylistically.

Onslow launched into a brilliant career that turned him into a leading composer of musical life in the first half of nineteenth century. His music was played by the greatest musicians of his time and his name was next to Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven, of whom people said he was the only worthy successor. Nicknamed "the French Beethoven", he was the only musician, at least in France, who devoted himself to chamber music. Composing 36 quartets and 34 quintets, Onslow left us exceptional works which supplied main European concert societies for more than fifty years. And he enriched his publishers, even in the United States (Schirmer).

Onslow mainly becomes a national glory in Germany where he is much admired and praised. He is very famous among the musicians and the audience. Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann witnessed this live. His contemporaries admired him and he was widely published, but he was also acknowledged by the institutions: as a member of most European societies (London in 1829 along with Mendelssohn, Rotterdam in 1834, Vienna in 1836, Rome in 1839, Florence in 1839, Cologne in 1847, Strasbourg in 1849, and Stockholm in 1851), he was elected in 1842 at the Fine Arts Academy, in particular before Hector Berlioz.

At a time when, in Paris, vaudeville and opera comique were most favoured, Onslow embodied the continuity of the great classic school and was an alibi for these who think music is decadent while musical life is "privatised". The "soirées de quatuors" of Pierre Baillot in Paris, Robert Lindley in London and Zimmerman in Berlin were thought to be the last refuges of "true music". Onslow became the herald of those who defended tradition and instrumental excellence against such drifts as romances, quadrilles and other entertainment compositions. Onslow composed no less than three operas though, out of curiosity and because he wanted enhance his fame (The Alcade of Vega, 1824 ; The Pedlar, 1827; The Duke of Guise, 1837). Although these works were given at the "salle Favart", those who witnessed their creation unanimously declared they could have been given at the "Opera". Onslow's lyric scores were dense and unusually complex for the audience, and since their libretto were not of great value (a redhibitory defect in those days, especially in France), the operas were praised out of regards only, although the critics loved them and although Berlioz himself enthusiastically defended the Duke of Guise.

In his instrumental and orchestral music (4 symphonies), Onslow announced romanticism by the richness of his harmony, the preponderance of chromaticisms, his storm-like tormented inspiration and the fervour of his lyrical themes. One of the reasons why interpreters gave up playing his quartets and quintets (which was already known in his days) was because they were so difficult to perform.

His life was mainly quiet and exempt of concerns. Only once he was victim of a serious accident: during a hunting in 1829, he was badly injured by a shot. He could have died, and became deaf in the left ear as a result of this accident which inspired him the three last movements of his quintet opus 38, entitled "The bullet".

Although he had a brilliant international career and though he was required more and more often, Onslow always remained faithful to Auvergne, since, born in Clermont-Ferrand, he also died in the same town. Which make him apart from artists who moved to Paris. He was deeply attached to his hometown and well-known for his generosity (charity concerts, help to poor people, etc.). By his courteous and gracious behaviour, Onslow gave Clermont all the prestige of his name, but his music was never really appreciated and understood. Onslow was very involved in the modest musical life of his province: his most important project was the foundation of a Philharmonic Society in 1839.

He was a respected and admired castle owner: a real gentleman-farmer, as talented running his properties as in negotiating contracts with Breitkopf & Härtel or Schlesinger. Although he had a property in the countryside (castle of Chalendrat, then castle of Bellerive), he always kept his apartments in Clermont: first in Michel de l'Hospital square (called Wood market square at the beginning of the 19th century), then number 2 Blaise Pascal street where he died on October 3rd 1853. He rests at the Carmes cemetary, next to some of the well-know families in Auvergne. ~ Baudime Jam

Onslow's signature

Recommended Recordings

String Quartets

CPO 999793-2
String Quartets #7 (Op. 9/1), #8 (Op. 9/2) & #22 (Op. 47)/CPO 999060-2
Mandelring Quartett


String Quartets #1 (Op. 4/1), #10 (Op. 10/1) & #21 (Op.46/3)/CPO 999329-2
Mandelring Quartett


String Quartets #4 (Op. 8/1), #20 (Op. 46/2) & #25 (Op. 50)/CPO 999793-2
Mandelring Quartett


String Quintets

Dabringhaus & Grimm MDG6031233-2
String Quintets Op. 33 & 74/Dabringhaus & Grimm MDG6031233-2
Ensemble Concertant Frankfurt


String Quintets Op. 34 & 35/Dabringhaus & Grimm MDG6031253-2
Quintett Momento Musicale


String Quintets Op. 38 & 67/Dabringhaus & Grimm MDG6031390-2
Quintett Momento Musicale


Trumpet