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Dennis Brain archival collection open

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06 Dec 2013 12:37 #772 by Nathan Coy
Dennis Brain archival collection open was created by Nathan Coy
I thought I would send the press release along. There also is probably good information in there about many of the performers he worked with and his family. This like all collections are available to researchers and the public. The press release might be a little redundant for this audience so if you want to check out the guide the link is below:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8h996vc/

As a disclosure I do work at the institution but not at the archive.

Nathan Coy


"The Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound has recently finished processing the William C. Lynch Dennis Brain Collection. This collection is believed to be the largest of its kind in North America, if not the most comprehensive and organized collection of recorded music relating to the British horn player Dennis Brain (1921-1957), anywhere in the world. A full itemized finding aid for the collection is now available online at http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8h996vc/.

During his career, cut tragically short in 1957 when he was killed in a car accident at the age of 36, Dennis Brain became known, alongside his father Aubrey Brain, as one of the world's greatest practitioners of the French Horn. From his earliest days playing in the RAF Orchestra during World War II, to his later orchestral roles as principal horn of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and then the Philharmonia Orchestra, as well as work as a highly regarded soloist, Brain quickly established himself as one of the most sought after hornists in Europe. He became highly regarded for his performances and recordings of horn concertos by Mozart and Strauss, as well as works by contemporary composers, many of which were written for him by the likes of Benjamin Britten, Paul Hindemith, Gordon Jacob, Malcolm Arnold, and Elisabeth Lutyens.

The William C. Lynch Dennis Brain Collection consists of commercial and unpublished orchestral and solo recordings, featuring Brain, on audiocassette, compact disc, 33rpm long play and 78rpm records, VHS video cassette, and DVD. Also included are research notes, sheet music, photographs, and books pertaining to Dennis Brain from the late 1930’s until his untimely death in 1957, along with research materials pertaining to the publication of "Dennis Brain : a life in music", co-authored by the donor, William Lynch, and fellow researcher Stephen Gamble, published by University of North Texas Press in 2011.

A number of additions will be made to the collection in the coming years as new recordings and findings pertaining to Brain are discovered, along with additional archival materials also recently donated by Stephen Gamble, which include original concert programs, rare scores, correspondence, and photographs, previously in the possession of Mrs Aubrey Brain, Dennis Brain's sister-in-law. "

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