Angus Morrison (pianist)


Stuart Angus Morrison CBE was an English pianist and teacher who played a significant role in the revival of British music during the inter-war years.
Angus Morrison was born in Bray, near Maidenhead, Berkshire into a musical family, and began playing piano at the age of four. At nine years old he began lessons with Harold Samuel. By 13 he was playing for Margaret Morris's dancing classes in Chelsea. At the age of 16 he was admitted to the Royal College of Music through an open scholarship. His composition teachers there were Thomas Dunhill and Ralph Vaughan Williams, and his contemporaries included Constant Lambert, with whom he enjoyed a lifelong friendship. While at the College, Morrison helped Lambert with the scenario for his early ballet Adam and Eve. He was the dedicatee of Lambert's The Rio Grande, and played the solo piano part in the first broadcast performance on 27 February 1928 from the BBC's Savoy Hill Studios. Through Lambert, Morrison also became a close friend of William Walton, and offered help and advice to Walton while he was struggling with the composition of his Viola Concerto and First Symphony.
Angus Morrison made his London debut as a pianist in 1923 at the RCM, playing two pieces by Isaac Albéniz and the F minor sonata, Op. 5 by Johannes Brahms, and made his Proms debut in 1927. In 1926 he began teaching at the Royal College, carrying on for over 45 years until his retirement in 1972. From the mid-1930s he also played in a trio with violinist Jean Pougnet and cellist Anthony Pini. He was a champion of French and English music in particular, playing John Ireland's Piano Concerto several times, including at the Proms in 1933.
Morrison left no recordings. At the Royal College his pupils included Colin Horsley, John Lill, Alan Rowlands and Melvyn Tan. He was pianist for the Ballet Rambert from 1931-41 and was music director there between 1940 and 41. He was also an occasional actor, appearing as the pianist in the 1940 film Gaslight. Morrison was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1979.

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