Rhoda Sinclair Coghill was an Irish pianist, composer and poet.
Biography
Rhoda Coghill was born in Dublin and studied from the age of eight with Patricia Read at the Leinster School of Music. Between 1913 and 1925 she won 21 prizes at the Feis Ceoil, among them first prizes for piano solo, piano accompaniment and piano duet, after 1923 for composition. In that year she completed her largest score, the rhapsody Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking for tenor solo, mixed chorus and orchestra, to a text by Walt Whitman. Coghill also played double bass in the orchestras of the Dublin Philharmonic Society and Radio Éireann. She continued her piano studies with Arthur Schnabel in Berlin to whom she had been recommended by Fritz Brase. In 1939 she took a position as the accompanist of Radio Éireann, where she remained until 1969. In this capacity she has worked with major performers of her day, both Irish and international, and gave exemplary interpretations of contemporary Irish works. She was known for remarkable sight-reading capacities and her absolute ear. She also appeared as a concerto soloist, reliably attracting large audiences. Coghill stopped composing in the early 1940s, concentrating on her performing career, but began writing and translating poetry. It has been suggested that a reason for this re-orientation may have been that in the poetry and literature-dominated perception of Irish culture it was easier to receive acknowledgements as a poet rather than as a composer. Coghill remained unmarried and spent her late years from 1982 at Westfield House, Morehampton Road, Dublin, where she died aged 96. Her music manuscripts as well as some notebooks and diaries are located in Trinity College, Dublin.
Music
The rhapsody Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking is one of the most forward-looking Irish compositions in the first half of the twentieth century. Written during the Civil War in Ireland in 1923, it was first performed in a small format, with a small orchestra and a vocal quartet replacing the chorus, in the 1950s; the first performance did not take place before 1990. Up to this time, Coghill had never heard an orchestra, but had a good knowledge of orchestral music from studying scores. The work is set for tenor solo, mixed chorus and orchestra, is in one continuous movement of about 23 to 25 minutes duration. The text is based on a poem of the same title by Walt Whitman. The work is remarkable for its unconventional tenor line, the use of whole-tone scales, and its overall serious expression and emotional drama. One of the reasons why she didn't write more orchestral music or why she didn't promote the score for so long may also lie in her modesty as a practising Quaker. Her songs show a sensitive and skilled hand in setting words, be it in folksong arrangements or in original compositions. Some are quite distinct, showing a somewhat introspective, atmospheric voice. Her only published piano composition, the Gaelic Phantasy, plays with elements of Irish traditional music in an original manner. For the print with An Gúm she was forced to smooth out some chromatic harmonies that she had originally intended.
Compositions
Works with orchestra
Out of the Cradle, Endlessly Rocking, rhapsody for tenor solo, chorus and orchestra
Gaelic Phantasy. Arrangement of piano work for piano and orchestra
Songs :
A Song of St. Francis
I Love All Beauteous Things
I Will not Let Thee Go
Mary Moriarty
Jenny
Creeveen Cno , Dublin: Pigott & Co., 1925.
Messages
Among the Heather. Old Irish Air arr. , Dublin: Pigott & Co., 1926.
Peasant Woman's Song
Five Poems by Pádraic Colum . Contains: In the Fore of the Year, Once I Loved a Maiden fair, The Hawk-Questing Maid, The Old Woman of the Roads, I'll Bring You These for Dowry.
Meg Merrilees
Erster Schnee
Four Poems by Æ . Contains: Refuge, Parting, When, Germinal.
The Might of Love for unison mixed voices and piano, published in Quaker Song Book, ed. by John Sheldon,.
Piano music:
Four Piano Pieces for Children
Gaelic Phantasy, published as Saoirdhréacht Gaedhealach do’n Phiano: Dublin: An Gúm, 1942.
Poetry
Coghill's poetry "reflect a sensitivity to nature, a belief in simplicity and a deep Christian faith. Although stylistically advanced, she made occasional use of various rhyme techniques." In the introduction to her first collection, Seumas O'Sullivan wrote that Coghill's expressiveness would "eventually give their author full title to a place amongst the poets of our time". She was represented in the first Field Day anthology of Irish women writers.
The Bright Hillside
Time is a Squirrell
Angel Songs/Engellieder. Translated by Rhoda Coghill from the German of Rainer Maria Rilke