Davenport read law at University College, Oxford. However, he decided to have a career in music, studying under George Alexander Macfarren. In 1873 he married Macfarren's daughter Clarina Thalia Macfarren (23 Mar 1848-10 Jul 1934). They had several children; son Robert, a writer and illustrator of children's stories and popular song lyricist, was father of the critic John Davenport[2][3]
His daughter, originally Gertrude Mary Davenport married Eden Paul, with whom she published many works under the name Cedar Paul.[5] His nephew, Christopher Wilson, was a composer, conductor and music director for the theatre.[6]
Works
Symphony in D minor: this won the Crystal Palace Symphony Competition in 1876.[7]
Symphony No 2 in C major.
Twelfth Night, overture for orchestra
Prelude and Fugue for orchestra
Piano Trio
Six Pieces for piano and cello
Pictures on a Journey, suite for piano
Many partsongs and songs
Publications
Elements of Music (1884)
Elements of Harmony and Counterpoint (1886)
Guide for Pianoforte Students (with Percy Baker) (1891)
^A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (A.D. 1450–1880), George Grove, Macmillan, 1889, pg 608
^A. A. Needham: A Daughter of Music, archived in Cambridge among the "Joseph Needham Papers"
^Carey, Mike (2019). "Cedar and Eden Paul's Creative Revolution: The 'new psychology' and the dictatorship of the proletariat, 1917-1926". Twentieth Century Communism. 17 (17). Lawrence and Wishart: 122–165. doi:10.3898/175864319827751349. S2CID214124194.