Katherine Emily Eggar (5 January 1874 – 15 August 1961) was an English pianist and composer. Eggar was born and died in London, England, the daughter of Thomas Eggar and Katherine MacDonald. Eggar was active member of the feminist movement especially in terms of opportunities for women in music. At the inaugural meeting of the Society of Women Musicians, Eggar stated, "The conventions of music must be challenged. Women are already challenging conventions in all kinds of ways… We believe in a great future for women composers." (Katherine Emily Eggar, at the inaugural meeting in 1911 of the Society of Women Musicians which she helped found)
With singer Gertrude Eaton and musicologist Marion M. Scott, she co-founded the Society of Women Musicians in London in 1911[1] and served as its president in 1914–1915. Eggar ran fortnightly meetings for women composers in the Society. With Marion Scott, she wrote a column in the Chamber Music (a supplement to the periodical The Music Student) called "Women's Doings in Chamber Music."
Eggar was also a Shakespeare archivist and the author of the pamphlets "Shakespeare in His True Colors" (1951) and "The Unlifted Shadow" (1954). She later bequeathed her 253 volume collection to Senate House Library of the University of London.[2][3] Eggar also spent over thirty years researching the life of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, and believed Lord Oxford to be the real author of Shakespeare's work. She planned to publish her writings, but she died before the preparatory work for her book could be made.[4]
She was a chairman of the Society of Women Musicians. In an opening address, "she expressed the conviction that a strong body of high-principled women musicians might do a great deal to reform public opinion on music and raise the standard of musical politics."[5] She was very aware of the disadvantages of female composers and musicians, and actively worked to create opportunities for women in the realm of music.
In the 1950s, Katharine Eggar was living at 40c Palace Road, Westminster, London.[6]
A photo of Eggar is included prefacing a 2022 YouTube video, in which Professors Michele Bozzi, flautist, and Oriella Caianiello, pianist, perform Eggar's Idyll for flute and piano; both musicians teach at the Conservatorio di Musica Niccolo Piccinni of Bari, Italy.[7] Another photo can be found in the June 2008 edition of Signature: Women in Music. In the photo, Eggar is seated alongside Liza Lehmann and Marion M. Scott, respectively the President and a co-founder, with Eggar, of the SWM. Other members of the SWM also appear.[8]
Works
Eggar composed songs and chamber music. Selected works include:
Chamber
Piano Quartet in D minor and major, 1906
Piano Trio in G minor, 1905
Rhapsodic Impression for violin, viola and piano, 1928
String Quartet, 1931
Cello Sonata in C minor
Suite for cello and piano: Prelude, ballade, landler, finale, 1908
Idyll for flute and piano, 1910
Piano
Legends of the Norse Gods: Wodin, Thor, Freia, Seater, Sun, Moon, Tiu
Four characteristic sketches: The Old Castle, The Wishing Well, Romance, At the Fair.
Moonrise, 1906
Sun in Springtime, 1935
Duets for Fun- eight short pieces for child and pianist, 1934
Voice and Instruments
I must go down to the sea tonight', scena for baritone and small orchestra
My Soul is an enchanted boat' words by Percy Bysshe Shelley for voice and piano quintet, or piano and organ.
Trios: 'Autumn Leaves', 'May Wind' for first and second sopranos and alto with accompaniment of piano quartet (also arranged for female choir and piano), 1909
Pan in a City Stone' for soprano, baritone, with flute and piano accompaniment
Six songs from Forbes 'Cantus, and I Fancies' (17thC.)
Voice and Piano
Hope of Spring, two part songs for female voices or soprano and baritone with piano
Wolfram's Dirge' with piano and cello ad lib words by Thomas Lovell Beddoes, Cycle of Gaelic love lyrics, 1906
Curtsy to the Moon, words by H Taylor, 1906
Old Gaelic lullaby
A Fairy Barcarolle' (A lake and a fairy boat) words by Thomas Hood, 1920
May Wind' for three voices and piano, 1909
The Purple Moors, 1908
Red Clover
Remember me, my Dear' from Forbes 'Cantus, songs and fancies' 1682- one of six, 1909
Song of the Vagabond
The Holly Bough and the Misletoe – A Christmas Carol words by W E Grogan[10]