By Helen Wallace

Published: Friday, 08 March 2024 at 11:40 AM


When Clara Schumann wrote, ‘A woman must not desire to compose – not one has been able to do it, and why should I expect to?’ she can’t possibly have known about her illustrious predecessors, who include the 12th-century abbess Hildegard of Bingen, Francesca Caccini, jewel of the Medicis, or Elisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, France’s first female opera composer. Clara was by no means alone yet, even today, female composers of the past are still not on equal footing with their male counterparts. Here’s our guide to the female composers from history whose music should be more widely appreciated than it is today….

While you’re here, why not also have a look at our round-up of the best living female composers making music today?

Who are the most famous female composers?

Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179)

Abbess, visionary, leader, poet, dramatist, herbalist and composer, Hildegard von Bingen stands out in music history as an artist in control of her context.

How many works did Hildegard von Bingen write?

Hildegard von Bingen musical legacy, of nearly 80 surviving works including a morality drama Ordo Virtutum, is one of the largest of any Medieval composer. She wrote for her own convents and nearby monasteries, supervising the copying of manuscripts. Immersed in her youth in the eight sung offices of the day, Hildegard seems to have learnt the skills of composing via osmosis: ‘I composed and chanted plainsong in praise of God and the saints, even though I had never studied either musical notation or singing.’ She is not only a great example of a Medieval composer, but her music has stood the test of time, making her among the best female composers of all time.

What musical style did Hildegard von Bingen write in?

Hildegard von Bingen’s collection of pieces following the liturgical forms of antiphons, responsories, sequences and hymns is entitled Symphony of the Harmony of Heavenly Revelations. Her musical style is characterised by great boldness, as ecstatic melodies vault upwards in wide intervals of fourths and fifths, and a dramatic use of flowing lines, with soaring arches encompassing more than an octave.

Read our reviews of the latest Hildegard von Bingen recordings here

Francesca Caccini (1587-c1641)

Francesca Caccini’s works are often assumed to be by her father, Giulio. In fact, her songs have endured and can be found in many recorded collections of Italian Baroque. Known as ‘La Cecchina’, this composer, singer, lutenist, poet and teacher is thought to be the first Italian woman to have an ‘opera’ successfully staged: the ‘comedy-ballet’ La liberazione di Ruggiero, published in 1625.

Who was Francesca Caccini?

Born into the Medici court where her father worked, Francesca Caccini received a humanist education and music training. She sang at the wedding of Henry IV of France to Maria de’ Medici and so impressed him he requested she stay. But she returned to Florence where her carnival entertainment La Stiava led to her first position at court.

How many works did Francesca Caccini write?

Francesca Caccini composed 32 songs, and at least 16 stage works to dramas by Michelangelo Buonarroti (the younger) and provided music for court and liturgical settings. At her career’s height in the 1620s, she was the highest paid musician in the court.

Read our reviews of the latest Francesca Caccini recordings here

Barbara Strozzi (1619-77)

One of 17th-century Venice’s most famous singers, Barbara Strozzi was also the composer of eight volumes of dramatic vocal music.

Probably the illegitimate daughter of a servant and Giulio Strozzi, the enlightened dramatist and librettist, she became his ‘elected’ daughter, and pupil. He encouraged both her performing and composing, setting up his Accademia degli Unisoni as a platform for both.

Barbara Strozzi’s first book of songs, settings of her father’s lyrics, was presented to the Grand Duchess of Tuscany in 1644, with a dedication which hinted at the pressures she was under: ‘I hope it may find protection… from the bolts of slander already preparing for it.’ After her father’s death she relied on composition for her livelihood.

How many works did Barbara Strozzi write?

Barbara Strozzi wrote eight volumes of dramatic vocal music, as well as having a career as a highly successful singer.

What musical style did Barbara Strozzi write in?

Chromatic tensions, expressive lines and long virtuoso runs mark Barbara Strozzi’s style, whose flamboyance hints at her own vocal powers.

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre (1665-1729)

Louis XIV, no less, was a patron of the Parisian harpsichord prodigy Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, born into a family of musicians. She played for him at the age of five, and was taken under the wing of Madame de Montespan until she married the organist Marin de La Guerre, which enabled her to pursue her career.

In his Le Parnasse français, the contemporary chronicler Evrard Titon du Tillet declared that, ‘Sometimes she improvises one or another for a whole half hour with tunes and harmonies of great variety and in quite the best possible taste, quite charming her listeners.’

What instruments did Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre write for?

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre’s name appears in one of the first published collections of harpsichord music, dating from 1687. She also wrote secular Cantates françoises and the first opera by a woman to be staged in France, Céphale et Procris (1694).

Try La Guerre’s violin sonatas, with their bold, structural freedom and sense of drama, and which the Sun King reportedly found ‘most fine, but also original – a quality that today is extremely rare.’

Read our reviews of the latest Jacquet de La Guerre recordings here

Duchess Anna Amalia of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1739-1807)

There were plenty of female composers and virtuosos during the 18th century, but their lives were more restricted than before. Duchess Anna Amalia of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel had the advantages of nobility and influence: born a princess (her grandfather was Frederick William I of Prussia), she became the Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, transforming her court into one of the most influential cultural centres in Germany.

Her husband, the Duke, survived only two years after their marriage, after which she took charge of her court, attracting visiting writers and dramatists such as Goethe and Schiller.

How many works did Anna Amalia of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel write?

Among Anna Amalia’s surviving compositions are a symphony for two oboes, flutes, violins and double bass (1765), an oratorio, an opera Erwin und Elmire (1776) on a text by Goethe, and a Divertimento for Piano, Clarinet, Viola and Cello.

Are there any recording of Anna Amalia’s music?

The only available recordings feature Anna Amalia’s Flute Sonata and the overture and the entr’acte of her opera, which reveals a composer of zest, style and refinement.

Recommended recording: Ladies First! Simon Bucher (piano), Ana Ioana Oltean (flute)