By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Wednesday, 20 December 2023 at 15:01 PM


Read on to learn all about the life and works of the great 20th-century American composer, Samuel Barber.

Who was Samuel Barber?

Before anything else, Samuel Barber was a singer. When he was growing up in West Chester, Pennsylvania, he was impressed by the glamour surrounding his aunt Louise Homer, a leading operatic contralto of the era. As a student at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, he took voice lessons alongside his studies in piano and composition.

Barber made the first recording of one of his earliest published works, his haunting setting of Matthew Arnold’s Dover Beach for voice and string quartet. Although this singing career did not last long, he retained a feeling for vocal writing and his works are equally full of lyrical, singable melodies.

If this emphasis on lyricism increasingly set Barber apart from the modernist movements of the mid-20th century, so too did his education, which was firmly grounded in the conservative European tradition. At the Curtis Institute, he was given a rigorous training in composition by Rosario Scalero. And at 18, he made the first of many trips to Europe, not only soaking up musical impressions but also becoming fluent in several languages. For the rest of his life, he would spend a large proportion of his time in Europe.

What is Samuel Barber’s most famous work?

It was in Europe that Barber wrote some of his most successful early works. The single-movement First Symphony was begun in 1935. Premiered in Rome, it was later the first American work to be performed at the Salzburg Festival.

And the String Quartet which he wrote at St Wolfgang in the Austrian Tyrol in the summer of 1936 was the source of the elegiac Adagio for strings which remains Barber’s most popular piece. In its orchestral guise, it received its first performance in New York in 1938 alongside the First Essay for orchestra, under the baton of the celebrated Arturo Toscanini.