ABSTRACT

The deaths of William Hurlstone and now Coleridge-Taylor removed the two composers Charles Stanford and the Royal College of Music had produced. Others acquired fame – notably Holst and Vaughan Williams – but not at this time. In 1913 Stanford wrote to the musical press to explain why Coleridge-Taylor had not become rich through the Hiawatha trilogy. There was a lengthy piece in the Musical News on 22 March 1913. Novello defended their contract saying they had made ex-gratia payments including £100 paid to Jessie so she could purchase the house. However, the widow and her son continued to be ‘a frequent source of embarrassment’. Her complaints in 1921 led the board of Novello to minute that it was not prepared to create royalties on works purchased outright; but they sent her £300. Four years later the board ignored a protest letter in The Times. 1