Bringing Jane Austen's Music Collection to life!

The 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth in 1775 has attracted a lot of attention this year. On 11th July, Magda, Tom and M-J were honoured to perform a specially curated Jane Austen programme with soprano Penelope Appleyard, at the Global Jane Austen Conference at the University of Southampton. Professor Jeanice Brooks and Dr Mary-Jannet Leith devised the programme, which featured entirely music owned by Austen and her family. We so much enjoyed exploring Austen's musical world together, reading from facsimile scores of pieces in her collection, many of them in the author's own, extremely neat, musical handwriting! The volumes in the Austen music collection are all digitised, and free to access online, and also searchable at the University of Southampton library catalogue.
Most excitingly, this was our first performance with an early piano rather than our usual harpsichord. Our harpsichordist Tom played the university’s incredible 1796 Broadwood grand piano, and became immediately addicted! He writes: "Playing a part in this concert is something I will remember for a long time to come. The combination of the hall, instruments, repertoire, unique repertoire, and the academic context for this music made for something unique and special. Most of the scores I used were facsimiles of Jane Austen's own hand. The colours for accompaniment on the Broadwood piano were thrilling, sometimes very soft to colour the text and sometimes pushing the sound for orchestral effects in popular Overtures which were arranged for domestic enjoyment at the time."
We were delighted to introduce this fascinating repertoire, most of it rarely played in concerts today, to an enthusiastic audience at the Turner Sims concert hall. Our recorder player and researcher Dr Mary-Jannet Leith also took part in a Q & A after the performance, in which the panel answered many excellent questions about the instruments and the repertoire, leading to a lively discussion about how Jane Austen engaged with music in her daily life.

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