Peter K. Moran

Peter K. Moran [P.K. Moran] (30 June 1767[1] – 10 February 1831) was an Irish pianist, composer, and music publisher – probably the earliest classical composer from Ireland to emigrate to the United States.

Life

Moran was probably born in Dublin and studied with Philip Dwyer (died 1802) and Philip Cogan (1750–1833).[2] He appears at concerts in Dublin between March 1799 and June 1816[3] His earliest compositions were published in Dublin from c.1796 and reprinted there until the late 1820s.[4]

In 1817, Moran emigrated to the USA with his wife, a singer. While Kinkeldey describes him as a "Boston musician",[5] the Moran couple was evidently very active in New York's concert life, even their daughter making her début as a singer and pianist in 1820, aged five.[6] Moran was organist at Grace Episcopal Church (c.1823–7), and St John's Chapel (1828–31), performed for the Handel and Haydn Society in 1820 and for the New York Choral Society's first concert in 1824. He also played the cello in the García Opera Company in New York in 1825, performed with the Philharmonic Society, and was concertmaster of the Musical Fund Society.

From 1822 to 1823 he ran a piano and music store and published about 25 pieces, including 16 of his own compositions and arrangements. Some of his Dublin-published music was reissued in New York, where he was second only to James Hewitt as the city's most prolific composer of piano music.[7]

Moran died in New York City.

Music

Moran evidently was an able pianist, judging from the scores of his piano music. He made a name for himself with rondos and variations on original or popular tunes. Several of his works were expressly written "for harp or piano-forte", suggesting that he played the harp as well. After his emigration he also became popular as a song composer, with The Carrier Pigeon (1822; also arranged as a rondo for piano, c.1825) and running through many editions. Other well-known pieces by him (for harp or piano) include his variations on Kinlock of Kinlock (1825), Swiss Waltz (c.1810), Stantz Waltz (c.1817), and Suabian Air (c.1817). He also arranged many traditional airs, and religious works by Handel and others.

Many of Moran's works were still listed as for sale in the Board of Music Trade Catalogue (1870).[8]

Selected compositions

Piano solo

Piano 4-hands

"Harp or piano-forte"

Songs

Bibliography

External links

References

  1. Missing in most biographies; source: Charles William Hughes: American Hymns Old and New. Notes on the Hymns and Biographies of the Authors and Composers (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980).
  2. Ita M. Hogan: Anglo-Irish Music, 1780–1830 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1966), p. 204. He is erroneously called 'Patrick' here.
  3. John C. Greene: Theatre in Dublin, 1745–1820. A Calendar of Performances vol. 6 (Lanham, MD: Lehigh University Press, 2011).
  4. Online catalogue of the National Library of Ireland, http://catalogue.nli.ie.
  5. In his foreword to H. Earle Johnson: Musical Interludes in Boston, 1795–1830 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1943), p. xi.
  6. J. Bunker Clark, Eve R. Meyer: "Moran, Peter K.", in: The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013).
  7. Clark/Meyer (2013), as above.
  8. J. Bunker Clark: "Peter K. Moran / Amerigrove Expanded, Part VI", in: Sonneck Society Bulletin vol. 15 no. 3 (Fall 1989), p. 106.
  9. Reprints c.1810 & c.1816.
  10. Print in National Library of Ireland with label reading "Sold at James & Patrick Corbett's Apollo Music and Musical Instrument ware-house, 39 Patrick-Street, Limerick".
  11. Reprinted 1819.
  12. Reprinted c.1814 by T. Cooke & Co.
  13. Reprinted c.1820 & c.1830; as Moran's Swiss Waltz reprinted between 1836–1843 in Dublin by Robinson & Bussell.


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