Dive into the life and legacy of Amy Beach the iconic female composer.
Composer: Amy Beach airs Friday, August 9 at 9 p.m. on WXXI-TV. Repeats Saturday, August 1- at 4 p.m.
Amy Cheney Beach was born September 5, 1867, in Henniker, New Hampshire. A child prodigy, she would become one of the most respected and accomplished American musical composers of her time. Beach debuted as a pianist at 17 with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. At age 23, with no formal training, she began composing her acclaimed “Gaelic Symphony.
Featuring interviews with historians and musicians – and excerpts from some of Beach’s pieces – Composer: Amy Beach chronicles a remarkable life and career that has inspired generations.
In 1893 at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, her commissioned choral piece premiered at the opening of the Women’s Pavilion. Throughout her career, she wrote hymns, chamber music, a mass, a piano concerto, an opera, and a robust collection of more than 150 songs. A pioneering composer, pianist and teacher, Beach was a national symbol of women’s creative power and helped redefine the role of women in music.