18-year-old Ananya Prasanna shares the stories of five female musicians who deserve to be famous
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Alma Deutscher’s debut with Jane Glover conducting the Orchestra of St Luke’s at Carnegie Hall, New York, 12 December 2019.
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January 10, 2025
Five overlooked female composers from the 11th century to now
‘Where words fail, music speaks’ – a tribute to the power of music, from the famous Danish author Hans Christian Andersen.
Yet, as is the case for many professions, music has been historically dominated by males, with female composers’ incredible contributions often overlooked and forgotten.
This article presents some of the incredible women in music, both in the past and present. Their influence has shaped the music we listen to and cherish today, and it is the hope that one day, they will be truly recognised for their talents.
Harbingers’ Weekly Brief
Hildegard von Bingen
Composer, poet and saint Hildegard von Bingen is known for her religious music, which was composed for nuns to sing during devotions.
Born in 1098 in Germany, Hildegard was the tenth child in a noble family. It was customary at the time to pledge the tenth child of a family to the church, so at a young age, Hildegard was sent to live her life in a secluded hilltop monastery.
After her mentor, Jutta of Sponheim, died, Hildegard took on leadership responsibilities at the monastery, where she was given the opportunity to write music for the nuns to sing. Little is known about her creative process, and her music was probably not heard outside her convent during her lifetime.
It was not until the 800th anniversary of her death that she started to gain mainstream recognition, following the release of an album recordingof her music.
Accounts from the time explain just how extraordinary Hildegard really was. She was also known for her prophetic visions, news of which even reached the pope. She was a prolific writer, and a pioneer in the sciences. As one of the earliest named female composers, her music has inspired generations of musicians, even though she still isn’t as renowned as some male composers.
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel
The Mendelssohn name may be familiar to you thanks to revered composer Felix Mendelssohn (composer of the world-famous ‘Wedding March’), but his older sister Fanny has long been hidden in his shadow.
Born in 1805, Fanny’s music fits firmly into the development of the early Romantic era. She is said to have been as musically talented as her younger brother, the two of them having the same teachers. Their composition teacher, Carl Friedrich Zelter, described her as ‘really something special’.
Despite her talent, her father believed that composition wasn’t a pursuit suitable for women, telling her that it “can and must be only an ornament” in her life. Nevertheless, Fanny continued to write, and her brother supported her passion, sharing musical ideas with her and even publishing her work under his own name. She wrote more than 450 pieces of music, most of which are only just being attributed to her.
Researchers believe that one of Felix’s most celebrated forms, Lieder ohne Worte (‘songs without words’), was actually pioneered by Fanny.
One famous piece, written by Fanny and published under her brother’s name, was the song ‘Italien’. It is said that this was a particular favourite of Queen Victoria, who asked Felix to perform the piece and was surprised to learn that it was not his own work.
It was not until 1846, aged 41, that Fanny was able to publish a piece under her own name. Unfortunately, she died just a year later.
Leokadiya Kashperova
For decades, Leokadiya Kashperova has been best known, if at all, as Igor Stravinsky’s piano teacher. Her reputation was tainted after he described her as “antiquated” and a “blockhead”.
However, Kashperova, born in 1872, was a much-loved part of the musical scene in Moscow.
She was incredibly talented and studied under the great pianist Anton Rubinstein,who predicted that she would eclipse all of the men at the St Petersburg Conservatoire.
She enjoyed composing in a variety of styles, including symphonic works, vocal pieces and, of course, solo piano pieces. Many renowned Russian composers appreciated Kashperova’s interpretations of their works, enabling her to travel internationally as a performer of both their works and her own.
However, with the onset of the Russian Revolution in 1917, Kashperova was silenced, with all public performances of her work ceasing due to her associations with the gentry. She had to flee her home. Any work composed from this point on would not be heard until after her death in 1940.
For decades, Kashperova has been consigned to merely a footnote in musical history, but now she is once again becoming appreciated for her contributions to the musical scene.
Lili’uokalani
Born in 1886 in Honolulu, Hawai’i, Lili’uokalani was the last sovereign – and the only female one – to reign over the Hawaiian islands. She was also a prolific composer, writing more than 150 pieces of music.
As a schoolgirl, her exceptional talent for sight-singing – an ability that requires innate perception of pitch and rhythm – was noticed quickly by her tutors. She nurtured this, writing mele (Hawaiian songs/chants) and became a trained singer, chorister and organist.
Resisting the annexing of the Hawaiian islands by the United States, Lili’uokalani became a political prisoner. Her sight-singing abilities proved useful here; even without access to a piano, she continued to write, waiting for the day that her music could be performed again.
She described composing being “as natural to her as to breathe”, in her 1898 autobiography ‘Hawaii’s Story’.
She wrote a national anthem for Hawai’i, pieces to commemorate other monarchs, such as for Queen Victoria’s golden jubilee, and music to support the Hawaiian citizens’ political uprising.
Her most famous piece remains ‘Aloha ‘Oe’, written as a parting song between two lovers. Although originally inspired by a kind gesture she witnessed, this song came to represent mourning for the loss of Hawai’i’s independence.
Alma Deutscher
Born in 2005 in the UK, Alma Deutscher is a growing sensation in the music world, and a symbol of what the future of classical music could be.
Deutscher received a violin as a gift for her third birthday and was instantly hooked. Her parents quickly found her a teacher, and within a year she was playing difficult Handel sonatas, a clear sign of her being a musical prodigy.
She could read music before she could read words, and composed her first fully-notated piano sonata by the age of six. Often depicted as “Little Miss Mozart” in the media, Deutscher has faced difficulty in receiving acclaim for her music outside of the spectacle of her age.
“I want to be Alma, not Mozart,” she has said.
After the release of her opera Cinderella in 2016, Deutscher has become more known for her musical prowess, with an incredible ability to command musical language and aesthetics. She has described her thought-process: she depicts melodic inspiration arising when she waves a skipping rope – a metaphor for the state of mind she enters during improvisation.
Critics describe her work as “full of extraordinarily original ideas with genuine surprises”. It shows much resemblance to 18th-century music, this being the compositional style she was educated in, and what she describes as her musical “mother tongue”.
Although remaining fairly traditional in form compared to the modern ideas in 21st-century music, Deutscher’s work shows that the beauty of the Romantic era continues to live on.
Written by:
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Science Section Editor 2024
Reading, United Kingdom
Born in 2007, Ananya studies in Reading, England. With her passions lying in science and music, she plans to study medicine and is a diploma-holder on the violin.
In her free time, she enjoys volunteering at a local hospital, leading choir/orchestra rehearsals and reading books written by doctors in order to get an insight into how medical practices and customs vary around the globe.
She has experience in cultivating a social media profile, previously garnering 150,000+ views on a music-based YouTube channel.
Ananya joined Harbingers’ Magazine in the autumn of 2023, having won third place for her Essay on Science in The Harbinger Prize.
She speaks English, Tamil, and a bit of German.
Edited by:
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