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Susi Jeans

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Susi Jeans
Background information
Birth nameSusanne Hock
Also known asLady Jeans
Susanne Jeans
Born(1911-01-25)25 January 1911
Vienna, Austria
Died7 January 1993(1993-01-07) (aged 81)
Westhumble, Surrey, England
Occupation(s)Organist, teacher, musicologist
SpouseSir James Jeans (m. 1935)
Musical artist

Susi, Lady Jeans (née Susanne Hock; 25 January 1911 – 7 January 1993) was an Austrian-born professional organist, teacher and musicologist.

Personal life and education

Born in Vienna, she was the oldest child of Oscar and Jekaterina Hock. She trained as a ballet dancer by the modernist teacher Gertrud Bodenwieser but growing rather rapidly, switched to the piano. From 1925 to 1931, she studied piano at the Vienna Conservatory, with organ as a second study. This became her first instrument from about 1928, when she began studies with the composer Franz Schmidt and the organist Franz Schütz.

In 1931, she was heard by the organist and composer Charles-Marie Widor. After criticising her pedal technique, which he thought not legato enough, Widor invited her to become a student. She accepted his offer but did not report on his lessons' effects other than to say that he was a very old man at the time.

The hillside hamlet of Westhumble became an influential UK keyboard instrument teaching centre at her large, now demolished house, Cleveland Lodge

During her 1934-35 tour she met the astronomer and mathematician Sir James Jeans just over 32 years her senior, whom she married, in Vienna, in September 1935. They lived together in a large house (replaced at the end of the century by Cleveland Court) 'Cleveland Lodge' next to Box Hill & Westhumble railway station in Westhumble, Surrey having three children before his death in 1946. Lady Jeans continued to live at the house until she died in 1993.

Career

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Between 1933 and 1935, she studied intermittently at the Leipzig Kirchenmusikalisches Institut with Karl Straube during which time Jeans acquired knowledge of period instruments, forming her specialisation.

Jeans advocated, amongst other theories, that the trio sonatas by J S Bach were conceived with the pedal harpsichord as the larger instrument of the three involved, rather than the organ, Jeans bought a two manual and pedal harpsichord by Maendler-Schramm of Munich. In ensuing years, she was to make many broadcasts from this instrument and the study organ.

Before marriage, the enlarged marital home, Cleveland Lodge had assembled a large three-manual Willis II organ in a specially-built concert hall. In 1937 this was supplemented by a new mechanical action organ, built into her study by Eule of Bautzen although she later represented it was installed by Hill, Norman and Beard It was the first neo-Classical organ built in Britain in the 20th century.

Her first concert tour in Britain, in 1934, was a great success and the following year she returned to play at the Handel Festival in Cambridge.

Jeans founded the Mickleham and Westhumble Festival in 1954, which was renamed the Boxhill Music Festival in 1966 and subsequently held at Cleveland Lodge until the summer before her death. She also founded and ran an annual summer school for organists.

Susi Jeans' concert tours took her throughout Europe, the United States and Western Australia. She adjudicated major international competitions and from 1967 held a post at the University of Colorado. She championed informed performances and authentic restoration and use of harpsichords, clavichords and organs.

Jeans approved of many modern composers from German-speaking countries including her teacher, Franz Schmidt and played works dedicated to her by such composers as Augustinus Franz Kropfreiter (Toccata Francese) and Hendrik Andriessen (Thema met Varieties, written at Cleveland Lodge). Jeans was a recreational player and public exponent of the clavichord. She performed early and contemporary works on her favourite clavichord, a single-strung instrument by Thomas Goff and maintained that "clavichord technique is the backbone of all keyboard playing, whether this be organ, piano or harpsichord."

Knowledge and critique

  • Organs, harpsichords and keyboard music
  • British chamber and concert hall music especially of the 17th and 18th centuries
  • Austrian chamber and concert hall music

Other interests

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  • William Herschel who shared her husband's profession
  • Skiing and mountaineering: she climbed the Matterhorn twice
  • Natural medicine and performance nutrition. She advocated vitamin pills especially Vitamin B12 'for co-ordination' and Vitamin D 'for nerves'.

Publications

She published many articles in scholarly journals, as well as editions of scores.

Pupils and influences

Her range of musician pupils included:

Those on whom she had a direct influence included harpsichordists Ruth Dyson and Davitt Moroney and, as a clavichord and harpsichordist, Jon Baxendale.

Jeans bequeathed her house to the Royal School of Church Music for a centre for musicians and it was itself restored and modified using National Lottery money. However the Royal School of Church Music relocated and concentrated its site on Sarum College and it was sold to property developers to raise further charitable funds.

References

  1. Susy Jeans: a Seventieth Birthday Tribute, p. 47, Guy Oldham, 1981, London
  2. ^ Oldham, Guy (14 January 1993). "Obituary: Susi Jeans". The Independent. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  3. ^ Yet to be published (as at 2015) interview with musicologist and harpsichordist, Jon Baxendale
  4. GRO Register of Deaths: SEP 1946 5g 607 SURREY SE – James H. Jeans, aged 69
  5. Henderson R (1966). "Festival Reports". Musical Times. 107 (1482): 693–700. doi:10.2307/953140. JSTOR 953140.
  6. Planning Application Details

Further reading

  • Cecil Clutton (1992) "The influence of Susi Jeans", Aspects of Keyboard Music: Essays in honour of Susi Jeans, Oxford, 10–12.
  • "Lady Jeans at 70: a Conversation with Gillian Weir", Organists' Review 67/2 (1982), 9–14.
  • Oldham, Guy (January 1981). "Susi Jeans: a Seventieth Birthday Tribute". Musical Times. 122: 47–49. doi:10.2307/961548. JSTOR 961548.
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