Description
LAURI KENNEDY (RANDWICK, NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA, 5 JULY, 1896 – SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA, 26 APRIL, 1985)
Irvine Robert Laurie Kennedy (he used Laurie, later dropping the final ‘e’) was born in Randwick, a suburb of Sydney, to an English-born father and native-born mother. He studied with Herbert Walenn at the Royal College of Music, London, and Paul Brummer in Vienna. Dame Nellie Melba noticed him and encouraged him to undertake further studies in the United States. He made his mark in the US in the 1920s, where he became principal cellist with the New York Philharmonic at the personal invitation of Arturo Toscanini. He played chamber music with performers such as Arthur Rubinstein and Jascha Heifetz. In the United Kingdom he played in a noted piano quartet called the Chamber Music Players with Albert Sammons, Lionel Tertis and William Murdoch. He also appeared with the tenor John McCormack for a number of years, and appears on record accompanying McCormack. He became principal cellist with Sir Adrian Boult’s BBC Symphony Orchestra at its inception in 1929 and played with them until 1935. It has been stated that his cello can be heard in the slow movement of Boult’s 1935 recording of the Brahms 2nd Piano Concerto with Artur Schnabel. However, Kennedy himself said that, while it was planned that he should play the cello solo, by the time the recording was actually made (Nov. 1935), he had left the BBCSO, and that it was Ambrose Gauntlett whose cello playing is recorded with Schnabel. He recorded music with Fritz Kreisler and William Primrose, including Kreisler’s String Quartet in A minor in 1935 with members of the London String Quartet. He recorded Edgar Bainton’s Cello Sonata. After Felix Salmond and Guilhermina Suggia turned it down, Lauri Kennedy was engaged to premiere Frank Bridge’s Oration for cello and orchestra, but withdrew during rehearsals. He also became a professor at the Royal College of Music. His wife Dorothy Kennedy (née McBride) was a pianist who also accompanied John McCormack and taught the children of Enrico Caruso. They made a highly successful tour of Australia in 1938. They then went to the United States again, where Lauri joined Toscanini’s NBC Symphony Orchestra. He relocated to Hollywood and his playing is heard on a number of films. In 1944 they returned to Australia permanently. They bought hotels in Taree and Sydney, and Lauri taught at music camps. Lauri later taught cello at the Canberra School of Music in 1966, resigning after only one year due to poor health. Dorothy Kennedy died in 1972. Lauri Kennedy died on 26 April 1985, in Sacramento, California, where he was living with their eldest son David. Their son John Kennedy was also a noted cellist and was the natural father of the violinist Nigel Kennedy. Lauri Kennedy’s cousin was the violinist Daisy Kennedy.
TRACKLIST
Cradle Song (Dvorak) Songs My Mother Taught Me (Brahms, arr. Kennedy) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) HMV C1595 3-07857
Élégie (Massenet) Marie Rappold (Soprano) Edison 82190-R 7086
Gavotte (Popper) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) Edison 7430 Test
Hungarian Rhapsody (Popper) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) Edison 7432
Hungarian Rhapsody (Popper) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) HMV C1595 3-07859
Kol Nidrei – Part 1 (Bruch) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) Edison 80580-R 7429
None but the Lonely Heart (Tchaikovsky) John McCormack (tenor) HMV (7-2083) DA 1112
The Broken Melody (Auguste van Biene) Dorothy Kennedy (piano) Edison 80580-L 7431
The Rosary (R. C. Rogers-Nevin) John McCormack (tenor) HMV (40-2031) DA 1116
String Quartet in A minor (Fritz Kreisler)
Fantasia (Moderato)
Scherzo (Allegro vivo, con spirito – Molto moderato – Tempo 1)
Einleitung und Romanze (Allegretto – Andante con moto)
Finale (Allegro molto moderato – Molto moderato – Andante con moto)
Fritz Kreisler, 1ste Violin
Thomas Petre, 2nd violin
William Primrose, viola
Laurie Kennedy, cello
HMV DB2483/2486, 2EA 1370-1376
Recording Venue: 1 Apr 1935, Abbey Road Studio No. 3, London






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