2 August 1974(1974-08-02) (aged64) East Sheen, London, England
Genres
Romantic, 20th century
Occupation(s)
Virtuoso pianist, pedagogue
Instrument(s)
Piano
Musical artist
Personal life
Birthplace
Smith was born at Costa Street, Middlesbrough, England, the son of Charles Smith, a foundry bricklayer, and Eva Harrison, and had an older brother and sister.[2] He married Andrée Antoinette Marie Paty in 1931, but the couple divorced.[2]
In 1937 he married Phyllis Sellick. They had a son, Graham, and a daughter, Clare and remained married until his death.[3] Smith died in 1974 at his home in East Sheen, London, as a result of a stroke.[2][4]
Performing
From 1926 to 1930, Cyril Smith studied with Herbert Fryer (a student of Tobias Matthay and Ferruccio Busoni) at the Royal College of Music, winning medals and prizes[2] including the Daily Express piano contest in 1928 and made his concert début in Birmingham in 1929.[4] He performed as an off-screen piano accompanist in several of the 30-line Baird system television broadcasts of 1935[2][5][6] and joined the BBC when they took over. It was at the BBC's early television studios that he met his future second wife, the pianist Phyllis Sellick.[1][7][8][9]
In 1934, Smith left the BBC to take up an appointment as professor of pianoforte at the Royal College of Music. Smith and Sellick married in 1937, pursuing solo careers. During the Second World War Cyril Smith performed concerts for ENSA but in 1941 he and his wife began performing together as a piano duo at the Proms,[10][11]
and made many international concert tours for ENSA and the British Council In 1945, they toured the Far East,[2]
where the hazards to contend with included small animals lodged in pianos and out-of-tune instruments.
In 1956, while in the city of Kharkiv in Ukraine at the start of a concert tour of the Soviet Union he experienced thrombosis and had a stroke that paralysed his left arm.[2][4][12][14][17][18][19] However, with music arranged by themselves, or written or arranged by composer friends, Smith and Sellick were able to continue to perform concerts of three-handed music as a piano duo.[14]
Notable among the works composed for them was Malcolm Arnold's Concerto for Two Pianos (3hands), Op.104, dedicated to the performers,[20] who premiered it at the Proms in 1969 and recorded it in 1970.[21]
Cyril Smith's autobiography written in the form of a memoir, is entitled Duet for Three Hands (Angus & Robertson, 1958).[1][4][56]
One of the chapters was written by his wife Phyllis Sellick.
Honours
Cyril Smith and Phyllis Sellick were both made Officers of the Order of the British Empire in 1971.[8]
Smith was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1960 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the BBC Television Theatre.[57]
Discography
Cyril Smith, Phyllis Sellick and the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and Philharmonia Orchestra (conductor Malcolm Sargent), Dutton, (P)1947/48[58]
Phyllis Sellick, Cyril Smith, Orchestras of the Bournemouth Symphony, Philharmonia, City of Birmingham and the Royal Philharmonic, Arnold: English Dances, HMV Classics[12]
Cyril Smith, Phyllis Sellick and Solna Brass, including Rhapsody for Piano (3 hands) by Gordon Jacob, Granada[59]
Cyril Smith & Phyllis Sellick, Piano Duos: Faure Mendessohn Franck Schubert, Nimbus Records, (P)1974 (Cyril's last recording)[60]
"Bermuda Festival Programme". Bermuda Musical & Dramatic Society. September 1952. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.;
"History". Chichester Symphony Orchestra. 2009. Retrieved 19 February 2010.[dead link];
"History". Egham & District Music Club. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.;
"About Us". Epsom Symphony Orchestra. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 5 May 2007.;
"Leeds Classical Music". Discovering Leeds. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
"Piano Masterclass by Ray Alston"(PDF). The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Department of Music, 2006. Archived(PDF) from the original on 27 November 2009. Retrieved 5 May 2007.
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