musicus wrote:I did not know that 'he resigned after coming under significant criticism for his choice of music', though.
Grove on-line says:
When Westminster Cathedral was built he was appointed organist and director of music, a post which he held with great distinction from 1901 until 1924, when he resigned after increasing criticism of his bold choice of works.
without saying which were the works involved and who was offended by their boldness. But there's this in his obituary in the Musical Times from 1938:
Unlike Dolmetsch,whose work in the instrumental field of the period has been compared to Terry's, he did not put a term to church music in any particular period, but encouraged contemporary composers to write for his choir. His repertoire included works by Charles Wood, Howells, Holst, Oldroyd, and, not least, Vaughan Williams's Mass for double choir, first performed at Westminster Cathedral during Terry's last year of office.
So maybe it was Vaughan Williams who caused the trouble.
The obituary also says:
With Terry's resignation in 1924 from a choir starved in numbers and hampered with difficulties the spirit that had made the music at Westminster Cathedral second to none in the world burnt fitfully; and it is not to disparage the brave efforts made by his successor, under impossible conditions, to say that it still awaits revival.
As for SSG membership, well, the obituary comments on his commitment to the Liturgical Movement:
Long before there had been so much maneuvering for position, before, indeed, the promulgation of the Motu Proprio, Terry had begun the liturgical movement at Westminster Cathedral, from the first, by putting the right things in the right places.
so it's not out of the question, I suppose! He evidently had strong views about chant:
What he rightly loathed and fought against was the obscurantism, fanaticism, and half-educated musicianship of the neo-Solesmes school, which were a drag on the liturgical movement that he had so much at heart.
I once heard it claimed that the trigger for his resignation was an outburst on his part during a Mass at Westminster, prompted by the half-hearted attempts of some member of the clergy to sing his proper part. No idea whether there's any truth in that. But I expect some of us can sympathise.
(Not me, I hasten to add - the clergy at my place of worship are paragons.
)
M.