Songs of Suffrage: An evening of music & readings, 1900-1930
The IHR and Senate House Library host a chamber concert featuring the work of three women composers active in the suffrage movement – together with readings from their diaries and letters, and from those of fellow suffrage campaigners.

The concert will include music by Ethel Smyth (1958-1944) and Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979), who were prominent suffragists and members of the Society of Women Musicians, and by Dorothy Howell (1898-1982) whose work was regularly premièred at the Proms from 1919, but is now rarely heard.

The concert will be accompanied by an exhibition of scores, diaries and letters written by these and other women composers from the period, drawn from the Senate House Library collection.

The Berkeley Ensemble was formed in 2008 by members of Southbank Sinfonia, Britain’s young professional orchestra, with the aim of exploring the wealth of little-known twentieth and twenty-first century British chamber music alongside more established repertoire. It now enjoys a busy concert schedule performing throughout the UK and abroad, and is also much in demand for its inspiring work in education.

Dr Kate Kennedy is a well-known author and broadcaster on BBC Radio 3 and BBC television. She is the consultant to Radio 3 for their First World War programming and a specialist in early to mid-twentieth-century British music. Kate is also Deputy Director of the Oxford Centre for Life-Writing at Wolfson College, and teaches in both the English and Music Faculties.

Tickets £10; concessions £5; includes a pre-concert drink and entry to the exhibition.

Part of the IHR’s Suffrage Season, 1918-2018 in collaboration with Senate House Library.
Date: 1 November 2018, 18:30 (Thursday, 4th week, Michaelmas 2018)
Venue: The Chancellor's Hall, First Floor, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU
Speaker: Dr Kate Kennedy (broadcaster and historian (narrator))
Booking required?: Required
Booking url: https://www.history.ac.uk/events/event/16713
Audience: Public
Editor: Laura Spence