Caroline ReinagleCaroline Reinagle (born Caroline Orger) (1 May 1817 – 11 March 1892) was an English classical composer, pianist, and writer. Only a few of her works have survived. LifeReinagle was born in London on 1 May 1817. Her father was Dr Thomas Orger and her mother was Mary Ann Orger who was a comic actress.[1] In the 1840s she had several of her works published and performed, including a piano trio, premiered by 1842[2] and a piano concerto, published 1842[2] and performed by her in 1843 at Hanover Square Rooms.[3] Her mother was well read and her father, Dr Thomas Orger was a translator of Ovid and Anacreon, and he had written a book about Napoleon. He didn't object to her mother's acting and he become a founder member of the Swedenborg Society and the editor of Intellectual Repository. Both her parents became members of the Swedenborgian church.[4] In 1846[3] she married Alexander Robert Reinagle (1799-1877), organist at St Peter-in-the-East, Oxford, composer of the hymn tune St Peter, and son of Joseph Reinagle. She died in Tiverton, Devon, in 1892. CompositionsHer only apparently surviving compositions[3] are some songs, a tarantella in E minor and a sonata in A (the latter two works for piano). The last two have been republished by Vivace Press. Also surviving is a pair of articles in the 1862 Musical Times entitled A Few Words on Piano Playing.[5] Composed but possibly lost also were at least one piano quartet and a cello sonata in addition to the concerto and trio. References
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