Una Mabel Bourne
Una Mabel Bourne (23 October 1882 – 15 November 1974) was an Australian pianist and composer. Early lifeUna Mabel Bourne was born at Mudgee, New South Wales,[1] the daughter of James George Bourne and Margaret Webber Bourne. Her father was a shopkeeper. She was raised in Melbourne. Una Bourne's musical abilities were evident early in life; she performed on piano in professional venues before her teens.[2] She studied with Benno Scherek in Australia,[3] and in several European cities as a young woman.[4] Career"Miss Bourne has an excellent technique and plays with refinement and distinction," an English critic wrote of a performance at London's Bechstein Hall in 1906.[5] Bourne joined Nellie Melba's touring entourage in Australia in 1907, 1909, and 1912,[6] both as an accompanist and performing solo.[2] After 1912, she moved to England, where she gave concerts and toured. She performed for Queen Mary of Teck in 1914, and during World War I she gave benefit concerts and concerts at hospitals.[7] In 1915 she began making recordings with the English Gramophone Company. She also made player-piano rolls in the United States, and gave performances for women's clubs[8] and radio audiences. During World War II she was based in Melbourne again, where she performed and opened a conservatory.[4] Bourne's art songs and compositions for piano are considered "light and dainty", and include March Grotesque, Petite Valse Caprice, Gavotte, Humoresque, and Wiegenlied, which was dedicated to Nellie Melba.[9][10] Personal lifeUna Mabel Bourne lived for many years with her friend and colleague, soprano Mona McCaughey, who died in 1964. Bourne died ten years later, in 1974, aged 92 years.[4] Some of her papers, including original compositions in manuscript, are archived in the State Library of Victoria.[11] There is a scholarship named for Una Bourne at University of Melbourne.[9] References
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