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Kevin Allen, Gracious Ladies: The Norbury Family and Edward Elgar. A Chronicle with Documents. Volume One: Genius Has Its Own Rank Alverstoke, Hampshire: Kevin Allen, 2013. £25, ISBN 978-0-9531227-6-9 (hardback), pp.v + 957 Reviewed by Cheryl Law Independent Scholar Evidently consumed with a passion for the mystery that surrounded the English composer Edward Elgar (1857-1934), Kevin Allen has published extensively on Elgar’s life and music. In his lifetime, many stories circulated about the women, known and rumoured, in Elgar’s life, and for our purposes it is significant that Allen features the lives of the women in the Norbury family and their social circle. This 957-page tome is the first volume of Gracious Ladies; the second part will provide the index for both volumes, a distinct disadvantage when trying to negotiate this first convoluted volume. The book is self-published and follows the tradition of subscription publishing that originated in the 18th century that may partly account for its lavish size, and the generous number of photographs. Self-publishing also affords Allen the freedom to abandon the constraints, but also the discipline, of length, usually dictated by publisher and editor. Allen does not explain in this volume that the primary link between Elgar and the Norbury family lies in the initials ‘W.N.’ that Elgar attached to the eighth of his fourteen Variations for Orchestra Op.36, more famously known as the Enigma Variations, which referred to Winifred Norbury. Each of the fourteen Variations were named for Elgar’s wife, his friends and lastly, himself. Allen does recount that Elgar wrote that Winifred’s family home, Sherridge, had ‘suggested’ this particular Variation. Allen sets out to document a biography of the Norbury family from the marriage of Gertrude and Thomas Norbury in 1828 through the birth and childhood of their five daughters and three sons, whilst paralleling the childhood of the young Edward Elgar until he made incursions into the Norbury household’s orbit. Using this structure, Allen is able to weave the separate social spheres using music as the sustaining thread. Elgar apart, this book stands as a painstakingly researched and recorded account of the social history of a Victorian upper middle-class family. It also contributes to the history of women’s participation in regional music making during this period; for whilst ranked as ‘amateurs’, the dedication, knowledge and proficiency of the women included here seems impressive. Much of the book consists of substantial extracts from the letters and diaries of the massive archive of the Norbury family, apparently an under-researched source for middle-class women’s social and domestic history. Allen sketches a portrait of Gertrude Norbury as a somewhat enlightened matriarch, ensuring that her children enjoyed regular musical experiences, attending the concerts of Worcester’s Three Choirs Festival, as well as the Cathedral’s offerings. Significantly, she also allowed her daughters greater physical freedom than was the norm, and they sometimes accompanied their mother on London visits to their Aunt Fanny (Frances-Arabella O’Grady) who was to become a suffragette. Yet the two central figures in the narrative, Winifred (1861-1938) and Florence (b.1858), were to eschew radicalism, although they were politically active for the Conservative party in the 1885 and subsequent elections. Education was a priority for Gertrude’s daughters. At fifteen, Winifred took part in her first public concert, singing and playing the piano, a prelude to ‘the beginning of a lifetime of all kinds of music-making…and service to music in her community’ (p.254). As a violin teacher, composer and conductor at local events, Elgar drifts in and out of the Norbury narrative. But his presence increases in relation to his success when the author traces the Norbury women’s lives and Elgar’s in parallel, until by 1897 with Elgar’s success, they conjoin. Whatever letters, diaries, autobiographies and newspapers Allen investigates, the minutiae of his characters’ lives is picked over and laid before us as a continuous narrative, without the benefit of either selection or prioritisation in relation to its contribution to the central subject. Dental difficulties and dead ducks receive as much attention as an Elgar composition. A reader might feel the need to be one of the Norbury leisured ladies to possess sufficient time for Allen’s peregrinations. Immersion may have been Allen’s intention, but without an introduction to delineate his purpose, it is difficult to judge, although the title is A Chronicle. The reader is left to isolate the material of interest and use, such as the focus on the 1896 bicycling craze taken up so fervently by the Norbury sisters and their circle. Also, recounting every step in Elgar’s career does inculcate an appreciation of what a protracted and soul-sapping journey his rise to success was, as well as an understanding of how the barrier of his lower class denied him swifter recognition and access to essential social connections such as the Norbury family. For although Winifred and Elgar moved in the same musical circles for many years, and Winifred had ‘taken tea’ with his wife who was from a higher rank, by the end of this considerable volume they seem not to have been ‘introduced’. In the style of the best serials, we are left to anticipate this connection, as Volume I concludes with a group of influential county ladies instigating a new Musical Society and deciding to invite Edward Elgar to be its conductor. To be continued…