Talk:Edmund Chipp

Latest comment: 6 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Family edit

Just parking this here for the moment: (Hampstead/Highgate-Ely connection) Edmund Herbert Oliver Chipp. He was born about 1850 in Hampstead, London, England. He died in 1903 in Ely, Cambridgeshire, England. Edmund Herbert Oliver Chipp and Susan Atkinson had the following children: i. JOAN MARY NAOMI3 CHIPP was born on 06 Aug 1881. She died on 17 Oct 1968. She married Ellison Annesley Voysey on 17 Jun 1914. He was born about 1867. He died on 30 Jun 1942. ii. ROBERT EDMUND OLIVER CHIPP was born on 16 Sep 1886. He died on 09 Jun 1944.


Untitled edit

This page is still evolving.Bvrly (talk) 18:35, 18 February 2010 (UTC)Reply

I have references and much more content to insert as soon as time allows. I can fill in where someone has added <citation needed> but it is my way to write a section and then fillin the refs later. Sometimes I miss one, but I do have them. You might even know it yourself and be able to fill it in for me. Bvrly (talk) 10:28, 10 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Chipp and Mendelssohn edit

Dear Bvrly, Please don't take my edits of this article as an attack on you personally. What you have written about Mendelssohn's untoward reception in the UK before 1844 is completely unsubstantiated by any biography of the composer - please look for example at R. Larry Todd's 2003 biography, Werner's biography or indeed any other. Nor was there any hint of anti-Semitism attached to M. in the press or elsewhere. There is no evidence that Chipp introduced M.'s music to the Royal Family. And it is just not true that Chipp was the first to play M.'s compositions in the UK before he became famous (or even I think that he was the first to give M's organ sonatas in public, as the composer himself played them frequently, but I am open to correction on this if you can provide citations). The Musical Times obituary which you cite does not say that Mendelssohn heard Chipp play the six sonatas from memory, only that the obituarist heard him do so - your citation as it stood was misleading. (Of course if you can find well-researched publications which you can cite backing such statements, I will gladly withdraw these comments). The Oxford DNB article on Chipp does not even mention Mendlessohn.I do not mean in any way to demean Chipp, but if you make unreasonable claims for him you yourself are devaluing him. With best regards, --Smerus (talk) 21:33, 8 March 2010 (UTC)Reply


I have now found a reference which indicate that Chipp may have been the first to play the organ sonatas in public, and have cited this. This comment doesn't extend to Mendelssohn's other works of course.--Smerus (talk) 13:42, 9 March 2010 (UTC)Reply


Smerus, you are too quick to judge, and in particular to delete. As you admit in your last sentence, sometimes there ARE sources for information that you do not find yourself till later. Only a fool will come out with blanket statements like "There is no evidence" unless you know what I have in front of me and have read everything ever written in the history of the world. You do not know everything, and whilst some things may not feature in the biography of one man they may appear in reputable publications or biographies of another. Suffice to say that I have been greatly upset by your rapid deletions of my previous contributions and did as you said and did not put anything else on the Mendelssohn page, but now you pursue me to this. I do feel that this is a personal attack and as I have not interfered with your own postings and pages, I would be grateful if you can now leave me alone unless you are actually contributing new information. Enough sabotage and sarcasm. If you want to make comment restrict it to the talk page and I will look at it, but please stop tampering with my posts.In view of the tone of your previous communications however I would much prefer it if you actually did not bother to comment either. Give the pages a chance to develop and come back and look in one year or something. Thanks. Bvrly (talk) 10:14, 10 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Smerus,, PLEASE stop deleting stuff.Or completely rewriting it. It is very discouraging. you have wikistalked me from the mendelssohn page where you deleted every single sentence I had written. Please step back now. Give the stub some time to develop rather than changing something every few hours. It is hard to keep up with you.

Formatting and references edit

Thankyou to everyone who has helped to create this article. I had never heard of E.T. Chipp and I've enjoyed reading about him.

I've done my best to format the article and its references. I've not achieved perfection so please feel welcome to make improvements. I'm unhappy about giving two separate references for successive pages of the same publications. However I've done so because the publications were viewed online and each page has a different URL. I don't understand the purpose of the reference for the Percy Chapel[1] as it links to its baptismal records for 1776-1808, long before Chipp was born, and in any case the documents seem to be unavailable for viewing online. Hence the reference doesn't seem to substantiate Dr Chipp's tenure or dates as chapel organist.

Is it wrong to include E.T. Chipp's doctorate in the article title? It doesn't seem normal Wikipedia style. For example, both Dr Beeching and Dr Crippen appear with just their forenames and surname. Should the article be moved to plain Edmund Thomas Chipp? Motacilla (talk) 20:53, 10 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

The title of this article should indeed be just "Edmund Thomas Chipp". I put a request in to make this happen by tagging Edmund Thomas Chipp with db-move template. Jweiss11 (talk) 05:53, 11 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Jweiss11 and Tikiwont: thankyou for the page move.

Smerus: thankyou for the amendments and additional references. I have now wikified their formatting and added the missing details of Percy Scholes' The Mirror of Music 1844-1944. Please note the templates for standardising citations from books and journals and for combining identical inline citations. They help to keep articles tidy, and they help fellow-Wikipedians to remember all the publication details that they should include when citing sources. Motacilla (talk) 15:47, 11 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Commissioning of organ pieces edit

The commisioning of Mendelssohn's organ sonatas was quite independent of Novello and of Chipp. It resulted from the commissioning by Chalres Coventry of en edition of Bach's chorales and a set of voluntaries. See Todd (2003), 478-479. Best, --Smerus (talk) 17:06, 11 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Smerus - STOP DELETING MY POSTS and give me a chance to substantiate things. I have other sources which disagree with your view and back up what I have written. I am going to undo you revision. Please leave me alone as I have requested before. 92.29.46.165 (talk) 18:48, 11 March 2010 (UTC) M.s letters are a better source than any biography you have read, and I trust the news reports of the time over retrospective information such as Scholes.Bvrly (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 00:00, 12 March 2010 (UTC).Reply

Unfortunately MS letters are WP:OR and not appropriate as Wikipedia references. Please take a moment to read and understand the procedures of Wikipedia. Furthermore, please understand that noone in Wikipedia 'owns' articles, or can tell others to leave them alone. You are welcome to write what you like in a website of your own, but Wikipedia is a cooperative institution that works on a consesnsus basis - you cannot invent your own rules and impose them on others. What 'you' trust as evidence is not the issue; what others can refer to, is. Best regards --Smerus (talk) 08:03, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Smerus - Mendelssohns leter are NOTI {[WP:OR]} if they have previously been published and cited. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Bvrly (talkcontribs) 14:10, 4 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

  • Then cite them - it's as simple as that. And do sign your comments. Best, --Smerus (talk) 14:16, 4 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Mendelssohn's Introduction to the Royal Family edit

Claims have been made in this article that Chipp was responsible for the introduction of Mendelssohn to the British Royal Family. The facts are as follows:

In his 1842 visit to London, Mendelssohn had with him a letter of introduction to Prince Albert from his cousin the Prussian King Frederick William IV. Her presented this letter and met with Albert, on June 14th 1842. The following evening he met with both Albert and Queen Victoria, and played the piano to them. These meetings are recorded in Mendelssohn's own letters to his mother and his brother, and in Queen Victoria's own journal for 16th June. A full coverage of these matters is given in R. Larry Todd's 'Mendelssohn: A Life in Music' (Oxford, 2003), p. 439.

The assertion that Chipp made the introduction is clearly incorrect and casts doubts on the veracity of other information in the article. This is a good example of why Wikipedia requires assertions to be clearly referenced, in particular when they appear to be controversial.--Smerus (talk) 09:02, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Mendelssohn's introduction to the Philharmonic Society edit

Claims have been made in the article that Chipp introduced Mendelssohn to the Philharmonic Society in London. Mendelssohn began his relationship with the Society in 1829 during his first London visit, when Chipp was six years old. During 1829 he played at a number of concerts at the Society, with which he continued to be associated during later visits. He was almost certainly introduced to the Society by Moscheles, who was an active member of the Society and was his host during many of his London visits. (see Todd (2004), 207-210). I have therefore removed the claim that Chipp was responsible for this introduction.--Smerus (talk) 09:10, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

They ARE FACTS_ give me a chance to put the references and stop interfering eery few hours! Bvrly (talk) 11:13, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

If you have facts you should have them to hand and introduce them as references when you write. I suggest you do not add controversial materials in future unless you are able to justify them. It will I think be hard to find factual evidence that Chipp at the age of 6 introduced Mendelssohn to the Society, but if you can do so I will unreservedly apologize. Best regards,--Smerus (talk) 15:25, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

In fact I now find on reading the journals of Sir George Smart (President of the Philharmonic Society) (Leaves from the Journal of Sir George Smart, London, 1907, p. 64) that he called on the Mendelssohn family in Berlin in 1825 and recommended Felix to come to London at that time. In 1825 Chipp was only 2, and therefore probably had little or any influence on the situation. Best regards, --Smerus (talk) 19:25, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

First performances of Mendelssohn's music in England edit

It has been claimed in this article that Chipp 'was credited with being the first person to perform his [Mendelssohn's] music in England. In fact Mendelssohn himself was the first performer of his own music in England at the 1829 Philharmonic Society concerts (when Chipp was 6 years old). Others performing Mendelssohn's music during this season included the cellist Robert Linley.(Todd (2004), 207). I have therefore removed this claim from the article.--Smerus (talk) 09:14, 12 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

First performances of Mendelssohn's organ sonatas edit

I have corrected the text to conform with the information provided in the sources. Edwards does not say that Chipp played all six sonatas in 1846, or that he played them from memory. Indeed he makes it clear that the complete performance from memory which he mentions was on another occasion. There is therefore no justification for claiming that these performances were complete, were from memory, or that Chipp 'swiftly learnt them' by heart.

I cite verbatim:

Dr. Chipp [...] was one of the first - probably the first - English organist to play the sonatas in public, and it was at an organ recital he gave at Messrs. Walker's Factory in April 1846. On one occassion, Dr. Chipp like Mendelssohn, played all six in succession, but entirely from memory (Edwards, 1901, p. 276)

As regards 1847 there is no reference in the source that Chipp was 'asked' to play the sonata to Mendelssohn, only that Mendlessohn heard him play it.

The 1848 recital is the first sourced mention that Chipp played all six by heart, therefore it is not justified to say that he played them by heart 'again'. --Smerus (talk) 16:59, 27 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Queen Victoria edit

I have deleted from the article the following:

Once when presented with a note from the Queen saying that she found the music he was currently playing discordant and unpleasant, he replied with the message that her "ears were out of tune!".

My reasons are as follows: 1) no reference or citation is given (and I have failed to find one) 2) It would be extraordinary to make such a curt and rude remark to one's Sovereign 3) There is no evidence in the article to indicate that Queen Victoria even knew who Chipp was, let alone write a note to him about music.

So lest this anecdote takes unsourced wings via Wikipedia I have withdrawn it. As always, I shall be the first to acknowledge my error if proved wrong.

I quote from WP:Verifiability (WP's emphases, not mine)

The burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material.This is because it is generally much harder to prove that a statement cannot be sourced to the literature than to provide a citation to the source of the statement. All quotations and any material challenged or likely to be challenged must be attributed to a reliable, published source using an inline citation.

--Smerus (talk) 13:22, 29 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

External links modified edit

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