Philip FitzHugh Radcliffe (27 April 1905 – 2 September 1986) was an English academic, musicologist and composer, born in Godalming, Surrey.
His academic writings included the books Mendelssohn (1954), Beethoven's String Quartets (1965), Schubert Piano Sonatas (BBC Music Guide, 1967), a biography of John Ireland (1954), E.J. Dent: a centenary memoir (1974) and sections of Grove's Dictionary, Denis Stevens's symposium The History of Song, and the New Oxford History of Music. In 1933, at the request of T. S. Eliot, Radcliffe took over the Music Chronicle section of The Criterion from J B Trend.
His compositions include short choral pieces (such as the eight part setting of God be In My Head, Mary walked through a wood of thorn, and The Oxen) liturgical music ( The Preces and Responses and Versicles and Responses), songs, and a small number of instrumental works (including the String Quartet in D major, 1939).Alan George. ' Radcliffe: String Quartet in D major (1939)', MusicWeb International, 31 July, 2025 His incidental music for the Cambridge Greek Plays included Clouds (Aristophanes, 1962) Oedipus Tyrannus (1965), Medea (Euripides, 1974), and Electra (Sophocles, 1977). Radcliffe was an active member of the Ten Club playreading society whose other members included EM Forster, Donald Beves and Noel Annan.
He died in a car accident while travelling with his sister, Susan, in France at the age of 81, while still an active Fellow of the College.
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