Explore and learn more about women composers
Click on each composer to listen to programmes and learn more. Scroll to the bottom of this page for a collection of archive material on more women composers.
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A child prodigy who was almost entirely self-taught, Beach became the first successful American female composer of large-scale art music.
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Composer, writer, mystic and visionary: the earliest composer in the Western canon whose name is known today was a woman.
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The first woman ever to win the prestigious Prix de Rome competition. Who knows what she could have achieved had she not died aged 24.
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Chaminade impressed Bizet when she performed her own compositions for him aged just eight. Her piano pieces were audience favourites in America.
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A fine viola-player, she was one of the first female professional orchestral musicians in London, and wrote much for her instrument.
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French harpsichord player and composer who performed for Louis XIV, the Sun King, aged just five, and wrote the first opera written by a woman to be performed in France.
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Lutyens is credited with bringing serialism to Britain. Famous for her scores for Hammer's horror films, she earnt the nickname 'Horror Queen'.
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A hugely versatile composer, notably successful in her lifetime. Influenced by Bartok and Janacek, she was the first woman to chair the Composer’s Guild of Great Britain.
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Alma was an accomplished writer of songs. The terms of her marriage with Gustav Mahler were that she forget her own interest in composing, a stipulation he learned to regret.
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Older sister of the more conspicuous Felix Mendelssohn. While her brother's musical ambitions were supported, her own suffered from the attitudes of the time.
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Known for her vividly dramatic style, Musgrave studied with Nadia Boulanger (Lili Boulanger's sister) and Aaron Copland.
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Clara Schumann once wrote: “A woman must not desire to compose – there has never yet been one able to do it. Should I expect to be the one?â€
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Suffragette, composer and author, Smyth attended the celebrated Leipzig Conservatory, to the dismay of her military father.
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The daughter of a servant girl and famous for her ‘bold and graceful manner’, Strozzi was brought up and educated by the poet Giulio Strozzi, who was probably her father.
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A prolific composer and the sole female member of ‘Les Six’, which included Milhaud and Poulenc, she was part of the artistic crowd in Paris in the roaring 1920s.
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The first woman appointed Master of the Queen’s Music, Weir is best known for her operas and theatrical works. Her music often draws on medieval history and traditional Scottish stories.
Discover further archive content on women composers - click on a composer's name below to reveal Radio 3 clips and programmes.
Grażyna Bacewicz (1909-1969)
Sally Beamish (born 1956)
Judith Bingham (born 1952)
Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979)
Laura Bowler (born 1986)
Charlotte Bray (born 1982)
Diana Burrell (born 1948)
Yi Chen (born 1953)
Unsuk Chin (born 1961)
Tansy Davies (born 1973)
Louise Farrenc (1804-1875)
Emily Hall (born 1978)
Augusta Holmès (1847-1903)
Emily Howard (born 1979)
Elena Kats-Chernin (born 1957)
Nicola LeFanu (born 1947)
Liza Lim (born 1966)
Elizabeth Lutyens (1906-1983)
Elizabeth Maconchy (1907-1994)
Kaffe Matthews (born 1961)
Claudia Molitor (born 1974)
Meredith Monk (born 1942)
Thea Musgrave (born 1928)
Lucy Pankhurst (born 1981)
Roxanna Panufnik (born 1968)
Rachel Portman (born 1960)
Shulamit Ran (born 1949)
Kaija Saariaho (born 1952)
Rebecca Saunders (born 1967)
Ethel Smyth (1858-1944)
Hanna Tuulikki (born 1982)
Errollyn Wallen (born 1958)
Jennifer Walshe (born 1974)
Judith Weir (born 1954)
Grace Williams (1906–1977)
Debbie Wiseman (born 1963)
Explore and learn more about women composers on the Radio 3 website...
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Radio 3 has compiled a definitive playlist of works by seminal female composers.
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Listen to female composers speaking in these exclusive archive recordings.