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Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Athina Fytika
Ionian University (Corfu)
afytika@gmail.com
The career of Greek pianist and composer, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994), exemplifies the obstacles
placed before foreign-trained women musicians who aspired to be taken seriously as composers
in twentieth-century Greece. By all accounts Kyriakou was a remarkable musician who
demonstrated an early talent for both composing and playing the piano. Nevertheless, by her late
twenties she decided to forego her promising future as a composer and instead limit herself to
the career of a performing virtuoso. The pivotal moment seems to have been the poor reception
of her First Piano Concert, which she premiered in Athens in 1943.1 Considering all her efforts to
become a composer and all she had achieved toward that end, her decision to stop composing
after the 1943 concerto performance demands closer scrutiny. Clearly, one must be careful when
attributing motivations to any historical figure. Nonetheless, in Kyriakou’s case considerable
evidence suggests that prevailing social and aesthetic prejudices against women and certain kinds
of foreign influence, expressed by a hostile critical press, led her to her reluctant decision to
abandon composition.
Kyriakou’s musical talents were apparent from an early age. In 1923, at age six, she
performed her premier recital at the Athens Parnassos Hall, drawing the infatuation of the Greek
press. She also attracted the intense interest of Elena Venizelou, wife of the Greek prime
minister, who sponsored Kyriakou’s subsequent studies in Europe. This initially involved a 1925
visit to Paris, where, despite having no formal musical training, she was permitted to present her
own compositions to Vincent d’Indy and Albert Roussel, both of whom praised the eight-year-
old’s innate talent.2 Kyriakou continued her youthful studies in Vienna with Paul Weingarten
(piano) and Richard Stöhr (composition), eventually returning to Paris to enter the Paris
Conservatoire in 1930, at age thirteen. Studying piano with Isidore Philippe, she graduated two
years later with the prestigious first prize in piano. By that time, she had begun studying
composition with Henri Büsser and had heard some of her works performed in the concerts of
the Société Nationale de Musique. She also managed to have some her works published by the
French company Durand. Kyriakou had accomplished all this by 1935, her eighteenth year,
whereupon she moved back to Athens to begin a career as a pianist and composer. Despite
marriage, motherhood, and the disruptions caused by the Second World War, Kyriakou was
1 Her only work dated after 1943 is a Greek dance from 1947.
2 ‘[Ses] improvisations, evidemment très rudimentaires, denotent un sentiment et une intelligence certainement
2 ‘[Ses] improvisations, evidemment très rudimentaires, denotent un sentiment et une intelligence certainement
très au dessus de son âge.’ (Her improvisations, obviously very rudimentary, manifest an emotional and intellectual
level certainly beyond her age.) Vincent d’Indy, letter of 12 April 1925. ‘Je n’ai jamais rencontré jusqu’ici un enfant
plus prodigieusement doué pour l’art musical.’ (I’ve never before met a child more gifted in the art of music.) Albert
Roussel, letter of 4 March 1925. Although d’Indy refers to Kyriakou’s ‘improvisations’, she herself always maintained
that they were complete compositions. Georgios Sclavos, a musician who visited little Rena in Greece in 1922 with
the purpose of transcribing some of her compositions, testifies that the girl repeated each passage several times,
playing it in an identical manner with a ‘remarkable precision’, Mουσική Επιθεώρηση (June 1922). All translations are
mine.
Athina Fytika, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Mousikos Logos – Issue 2 (January 2015) – ISSN: 1108-6963
39
highly successful as a pianist, playing concerts in Greece and throughout Europe, which regularly
included her own compositions alongside standard repertoire.
It is important to recognize that Kyriakou did not stop composing for lack of
encouragement from established composers. In fact, this is attested to by a significant corpus of
correspondence dating from 1934–39 that includes letters from her father, who worked in the
Dean’s Office at the University of Athens; her former teachers; the Legation de la République
Française en Grèce; and the Legation Royale de Grèce.3 These letters highlight Kyriakou’s efforts
to raise the funds necessary for her return to Paris, where she hoped to continue her education.
In this effort she enjoyed the support of many prominent Greek artists and journalists. For
instance, a 1936 letter signed by, among others, the poet Kostis Palamas, the writer Grigoris
Xenopoulos, the writer-journalist Pavlos Nirvanas, and the composers Georgios Lavrangas and
Frank Choisy praises Kyriakou’s talent and achievements and underlines the importance of her
completing her compositional studies.4 That same year, a group of seven professors from the
Athens Conservatory, including Dimitri Mitropoulos, Giorgios Sklavos, and Filoktitis
Economides signed a letter recognizing her ‘remarkable’ talent for composition.5
It is equally necessary to point out that Kyriakou never ceased regarding herself as a
composer, and that she made continuous efforts to promote herself as such. In the numerous
interviews she gave throughout her life, she often described herself as an active composer, or at
least as planning to return to action soon. Similarly, in her many press releases and letters, she
3 There are several letters from Kyriakou’s former teachers. A letter from Henri Rabaud, director of the
Conservatoire to the Greek Ambassador of Paris, Monsieur Politis, dated 5 January 1934, is the first in a series
suggesting that additional funding was needed for Kyriakou to complete her compositional studies: ‘Si par votre
intervention bien veuillante Mlle Kyriacou pouvait obtenir l'aide qui lui est encore nécessaire je puis vous assurer que
cette générosité encouragerait un jeune talent, hautement digne de votre interêt.’ A letter from Henri Büsser to the
Rector of the University of Athens, dated 25 August 1934, urges the Univerity to grant a scholarship to Kyriakou to
continue her studies: ‘Je puis vous assurer que si l'Université d'Athènes donne à Rena Kyriakou la bourse qu’elle
postule, elle aidera au développement d’une carrière qui fera certainement honneur à ceux qui l’auront soutenue et
encouragée.’ In her archive there is also an undated letter from Dr. Richard Stöhr to the Rector of Athens University.
Stöhr confirms Kyriakou's compositional studies and states that he believes that once they are completed she will
probably become an important composer: ‘Wenn das gennante Fraülein ihre Studien fortsetzt und beende wird sie
wahrscheinlich eine Komponistin von Bedeutung werden und so ihrem Vaterlande alle Ehre machen.’ Finally, there
is another letter dated 9 September 1934 from Paul Weingarten to unknown recipient that also verifies Kyriakou's
studies and talents. In addition to these letters from teachers, a letter from the Légation de la République Française
en Grèce to Rena Kyriakou, dated from 18 August 1939, confirms that Kyriakou was granted a semi-scholarship for
the academic year 1939–1940: ‘J'ai l’honneur de vous faire savoir qu’il vous a été attribué une demi-bourse d’études
par le Gouvernement français pour l’année scolaire 1939–1940. Le montant de cette bourse est de 5.000 francs.’
Similarly, a letter from the Legation Royale de Grèce to Rena Kyriakou, signed by Madame Politis, dated 15
September (year unkown), suggests that 5000 francs remaining from her last scholarship could be used to continue
her composition studies, and that this would be in addition a new scholarship of 1250 francs per month – apparently
from another source: ‘Par consequant il restait encore à votre disposition 5000 francs qui, éventuellement, pouvaient
fournir le début d’une nouvelle bourse. […] d’un autre côté, mous avons l’information que vous avez obtenues (je ne
sais pas de quelle source) une nouvelle bourse de 1250: par mois pour la composition.’ All of Kyriakou’s
correspondence cited in this article is held in the Rena Kyriakou Archive in the Kyriakou family house in Rio,
Greece. Copies of all items in the Archive have also been donated to the Historical Museum of Crete, in Heraklion.
4 The other signatories were Palamas, Psaroudas, Melas, Synadinos, and Dambergis, letter, 9 May 1936.
5 ‘Κατά τας τελευταίας Συναυλίας αυτής τας δοθείσας εν Αθήναις, η Δις Κυριακού εξετέλεσε πλείστα έργα ιδίας
Συνθέσεως δια των οποίων διεπιστώθη το αξιοσηµείωτον τάλαντον αυτής εις το είδος τούτο της µουσικής.’ (In the course
of her last Athenian concerts, Miss Kyriakou performed many of her own compositions, manifesting thus her
remarkable talent in this kind of music.) Farantatos, Skokos, Mitropoulos, Economides, Veloudios, Sklavos, and
Bustodios, letter, 13 May 1936.
Athina Fytika, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Mousikos Logos – Issue 2 (January 2015) – ISSN: 1108-6963
40
consistently identifies herself as a performer and composer.6 As late as 1962, long after she had
stopped composing, she claimed that
Η σύνθεση περπατάει δίπλα µου σε όλη µου τη ζωή. Το όνειρό µου, ο
µεγάλος µου σκοπός είναι να γράψω ακόµα περισσότερο από τις στοίβες
των χειρογράφων που δεν έχει δη ούτε ακούσει ποτέ κανείς.7
(Composition is a close companion at every step in my life. My dream,
my ultimate ambition, is to produce many more manuscripts than the
already existing pile of manuscripts that no one has ever seen or heard.)
Despite the unfavorable initial reception of her piano concerto, she made several attempts to
revive it.8 She finally succeeded in 1954 with a second performance in Geneva with the Orchestre
de la Suisse Romande. Kyriakou also made efforts to promote and publish her compositions. In
1950 she arranged for a music critic to spread news of an agreement with Durand to publish all
her preludes and the variations set.9 While this deal never materialized, she did manage, with
Isidore Philippe’s assistance, to have her Perpetuum mobile, Op. 15, printed by the New York-based
publisher Carl Fischer in 1954.10
To be sure, Kyriakou’s decision to abandon composition cannot be attributed to a single
cause. Certainly her international performing career, whose potential for success had never been
doubted, reduced the time she could devote to composition. It is also necessary to point out that
Kyriakou adapted rather poorly to changes in the postwar professional environment. For
example, she refused to hire an agent, relying instead on personal references from teachers and
acquaintances, as had been common practice before the war. In the 1960s and 70s, when
executives from the Vox recording company, along with members of her family, urged Kyriakou
to get a manager to coordinate her recitals with record sales, advertise her works, and deal with
publishing companies, she insisted on doing all this work herself. She also seems to have naively
believed that the pure value of musical excellence would suffice to generate the acclamation of a
well-educated audience. This, in fact, is a running theme in her correspondence with friends and
colleagues, including Mitropoulos and Philippe.
It must be acknowledged that Kyriakou’s own attitude towards her compositions was not
without some puzzling ambivalences. Although she programmed some of her pieces for solo
concerts or used them for encores, for some reason her performance repertoire did not include
6 According to critic Achilleas Mamakis she was planning to finish a second piano concerto by the summer of
1949, Έθνος, 6 May 1949. This concerto, however, remained uncompleted. Kyriakou has left us a general plan of
ideas and harmonic development. The first movement is still a sketch with the piano part partially provided; the
second is completed; and the third is essentially non-existant. However, when interviewed in 1963, she included it in
her list of her works: ‘J’ai composé quelques mélodies, mais l’essentiel est consacré au piano: des pièces pour piano
seul, un concerto, un second concerto inachevé […]’ (I composed some songs, but for the most part devoted to the
piano: some pieces for solo piano, a concerto, a second uncompleted concerto […]) Gazette de Lausanne, 7 April 1963.
All parts and fragments of the Second Piano Concerto are held in the Kyriakou Archive, see n. 3.
7 Rena Kyriakou, Eλευθερία, 12 August 1962.
8 In 1948 she played it for Richard Austin, music advisor of London’s New Era Concert Society, Richard Austin,
letter to Rena Kyriakou, 9 August, 1948. In 1950, Henri Büsser mentions in one of his letters his deliberations with
Albert Wolff about whether the concerto could be performed in the Paris Concerts Pasdeloup the following year.
Büsser suggests also contacting Felix Apprahamian, the famous British music critic and promoter of French music in
the UK, Henri Büsser, letter, 6 February, 1950.
9 Achilleas Mamakis, Έθνος, 21 July 1950.
10 In 1948, Kyriakou sent a copy of the work to her former piano teacher, Isidore Philippe – by that time living in
New York – who forwarded it to publishing company. Philippe writes to Kyriakou of this event: ‘J’ai reçu votre
Perpetuum mobile et je l’ai donné ensuite au directeur de la Maison Carl Fischer, la plus important ici, plus même que
Schirmer.’ (I received your Perpetuum mobile and then gave it to the director of the Carl Fischer company, the most
important one here, even more important than Schirmer.) Isidore Philippe, letter, 21 April 1948.
Athina Fytika, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Mousikos Logos – Issue 2 (January 2015) – ISSN: 1108-6963
41
an even coverage of her composed material. Thus, for example, her two sets of Preludes, Opp.
12 and 13, nowadays considered two of her better works, remained unfamiliar to audiences and
even to her immediate family.11 She was also very reluctant to share her compositions with
students or fellow pianists, even when asked.12 Also curious is her apparent indifference to
cataloguing and dating her works, which she did only towards the end of her life upon the
insistence of her nephew and admirer, Pavlos Kalligas.13 Of course, none of this indicates a lack
of concern for her compositional legacy. Any number of reasons might explain her reluctance to
disseminate and catalogue her unpublished works. At any rate, by 1992 she was exploring the
possibility of recording herself playing the main corpus of her solo piano pieces.14 Unfortunately,
by that time Kyriakou was seventy-seven and already suffering from the serious health problems
that would lead to her death the following year.
If there was any explicitly self-imposed constraint on Kyrikou’s pursuit of a
compositional career, it may have been her recognition of the associated financial difficulties. We
know, for instance, that she commonly complained about this to her family. On the other hand,
one should recognize that her financial problems began in 1933, when Helena Venizelou
suspended her support for Kyriakou’s studies. Although Venizelou claimed in a letter to
Kyriakou’s father that this was because she had fulfilled her agreed term of support, it may have
also been motivated by Venizelou’s disapproval of the direction in which Kyriakou’s education
was taking.15 It had been Venizelou who required Kyriakou to leave Vienna to enter Philippe’s
piano class at the Paris Conservatoire. While Venizelou claimed that she was worried that
Kyriakou’s piano playing was not improving sufficiently under Weingarten, her failure to
comment on the progress of Kyriakou’s composition studies with Stöhr cannot go unnoticed.16
Once Kyriakou was in Paris, Venizelou certainly failed to support her efforts to continue
11 Theodoros Choïdas, interview with the author, 5 August 2013, Rio, Greece.
12 Domna Evnouhidou, the pianist who recently (2010) gave a the second performance of Kyriakou’s piano
concerto in Greece, and who had met the composer several times, states that she was very reluctant to share her
compositions, or even to discuss them openly. Interview with the author, 30 August 2013, Thessaloniki, Greece.
13 Pavlos Kalligas, ‘Introduction to the Musical Works of Rena Kyriakou’, Μούσικος Λόγος [print series] 3
(2001): 152–67.
14 Leopoldine Rozsa, a friend of Kyriakou and writer of some of her liner notes, wrote to Kyriakou: ‘Denn wir
müssen das Programm sehr vorsichtig und komerziell auswählen. Auch Deine Vorschläge 18 Preludien – Les Cloches –
Burlesque und Perpetuum mobile sind nicht schlect, aber wie gesagt, dass muss man alles prüfen und den Mann
[aussuchen], der die Aufnahme dann verkaufen muss, der weiss genau, was auf dem Markt fehlt und was Aussicht
hat, sich gut zu verkaufen’. (We have to choose the programme very carefully from a commercial point of view. As
far as your proposal is concerned, about the 18 Preludes, Les Cloches, Burlesque, and the Perpetuum mobile, it’s not bad,
but, as already said, one has to check everything and then [find] someone capable of selling the recording, who
knows exactly what is missing in the market, and what has the potential to sell well.) Letter to Rena Kyriakou, 14
June 1993.
15 ‘Είχε υποσχεθεί ν'αναλάβη τας σπουδάς της Δδος θυγατρός σας δια 5 έτη. Επτά όλα έτη παρήλθον από το 1926.
Εξώδευσε δια την µικράν περισσότερον από 3.000 λίρας’ ([Venizelou] had promised to take over your daughter’s studies
for a period of five years. Seven full years have passed since 1926. She has spent more than 3000 pounds for the
child). Helena Venizelou to Dimitris Kyriakos, letter, 12 August 1933.
16 Helena Venizelou to Dimitris Kyriakos, letter, 2 November 1929. Kyriakou had some initial success in Vienna,
as documented by press reports concerning an event that took place on 25 March 1927, where Greek art students
participated. The nine-year-old Kyriakou performed Chopin and works of her own. On 3 April 1927, the Allgemeine
Zeitung writes, ‘Diese 9 Jahre alte kleine stammt aus Heraklion auf Kreta, komponiert aus ihrem dritten Lebensjahre,
und hat bereits mehr als 100 Musikstücke geschaffen. Freitag brachte Sie eine musikalische Schilderung der
Entführung der Persephone, Erinnerungen aus Griechenland, une eine Phantasie aus griechischen Tänzen zum
Vortrage. Mann kann nur gespannt sein, welche Entwicklung dieses Musikgenie nehmen wird’. (This nine-year-old
child comes from Heraklion, Crete. She has been composing since she was three, and she has already penned more
than 100 musical pieces. On Friday she presented a musical description of the abduction of Persephone,
reminiscences of Greece, and a fantasy consisting of Greek dances. One can only look forward to the evolution of
this musical genius.)
Athina Fytika, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Mousikos Logos – Issue 2 (January 2015) – ISSN: 1108-6963
42
studying composition. In 1931, when Kyriakou expressed her intention to compete for the
prestigious Prix de Rome, Venizelou refused to allow this, claiming that it would require her to
change her citizenship from Greek to French.17 As mentioned, Kyriakou would go on to graduate
with the first prize from Philippe’s piano class in 1932, whereupon she decided to continue her
studies in composition exclusively. That same year Venizelou refused to sponsor the publication
of Kyriakou’s works by the Senart company, despite an offer from Dominique Crossfield, a
friend of Venizelou and admirer of Kyriakou, to contribute half of the required costs.18
The least that one can make of all this is that Venizelou had been primarily interested in
Kyriakou as a pianist and had little concern for her development as a composer. It was
undoubtedly charming to have a young protégée like Kyriakou composing such pieces as her
Cretan Dance, which celebrated Venizelou’s familial and national heritage.19 But it is certainly
plausible, and perhaps likely, that Venizelou’s actions reflect the prevalent belief that serious
composition was both inappropriate for, and beyond the abilities of, women musicians. As it
turned out, Venizelou’s withdrawal of support effectively ended Kyriakou’s compositional
training. Kyriakou did manage to secure enough funding to complete a certificate from the
Conservatoire, auditing the Büsser’s composition classes during the 1937–38 academic year.20
That was to be the end of Kyriakou’s formal study of composition.
A derisive attitude towards women’s potential to succeed as composers is evident in
much of the Greek critical reception of Kyriakou’s performances of her own works. On 7 March
1936 Kyriakou gave a solo recital in Athens whose programme included a large number of her
own recent compositions. According to numerous Greek newspapers, the audience’s enthusiastic
response to her works included repeated encores. Greek music critics, by contrast, were far less
complimentary. While critical opinion was far from unanimous, even the most supportive
reviewers tended to characterize her compositions as the pleasant works of a beginner whose full
potential had not yet been realized. Ioannis Psaroudas, for example, praises Kyriakou’s
compositions and wonders why she remains ‘in a country full of Maecenas’ rather than returning
to Paris.21 Michalis Kyriakides detects in Kyriakou’s works ‘an intense restlessness, a sign of her
17 ‘Ελπίζω ότι δεν θα λησµονήσεις ποτές ότι είσαι Ελληνίς και ότι αυτό ήτο αρχικώς η κυριωτέρα σύστασις η οποία
εκίνησεν το ενδιαφέρον µου προς σε...εάν αληθινώς έχεις τάλαντον όπως είµαι πεπεισµένη δεν έχεις ανάγκην του Prix de
Rome δια να διαπρέψεις.’ (I hope you will never forget your Greek identity and the fact that this was what kindled my
interest in you in the first place […] If you are truly talented, as I am convinced you are, you do not need any Prix de
Rome to excel.) Helena Venizelou to Rena Kyriakou, letter, 15 February 1931.
18 Dominique Crossfield to Madame Kyriakou (Rena Kyriakou's mother), letter, 18 February, 1932.
19 Venizelou was of Cretan origin. A postcard from Crossfield mentions her own performance of Kyriakou’s
Cretan Dance for the Venizelos couple and that they were both thrilled. Dominique Crossfield to Rena Kyriakou,
postcard, 19 September 1931.
20 She received partial funding from the Orthodox Community in Trieste and, according to her nephew, Pavlos
Kalligas, from the Athens Academy. A letter from the Orthodox Community in Trieste to Rena Kyriakou, dated 19
December 1936, verifies the partial scholarship: ‘H […] Επιτροπή […] απονέµει εις Υµάς το επί τούτω ωρισµένον
βραβείον εκ. Λι. 1000 (χιλίων), εγκαρδίως συγχαίρουσα’. Pavlos Kalligas states that the Athens Academy granted a
scholarship for one academic year, ‘Introduction’, 157.
21 ‘Θα εκφράσω την απορία µου πώς και γιατί, ενώ από πέρυσι η Ρένα Κυριακού επρόκειτο να ξαναφύγει για το Παρίσι,
βρίσκεται βέβαια προς µεγάλη χαρά µας, ακόµη στας Αθήνας, αλλά και προς βλάβη της, γιατί της λείπει ελάχιστος καιρός
για να φτάση στο σηµείο να θεωρήται ώριµη πλέον συνθέτις και εν τούτοις για λόγους τους οποίους υποπτέυοµαι αλλά
ανεξήγητους σε έναν τόπο που αφθονούν οι Μαικήναι, δεν ηµπορεί να επιστρέψει προς το παρόν στο Conservatoire [...]’
(Let me voice my wonder at the fact that while Rena Kyriakou should be in Paris, since last year she is still in Athens,
of course to our great joy, but to her own disadvantage, because she is very close to being considered a mature
composer. And yet, for reasons which I suspect but frankly find hard to understand in a country full of Maecenas,
for the time being she cannot get back to the Conservatoire […]) Ioannis Psaroudas, Eλεύθερον Βήµα, 10 March
1936.
Athina Fytika, Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994): Composer, Pianist, Woman
Mousikos Logos – Issue 2 (January 2015) – ISSN: 1108-6963
43
very soul, as well as a vivid quest towards a future serious and important artistic creation’.22 And
Frank Choisy observes that ‘some episodes catch one’s attention for a moment due to the poetic
aspects or their exuberance’, but adds that such effects are ‘transient impression[s], less
communicative than her playing as a pianist’.23
Such mildly complimentary reviews could not possibly counter the disparaging attacks
from the likes of Manolis Kalomiris, the leading figure of the Greek National School and
arguably the most influential musician in Greece at the time.24 Mingling his openly sexist attitude
with his presumption of the superiority of German music, Kalomiris writes of Kyriakou’s
compositions:
Δεν υπάρχει αµφιβολία πως υπάρχει κάποια αυτοσχεδιαστική διάθεσις και
ευκολία στα έργα της που εξετέλεσε, δυστυχώς όµως υπάρχει και πολύ
ερασιτεχνική αντίληψη και µεγάλος επηρεασµός από το γαλλικό µουσικό
ιµπρεσιονισµό. Εν πάση περιπτώση, προκειµένου για σύνθεση, δεν πρέπει
να είµαστε πολύ απαιτητικοί από µια δεσποινίδα....στη δηµιουργική µουσική
[οι γυναίκες] δεν έχουνε φύγη από τον κύκλο του µετρίου, µετριωτάτου, που
η ανώτερη εκδήλωσή τους αποτελούν τα ζαχαρόπηκτα έργα της Σαµινάδ και
κάποια εξαίρεση τα λιγοστά σοβαρότερα έργα της Ν. Μπουλανζέ.25
(There is no doubt that in her works one can find an improvisational
mood as well as a natural aptitude. Unfortunately, at the same time one
can also find a very amateurish approach and a stark influence of French
Impressionism. Be that as it may, one should not expect much from a
young lady […] As far as creating music is concerned, women have not
gone far beyond a mediocre, very mediocre, level, whose most sublime
manifestation is represented by Chaminade’s sugary works, the only
exception being a few serious works by N[adia] Boulanger [emphasis
added to convey meaning of the original Greek].
In some of the negative reviews, gender bias is merely implied by terminology frequently used to
dismiss stereotypically feminine characteristics. For instance, Manolis Skouloudis derides
Kyriakou’s works for their amateurishness, superficial beauty, and lack of emotional depth:
Για τη Ρένα Κυριακού, τη συνθέτιδα, οι ζωϊικές συναισθηµατικές έννοιες:
χαρά, λύπη, αγώνας, νίκη δεν υπάρχουν παρά µόνο εξωτερικά....στη
συνθετική της προσπάθεια βλέπει κανείς καθαρά την ρηχή αγωνία της
ωραιότητας για την ωραιότητα να ζωγραφίζεται µε τα άτονα χρώµατα ενός
ντιλετάντικου σχεδίου, που δεν ταιριάζει στην αναµφισβήτητη µουσική της
ιδιοσυγκρασία.26
(For Rena Kyriakou the composer, vital emotional concepts like joy,
sadness, struggle, [and] victory exist only superficially […] In her
22 ‘Ως συνθέτης η Ρένα Κυριακού παρουσίασε µια ζωηρά ανησυχία, που είναι αυτή η ίδια η ψυχή της, και µία εντατική
αναζήτησι προς µίαν µελλοντικήν σοβαράν και µεγάλην δηµιουργίαν.’ Michalis Kyriakides, Ελληνικά Γράµµατα, 5 May
1935.
23 ‘Certains episodes arrêtent un instant l'attention par leurs côtés poétiques ou par leur exuberance. Mais
l'impression reste passagère, moins communicative que ne l'est le jeu de la pianiste’. Frank Choisy, Le Messager
d’Athènes 11 March 1936.
24 The ‘Greek National School’ refers to a group of nationalist composers dedicated to creating a distinctively
Greek style of music, which might be described somewhat simplistically as aspiring to adapt what they considered to
be characteristically Greek modes and melodies to a generally nineteenth-century German conception of harmony
and form.
25 Manolis Kalomiris, 'Εθνος, 10 March 1936.
26 Manolis Skouloudis, Ηχώ της Ελλάδος, 18 April 1935.
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compositional attempts one clearly sees the shallow effort of beauty for
beauty’s sake, painted in the dull colors of an amateurish design,
incompatible with her unquestionable musical imagination.)
This type of implicit gender bias was certainly not limited to Kyriakou’s male critics. For
example, Kalomiris’s sentiments are echoed in a similar review by Sophia Spanoudi:
Όσον για το στάδιο της συνθέτιδος, όσοι την αγαπούν οφείλουν εκ
καθήκοντος να την αποτρέψουν να το ακολουθήση, όπως φαίνεται ότι
ενασµενίζεται να το πράξη. Δεν επιτρέπεται να συγχέει κανείς µιαν φυσικήν
εύκολην ροπήν προς τα σπουδάς της αρµονίας της µουσικής µε την
δηµιουργικήν µουσικήν εφευρετικότητα, που είναι ανύπαρκτη σε γυναίκες.
Και ό,τι δεν παρουσίασαν ως τώρα τόσοι αιώνες µουσικής, δεν θα το
παρουσιάση βέβαια ποτέ ο φτωχός ελληνικός αιών µας.27
(As far as a career as a composer is concerned, those who love
[Kyriakou] have the duty to dissuade her from following it, which she is
obviously pleased to believe she will do. One should be wary not to
confuse a natural aptitude for the study of musical harmony with creative
musical inventiveness, which does not exist in women. Not to mention
that what so many centuries of music history have failed to produce will
definitely not be produced by our own penurious Greek century.)
Another woman critic, musicologist Avra Theodoropoulou, responded to Kyriakou’s recital with
an article in which she advises Kyriakou to abandon composition completely. As well as
dismissing Kyriakou’s interpretation of Chopin’s Second Piano Sonata, which, according to
Theodoropoulou contains ‘a world of passion virtually unknown to a nineteen-year-old girl’, she
finds Kyriakou’s compositions ‘artful and pianistic’ but ‘lacking personality and spontaneity’. She
then adds that ‘one can only wonder whether it would be preferable for the young artist to
devote herself exclusively to the career of a virtuoso, which one could safely predict as being
brilliant’.28 The obvious irony here is that Theodoropoulou is prepared to imagine a ‘brilliant’
performance career for Kyriakou, despite her supposed limited capacity for ‘passion’, yet refuses
to consider that any flaws in her compositions might be the result of youthful inexperience, and
thus admitting of improvement with continued training.
The negative critical reception of Kyriakou’s works in Greece stands in sharp contrast to
the praise they sometimes received from foreign critics. For instance, the Serbian composer
Milenko Zivkovic described Kyriakou’s compositions as belonging to ‘the best of Greek art
music we have ever listened to’.29 Similarly, Hungarian music historian and critic Tóth Aladár
declared that:
Her grandiose polyphonic imagination provides her compositions with
authentic poetic grace and completeness […] these compositions, full of
soul and impetus, offered to us by a nineteen-year-old girl, are quite an
27 Sophia Spanoudi, Aθηναϊκά Νέα, 10 March 1936. Spanoudi was Kalomiris’s piano teacher and a prominent
advocate for his style of musical nationalism.
28 ‘Άραγε θα παρουσιασθή αυτό [το προσωπικό και αυθόρµητο] αργότερα ή θα ήταν προτιµότερο για τη νεαρή
καλλιτέχνιδα ν'αφοσιωθεί αποκλειστικά στο δεξιοτεχνικό στάδιο, που ασφαλώς προβλέπεται για αυτήν λαµπρό.’ Avra
Theodoropoulou, Ελευθέρα Γνώµη, 13 March 1936.
29 ‘Koмπoзициje r-цe Kиpиaκy cлaдajy y нajбoльe што смо уопште из гpчке умeтнчке мyзике чyли.’ Milenko
Zivkovic, ΒΡΕΜΕ (newspaper), 11 January 1937.
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45
unusual phenomenon. Hence, one can look forward to a glorious future
for this female, or in this case, creative spirit.30
As mentioned earlier, Kyriakou’s 1943 premier of her piano concerto in Athens marked
the end of her compositional activity. This time the critical reviews were mostly negative, but at
least they focused on the perceived deficiencies in the composition rather than the natural
limitations of women composers. Criticism from male reviewers was rather mixed. Iosif
Papadopoulos-Grekas, for example, found the concerto overly dependent upon impressionistic
harmonies expressed in a Stravinskian aesthetic, which for him indicated that Kyriakou’s
compositional models were both ‘alien’ and ‘already very old’.31 Phoevos Anogianakis felt that the
piano was not as prominent as it should have been in a solo concerto.32 Nevertheless, as one
might expect, there were favorable reviews as well. Ioannis Psaroudas praises the concerto’s
artistry and originality of harmony and orchestration, adding that it was the only example of a
first piano concerto by any woman composer that could be characterized as a major work.33 And
Dr Walter Trienes, writing in the Nazi newspaper Deutsche Nachrichten in Griechenland, compliments
the concerto’s robust rhetorical musical language, ‘the highly able craftsmanship, [and] the formal
handling of the piano part’.34
One of the more interesting reviews came from a Greek woman, Alexandra Lalaouni. In
1942, upon hearing Kyriakou’s Theme and Variations, Op. 17 and Perpetuum Mobile, Op. 15,
Lalaouni had praised her ‘exquisite understanding of elaboration and form’, and suggested a
recital ‘consisting exclusively of Kyriakou’s compositions’.35 Thus, her description of Kyriakou’s
concerto as lacking ‘the form responsible for true art’ comes rather as a surprise.36 On the other
hand, if Kyriakou’s previously warm praise precludes suspecting her of gender bias, one
nevertheless suspects that her criticism does not reflect a disinterested appraisal of the concerto’s
compositional merits. A few months before the premier of Kyriakou’s concerto, Lalaouni’s
daughter, Lila, had premiered her own rather conservative First Piano Concerto, also with the
Athens State Orchestra. It might be that nepotism motivated her negative review, especially if
one bears in mind Ioannis Psaroudas’s contemporaneous public declaration, cited above, that
30 ‘Popmás instrumentális fantáziája valódi festõi bájt és gazdagságot kölcsönöz szerzeményeinek’, Tóth Aladár,
Pesti Napló (newspaper), 10 January 1938.
31 ‘Tο να είσαι όµως σύγχρονος συνθέτης, αποδίδων εξ ιδίων τον παλµόν, την ψυχήν και τον εσωτερικόν κόσµον της
γύρω ζωής και της φυλής σου ιδιαιτέρως, είναι τροµερά δύσκολο. [...](ξεχνιέσαι) όταν αντιγράφεις απλώς τα ξένα µοντέλα
του 1919-1926 περίπου, που είναι αυτά - φευ! - πολύ παλαιά πλέον’. (However, it is very difficult for someone to be a
contemporary composer, to render on one’s own the pulse, the soul, and the inner reality of surrounding life and
especially of your race […] One is condemned to oblivion when one is copying alien models of ca. 1919–1926,
themselves, alas! already very old.) Iosif Papadopoulos-Greka, Ραδιόφωνον, 26 December 1943–1 January 1944.
32 Phoevos Anogianakis, Καλλιτεχνικά Νέα, 25 December 1943.
33 Ioannis Psarouda, Ελεύθερον Βήµα, 21 December 1943.
34 ‘Hervozuheben ist die bedeutende handwerkliche Könnerschaft, die Ausgestaltungen des Klavierpartes […]’
Walter Trienes, Deutsche Nachrichten in Griechenland, 21 December 1943.
35 ‘Αυτό [η κυριαρχία της σκέψης πάνω στην καρδιά] φαίνεται και στις συνθέσεις της κ. Κυριακού που είναι γραµµένες
µε ξεχωριστή τεχνική επιδεξιότητα, µε λαµπρή αντίληψη της φόρµας και της αναπτύξεως...µια συνθετική εργασία πάντως
εξαιρετικού ενδιαφέροντος που αξίζει να παρακολουθήσωµε περισσότερο σε κανένα πρόγραµµα αφιερωµένο αποκλειστικά
σε συνθέσεις της κ. Κυριακού’. (This [prevalence of intellect over emotion] is evident in Kyriakou’s compositions,
which are composed with a remarkable technical virtuosity, an exquisite understanding of elaboration and form […]
at any rate, an extremely interesting compositional work which deserves to be followed more closely, perhaps on the
basis of a program consisting exclusively of Kyriakou’s compositions.) Alexandra Lalaouni, Βραδυνή, 23 December
1942.
36 ‘Tο πιάνο µένει στο δεύτερο πλάνο, συχνά σκεπάζεται από την ορχήστρα κι ανάµεσα του πιάνου και ορχήστρας δεν
υπάρχει καµµία συνοχή και λογική συνέπεια - λείπει η φόρµα, η φόρµα που κάνει την πραγµατική τέχνη’. (The piano is
relegated to the background, more often than not eclipsed by the orchestra, and there is no coherence or logical
consistency between the piano and the orchestra – the form responsible for true art is absent.) Alexandra Lalaouni,
Βραδυνή, 20 December 1943.
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Kyriakou’s concerto was the first such work by a woman composer that deserved recognition as
a major work.
At any rate, as with earlier reviews of Kyriakou’s works, the most acerbic criticisms of the
concerto came from women. Sophia Spanoudi, whose 1936 review in Athinaïka Nea is quoted
above, attacks the concerto to smugly reaffirm her opinion that Kyriakou had wasted her time
with self-deluding aspirations to be a composer:
‘Η νεαρά αυτή καλλιτέχνις, τόσο πλούσια προικισµένη µουσικώς και
τεχνικώς ως σολίστ, δεν εννοεί µε κανένα τρόπο να περιορισθή µέσα στο
πλαίσιο του πιάνου, το οποίο βρίσκει στενό για τις ανώτερες φιλοδοξίες
της.’ 37
(This young artist, otherwise so greatly gifted musically and technically as
a soloist, could simply not imagine remaining a pianist, considering this
to be too narrow for her ambitions.)
Throughout her review, in which she restricts her comments to musical considerations, she
nevertheless always uses scare quotes to refer sarcastically to Kyriakou as the ‘composer’.
The review by another woman critic, Mary Chalkia, is strikingly similar to Spanoudi’s.
Chalkia claims that ‘Ms. Kyriakou mishandled every single instrument’, accuses her of lacking
originality, and also urges her to stop composing.38 While Chalkia superficially makes her case on
the basis of the concerto’s compositional flaws, her objectivity and critical acumen are thrown
into doubt by the reason she gives for the hopelessness of Kyriakou’s future as a composer.
‘Even Beethoven’, says Chalkia, ‘was influenced in his early years by Mozart’.39 By Chalkia’s
estimation, Kyriakou could not express originality because she had not benefitted from a similarly
influential relationship with a great master. Leaving aside Chalkia’s logically tortured implication
that originality necessarily depends upon the influence of great historical figures, by her account
any composer who fails to measure up to the compositional prowess of even Beethoven, or who
did not enjoy the childhood influence of a Mozart figure, could never become original, and thus
should never start composing in the first place.
Such was the level of 1940s Greek musical critical discourse that contributed to
Kyriakou’s decision to end her compositional activities. As shown in the foregoing examples, it is
apparent that much of it was motivated by gender bias, nepotism, and implausible music
historicism, decorated with superficial musical observations intended to provide a veneer of
technical legitimacy. While that alone would constitute a fairly strong indictment of Kyriakou’s
critics, one may equally challenge them for the things they fail to mention. Even if one were to
grant that Kyriakou’s piano concerto suffers from a number of compositional flaws, a fair critical
assessment would surely have to take into account that it was the first large-scale work of a
twenty-five-year-old composer, who, until that point, had written only solo piano pieces.
Additionally, the aforementioned First Piano Concerto of Lila Lalaouni represents an essential
element of the critical context for Kyriakou’s piece. That none of Kyriakou’s critics offers any
37 Sophia Spanoudi, Aθηναϊκά Νέα, 23 December 1943.
38 ‘Η κ. Κυριακού κακοµεταχειρίσθηκε όλα τα όργανα...(συστήνω) να παραιτηθη παροµοίων επιχειρήσεων και
ν'αφοσιωθεί αποκλειστικά εις το πιάνο της’. (Ms. Kyriakou mishandled every single instrument […] I suggest she
abandnon any such endeavor and devote herself exclusively to the piano.) Mary Chalkia, Καθηµερινή, 22 December
1943.
39 ‘Ας µη ξεχνούµε ότι κι ο Μπετόβεν ακόµη, προτού δηµιουργήσει την ακατάλυτο προσωπικότητά του, ήτο
επηρεασµένος από τον Μότσαρτ και ο Λίστ απ' τον Σοπέν κτλ’. Mary Chalkia, Καθηµερινή, 22 December 1943.
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comparison of the two is all the more astonishing in light of the fact that these two concertos by
young, female Greek composers were premiered by the Athens State Orchestra in 1943.40
If Kyriakou’s decision to stop composing may be partially, not to say largely, attributed to
the negative reception of her concerto, it must be admitted that poor audience reaction may have
contributed as well. While none of the critics cited thus far comments on it, Dimitris
Hamoudopoulos, writing in Proia, notes that it was largely negative. Interestingly, he attributes
this response to negative press releases prior to the performance that, he claims, prepared the
audience to have a bad impression of the work before they had heard it.41 Unfortunately,
Hamoudopoulos does not specify which press releases he is referring to, and I have not been
able to identify them. But if it were to turn out that those press releases express sentiments
similar to those found in the reviews we have seen, that would reinforce the impression that
Kyriakou’s concerto, and by extension her potential as a compositional career, had been unfairly
judged according to prejudice and rumour rather than its manifest qualities.
While it is ultimately impossible to demonstrate with certainty why Kyriakou stopped
composing, it seems reasonable that prolonged and unfair attacks from music critics, writing on
behalf of the Greek musical establishment, played a major role. We do know that Kyriakou
generally did not take criticism very well.42 We may further speculate that the negative critical
reaction to her work in Greece would have struck her as inexplicably dissonant with the general
praise and encouragement she had received while abroad. In this respect, Kyriakou’s career bears
remarkable similarities to that of two other Greek composers: Dimitri Mitropoulos and Nikos
Skalkottas. Like Kyriakou, they both enjoyed early successes outside of Greece, where they were
trained in idioms that did not reflect the priorities of the Greek National School, especially in the
1930s. Like Kyriakou, they returned to Greece only to face an extremely hostile reception that
forestalled their ability to continue their compositional careers in their native country. And like
Kyriakou, they eventually abandoned composition (at least in public, in Skalkottas's case) in favor
of performing careers: Skalkottas as a relatively obscure violinist in Athens, and Mitropoulos, of
course, as a pianist and internationally renowned conductor.
Ultimately, Kyriakou’s decision to abandon composition in favor of performance reflects
the unfortunate realities of musical life in mid-twentieth-century Greece, which was dominated
by intrigues, nationalist ideologies, and demagoguery. As a foreign-trained young woman, writing
music that failed to satisfy the stylistic prescriptions of the Greek National School, Kyriakou
probably never stood much of a chance of having a compositional career in Greece. This is
clearly born out by the biased reception of her works in the critical press. And if her works may
not claim the status of central masterpieces in the international piano repertoire, they certainly
deserve a fairer hearing than they received in their own day as noteworthy examples of one Greek
composer’s attempt to contribute to an emerging compositional art in her native country. At the
very least, their present neglect should not continue on the basis of their unfair assessment by the
1940s Greek musical establishment, whose prejudices and ideological commitments have been
largely discredited by modern scholarship.
40 It is noteworthy that two concertos by female composers were premiered in 1943, espeically considering that,
apart from the generally conservative atmosphere, this was perhaps the most difficult year of the German occupation
because of severe famine in the Greek capital.
41 ‘Η όποια επιφυλακτικότης του κοινού, στην αρχή κυρίως πρέπει να αποδωθεί στην κακή µάλλον εντύπωση που
έκαναν οι δηµοσιεύσεις στον τύπο πριν απ' τη συναυλία, γύρω από το έργο της Ρ. Κυριακού." (‘Any reservations of the
audience – especially at the beginning [of the performance] – should be attributed to articles on Rena Kyriakou's
work that were published before the concert and created a rather bad impression’.), Dimitris Hamoudopoulos,
Πρωΐα, 21 December 1943.
42 Theodoros Choïdas, interview with the author, 5 August 2013, Rio, Greece.
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Bibliography
Agrafioti, Efi. Η Μουσική δεν είναι γένους θηλυκού: Η Ελληνίδα Μουσικός στην Εστία της
Πολυτρόπου Μούσας (Music is Not of the Female Gender: The Greek Woman Musician in
the Hearth of the Multifarious Muse). Athens: Dromon, 2004.
Kalligas, Pavlos. “Εισαγωγή στο Συνθετικό έργο της Ρένας Κυριακού” (Introduction to the
Compositional Works of Rena Kyriakou). Μουσικός Λόγος [print series] 3 (2001), 152–67.
Newspaper Articles Cited
Anogianakis, Phoevos. Καλλιτεχνικά Νέα. 25 December 1943.
Chalkia, Mary. Καθηµερινή. 22 December 1943.
Choisy, Frank. Le Messager d'Athènes. 11 March 1936.
Deutsche Nachrichten in Griechenland. 21 December 1993.
Grekas-Papadopoulos, Iosif. Ραδιόφωνον. 26 December 1943 – 1 January 1944.
Hamoudopoulos, Dimitris. Πρωΐα. 21 December 1943.
Kalomoiris, Manolis. Έθνος. 10 March 1936.
Kyriakidis, Michalis. Ελληνικά Γράµµατα. 5 May 1935.
Kyriakou, Rena. Ελευθερία. 12 August 1962.
Kyriakou, Rena. Gazette de Lausanne. 7 April 1963.
Lalaouni, Alexandra. Βραδυνή. 23 December 1942, 20 December 1943, and 16 November 1945.
Mamakis, Achilleas. Έθνος. 6 May 1949 and 21 July 1950.
Psaroudas, Ioannis. Ελεύθερον Βήµα. 10 March 1936 and 21 December 1943.
Sclavos, Georgios. Μουσική Επιθεώρηση. June 1922.
Scouloudis, Manolis. Ηχώ της Ελλάδος. 18 April 1935.
Spanoudi, Sophia. Αθηναϊκά Νέα, 10 March 1936 and 23 December 1943.
Theodoropoulou, Avra, Ελευθέρα Γνώµη. 13 March 1936.
Tóth, Aladár. Pesti Napló. 10 January 1938.
Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung. 3 April 1927.
Zivkovic, Milenko. ΒΡΕΜΕ. 11 January 1937.
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Abstract
Pianist Rena Kyriakou (1917-1994 was a child prodigy who completed her performance studies at
the Paris Conservatoire before her twenties. She subsequently embarked on an international
career as a performing and recording artist. It is less well known that Kyriakou was also a child
prodigy in composition. Despite a promising apprenticeship, she abandoned composition before
turning thirty. An examination of published criticism, personal correspondence, and recorded
interviews suggests that Kyriakou reluctantly stopped composing in the face of overwhelming
prejudice against women composers in mid-twentieth-century Greece.
About the Author
Athina Fytika is Assistant Professor of Piano Pedagogy in the Music Department of Ionian
University (Corfu). She received her Doctorate of Musical Arts in Piano Performance from
Florida State University, having studied with Carolyn Bridger (piano) and Karyl Louwenaar
(harpsichord). She has performed solo, chamber, and lecture recitals in Greece, Cyprus,
Germany, and the USA. Her research focuses on Piano Pedagogy issues and on contemporary
Greek piano repertoire.