Biography:Edward Riley
Edward Riley
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Given name: | Edward |
Middle name: | R. |
Family name: | Riley |
Place of birth: | |
Place of death: | New York |
Year of birth: | 1769 |
Year of death: | 1829 |
Profile: | Editor, Collector, Composer, Engraver, Musician, Publisher |
Source of information: | https://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1000&context=music faculty |
Biographical notes
EDWARD RILEY (1769-1829) was an English engraver and publisher who had a business in London from 1795 to 1803, after which he emigrated to the United States. Arriving in New York, he established himself as a teacher of music and singing, advertising lessons on the German flute, patent flagiolet [sic], piano and singing. He also worked for a time as an engraver for established music publishers John Paff and John Appel. However, in 1811 he established his own music publishing business. Riley also sold instruments and manufactured instruments from his premises at 29 Chatham Street. His three sons followed him into the family business and two of them, Frederick and and Henry, later opened shops nearby. His two daughters married John Firth and William Hall, respectively, who had been apprenticed in Riley's shop. They founded the firm of Firth & Hall in 1821 and became prominent manufacturers and publishers in their own right. Following Edward's death in 1829 his sons (one also called Edward Riley) carried on the business until it became J.F. Gould & Co. in 1851.
Edward Riley Sr. wrote a treatise on flute playing and a produced a four-volume collection on music entitled “Riley’s Flute Melodies.”
For more on Riley, see Wendell Dobbs' article "An Early American Family of Flutists", Faculty Research, Paper 1, 2008, Marshall University [1].