Charles le Thiere


Charles Le Thière was a British composer, arranger and flautist. He was the son of a goldsmith and jeweller Thomas William Tomkins and his wife Eliza Tomkins, who had a store and company in Clerkenwell.

Biography

Le Thière is described by Henry Macaulay-Fitzgibbon in his book The story of the flute as an extraordinary piccolo player, who also played the flute with lesser success. Also in the book First flute by Gerald Jackson he is described as a musician without a permanent position who composed or arranged to feed his drinking habits. Despite this, and before he fell on hard times, he composed pieces like L'oiseau du bois and Danse de Satyrs, both for piccolo. He also wrote The Royal Tour for piano solo and his Sunrise on the Mountains and Village Life in the Olden Times were introduced by John Held in the United States in 1890 for his orchestra. Le Thière also arranged the well-known The Punjaub March by Charles Payne for orchestra and wind band. In an undated letter his address is given as care of Potter & Co, 36-38 West Street, Charing X , London WC2, in which Le Thiere mentions he is 70 and in the workhouse. For some time he may have lived at 26 Tonman Street, Deansgate, Manchester. Presumably he died in poverty.

Compositions

Orchestral works

Songs