Robert Layton (musicologist)


Robert Layton is an English musicologist and music critic. Between 1949 and 1953 he studied at Worcester College, Oxford under Edmund Rubbra and Egon Wellesz. He then went to Sweden, where he learned the language and studied with Carl-Allan Moberg at the universities of Uppsala and Stockholm. He was a teacher before joining the BBC in 1959. He worked first on music presentation and from 1961 on music talks. He was the BBC's senior music talks producer and senior music producer.
Layton's principal specialism is Scandinavian music; he has written extensively on Franz Berwald and published books on Edvard Grieg and Jean Sibelius. He has made many broadcasts, has contributed regularly to Gramophone and was a co-author of The Stereo Record Guide and the Penguin Guides to recorded classical music. He was general editor of the BBC Music Guide series.
The entry for Layton in The Oxford Dictionary of Music refers to him as "Sole authority on Danish composer Esrum-Hellerup" – an oblique reference to a celebrated prank in 1980 when among his numerous scholarly articles on Scandinavian music in Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians Layton smuggled in one on a wholly fictitious composer, Dag Henrik Esrum-Hellerup. Despite the long tradition of including fictitious entries in dictionaries and encyclopedias, the editor of Grove, Stanley Sadie, was not amused and the article was removed for the second edition.
Layton's books include: