Harold Samuel was born in
London and studied piano at the
Royal College of Music with the eminent scholar and pianist
Edward Dannreuther and composition with Sir
Charles Villiers Stanford. Later he was on its faculty as professor of pianoforte. Harold Samuel was particularly distinguished as an interpreter of Bach, whose entire keyboard oeuvre he learned by heart. At his London début in 1898 he played Bach's
Goldberg Variations (BWV 988), unknown at that time in London. He and
Walter Gieseking were among the first pianists of the twentieth century to play pure-Bach, distinguished for having programmed large scale works by Bach in their recitals. To make a living Harold Samuel taught (he was, for example, the piano teacher of the British composers
Benjamin Britten and
Elizabeth Poston), did vocal coaching and became a sought-after accompanist (performing especially with violinist
Isolde Menges). His solo career, however, was at a standstill until 1919 when he played an all-Bach programme in London. He soon found a ready audience for large amounts of Bach's keyboard works in their original form. In 1921 he gave six successive Bach recitals in London and a similar cycle in
New York City. He toured the US regularly from 1924. He wrote a musical comedy, ''Hon'ble Phil'', songs and piano pieces. On 15 January 1937 he died at his home in Hampstead, London aged 57. He had fallen ill two months before on board a ship returning from a tour of South Africa. == Performance style ==