Dare composed mostly small scale chamber music, including a distinctive set of works for cello. There are six separate pieces for cello quartet, one of which (the
Elégie) was published by Chester in 1956. She recorded these works with fellow cellists Antonia Butler,
Helen Just and
Olga Hegedus. Her
Phantasy Quartet (1933) and
Phantasy Quintet (with two cellos, 1933-4), both one movement works, along with the full scale String Quartet in G minor (1934-1937), were all heard at an Aeolian Hall concert devoted to her own compositions held on 19 January 1938, in which she performed as both cellist and pianist. Her 1939 Piano Trio won the
Royal College of Music Society of Women Musicians composition prize. A number of her occasional pieces for cello, such as
Serenade and Valse (Grade 2) and
Echoes (Grade 5), still feature as
ABRSM graded pieces for examination. Other works include pieces for string orchestra (such as the late
Scottish Rhapsody, commissioned by the Scottish Amateur Musical Association in 1972 for the
National Youth String Orchestra of Scotland), three ballet scores (including
For the Young Thumbeline, scored for two pianos and broadcast in 1964), as well as songs and choral works. Her colleague
Ronald Stevenson commented on her "fine ear for national intonations". The Scottish Music Centre holds around 100 complete scores and 30 sound recordings. Her
Phantasy Quartet of the 1930s was recorded in 2025 by The Berkeley Ensemble with Simon Callaghan (piano) and Tom Wraith (additional cello). == Selected works ==