MARSHALL,
a surname derived from the ancient and honourable office of
marischal, and not confined to Scotland.
There was a
painter of this name, George Marshall, a scholar of the younger
Scougal (see SCOUGAL, GEORGE) and thereafter of Sir Godfrey
Kneller, whose paintings are remarkable for good colouring,
although there is a flatness in them which is displeasing to the
eye. After a long practice in Scotland, he went to Italy, but
this produced no visible improvement on his works. He died about
1732.
MARSHALL,
WILLIAM, a celebrated composer of Scottish airs and
melodies, was born at Fochabers, Morayshire, Dec. 27, 1748, old
style. In his 12th year he became employed under the house
steward at Gordon castle, Banffshire, the seat of the Duke of
Gordon, but was soon appointed butler and house steward, a
situation which he held for nearly 30 years. “The correctness of
Marshall’s ear,” says a MS. Memoir of him quoted in Stenhouse’s
Johnson’s Scots Musical Museum, (vol. iv. p. 413), to which we
are indebted for this notice, “was unrivalled, and his style of
playing strathspeys and reels lively and inspiring, while his
fine taste and peculiarly touching manner of executing the slow
and more plaintive Scottish airs and melodies, delighted all who
heard him.” He is styled by Burns “the first composer of
strathspeys of the age.”
About the
beginning of 1790, the delicate state of his health obliged him
to relinquish his situation at Gordon castle, when he retired
for a short time to a small farm in the neighbourhood of
Fochabers. The same year he removed to the larger farm of
Keithmore, belonging to the duke of Gordon, in the lordship of
Auchendown and parish of Mortlach, where he became a keen
agriculturist. Shortly thereafter he was appointed factor or
land steward to the duke, over a very extensive range of his
estates in the counties of Banff and Aberdeen, comprehending the
districts of Cabrach, Auchendown, Glenlivet, Strathaven,
Strathdown, &c. This situation he filled with fidelity and
honour till 1817. He died at Newfield cottage, 29th May 1833,
aged 85. He had married, at the age of 25, Jane Giles, who
predeceased him, on 12th December 1825, and by whom he had five
sons and a daughter.
A collection of
Marshall’s ‘Airs and Melodies’ was published, by subscription,
in May 1822, containing 176 tunes. It was followed by a
supplement of about 74 additional tunes. Many of them had
appeared separately, before the close of the 18th century, and
were well known.