1 March – Incidental music to The Clouds (Aristophanes) by Hubert Parry is performed for the first time at the University of Oxford.
2 March – The first performance of York Bowen‘s Concertstück for Clarinet, Horn, String Quartet and Piano takes place at the Aeolian Hall in London with the composer at the piano.
10 March – Thomas Dunhill‘s Piano Quintet in C minor, op 20, is first performed at the Bechstein Hall.
16 March – In the first of a series of Birmingham lectures entitled A Future for English Music, Edward Elgar attacks some current English composers, without actually naming them, and points to the poor reputation that English music has abroad. Formerly friends, Elgar and Stanford cease communication.[2]
March – Percy Grainger attends a lecture by Lucy Broadwood and becomes interested in collecting folk songs.[3]
4 April – The first performance of an orchestral work by Arnold Bax, Connemara Revel, is performed at the Queen’s Hall, as part of a student concert put on by the Royal Academy of Music.
11 April – Percy Grainger visits Brigg in Lincolnshire and notes down his first folks songs.[3]
24 April – The incidental music Pan’s Anniversary (Jonson) by Ralph Vaughan Williams is performed for the first time at Bancroft Gardens, Stratford-upon-Avon conducted by the composer. Gustav Holst contributes orchestrations of keyboard music and traditional melodies.
29 June – The Mystic Trumpeter, Op. 18 for soprano and orchestra by Gustav Holst, setting Walt Whitman, is performed for the first time in Queen’s Hall, conducted by the composer.
11 July – Edward Elgar and his wife board ship in New York bound for Liverpool.
24 July – At the Grand Hotel, Eastbourne, Claude Debussy begins a five week stay (until 30 August), escaping the scandal at home surrounding his broken marriage. His pregnant mistress, Emma Bardac, accompanies him. While there (in Suite 200, now known as the Debussy Suite), he completed the orchestration of La Mer and made corrections to the score. The first performance takes place in Paris on 15 October, the UK premiere has to wait until 1 February 1908. Debussy also completes another “water” piece while in Eastbourne, Reflets dans l’eau.
28 August – The first performance of Scottish composer Hamish MacCunn‘s dramatic cantata The Wreck of the Hesperus, setting words by Longfellow, tales place at the London Coliseum. There are multiple further performances between August and October.
19 September – The fifth symphonic poem of Scottish composer William Wallace is given at the Queen’s Hall, London.
25 October – The first performance of Bohemian Songs for baritone and orchestra by Joseph Holbrooke is conducted by the composer at the Norwich Festival.
26 October – The Pied Piper of Hamelin, a cantata by Hubert Parry , setting the poem by Robert Browning, is performed for the first time in Norwich.
29 October – The first concert of the New Symphony Orchestra of London, a player-run orchestra formed mainly from graduates of the Royal College of Music from the `1890s, takes place at the Coronet Theatre in London’s Notting Hill. The NSO, associated with the early career of Thomas Beecham, becomes a specialist recording orchestra, and the “house” orchestra of the Gramophone Company between 1909 and 1930.
26 June – Music hall stars Frank Leo and Sable Fern are married in Southwark, and form a double act, three years after the suicide of her estranged husband Walter "Watty" Allan created a scandal.[7]
^Kennedy, Michael & Joyce; Rutherford-Johnson, Tim (2012). Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 279–280. ISBN978-0-19-957854-2.