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Written by Colin Sydenham
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Colin Sydenham, 2007
I was born in Hampstead on 13.12.1937. After Eton and King’s (where I read two years
of classics and one of law) I practised for nearly 40 years at the Chancery Bar. My classics
left me with a lifelong love of Horace, and I was Secretary of the Horatian Society for
over 20 years. Other hobbies include Mediaeval carving, following cricket and some gentle
boating on the River Alde. When I retired from the Bar (2003) the first project which I
could not resist was to publish my verse translation of Horace’s Odes (2005). I found
this pushed chess problems to one side (which was not what I had intended), and now the
energies which went into composition have been diverted into running a Latin Poetry reading
group in Aldeburgh.
I came to problems later in life than most composers, at about the age of 34, and my first
composition was published in 1974, when I was 36. At that time Bob Gooderson was the
solutions editor of The Problemist, and he gave me a lot of help. I started
composing directmate 2-movers, and with Bob’s encouragement developed a
liking for correction play (so-called). Later I discovered a lasting interest in making
black and white carry out similar moves or effects (B/W correspondence), and this became
my most enduring theme. I soon branched out into helpmates, where I realised that
the duplex helpmate offered the natural home for my love of B/W correspondence, and
the second half of my work is dominated by this form, which, to date, no other composer has
explored so closely. I also enjoyed Fairy composing, where my first love was a
known but little-worked field, which I christened Superpins. Other Fairy conditions came
my way at Andernach and elsewhere, and I found the duplex helpmate well suited to such
composing.
The selection from my work is arranged under the 4 categories in bold above. They are all
personal favourites, though not all of them are my best known.
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Last Updated on Monday, 07 November 2011 15:54 |