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Provincial Concerts in England, 1865–1914: A Case-Study of Bradford

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

David Russell*
Affiliation:
Lancashire Polytechnic

Extract

It is a commonplace that the nineteenth century witnessed a flowering of provincial musical life, and nowhere was this more pronounced than in the field of concert promotion. However, with a few notable exceptions, such as Michael Kennedy's work on the Hallé, little close scrutiny has been given to the topic. This paper seeks to give the provinces the attention they deserve.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1989 Royal Musical Association

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References

1 Kennedy, Michael, The Hallé Tradition (Manchester, 1960).Google Scholar

2 Alan Peacock and Ronald Weir, The Composer in the Market-Place (London, 1975), 3840.Google Scholar

3 Victorian Bradford, ed. David G. Wright and J Anthony Jowitt (Bradford, 1982).Google Scholar

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5 Hird, Horace, ‘Samuel Smith and his Music Hall’, in his Bradford Remembrancer (Bradford, 1972), 179–87; Bradford Observer, 31 October, 21 November, 5 December and 19 December 1861.Google Scholar

6 Bradford Observer, 9 February 1865.Google Scholar

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8 Although still offering subscriptions, the concerts are now organized by the local authority music officer.Google Scholar

9 Pratt, M., ‘The Influence of the Germans on Bradford’ (BA dissertation, Macmillan College, Bradford, 1971).Google Scholar

10 The Listener. 27 December 1945.Google Scholar

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21 Mackerness, Eric, A Social History of English Music (London, 1964), 177. 1 hope I do not appear to be using this book as an Aunt Sally at this point. Mackerness is an historian to whom those of us writing since the 1960s owe the greatest debt.Google Scholar

22 The first set was organized by William Morgan, eventually Mayor of Scarborough, the second by Walter Holmes.Google Scholar

23 There were, for example, 542 subscribers in 1884–5, 701 in 1889–90, 687 in 1894–5, 649 in 1898–9, 611 in 1904–5, and 617 in 1908–9. Figures, and those following, compiled from concert programmes in Bradford Archives.Google Scholar

24 Russell, David, Popular Music in England, 1840–1914 A Social History (Manchester, 1987), Chapter 10.Google Scholar

25 Bradford Observer, 9 February 1865.Google Scholar

26 For religious change in this period, see Hugh MacLeod, Class and Religion in the Late Victorian City (London, 1974). On changing male élite culture, see Yeo, Stephen, Religion and Voluntary Organisations in Crisis (London, 1976); Martin Weiner, English Culture and the Decline of the Industrial Spirit 1850–1980 (Cambridge, 1981).Google Scholar

27 These figures were taken by Samuel Midgley from the diary of the first subscription committee chairman, Hermann Averdieck. Yorkshire Observer Budget, 6 June 1930Google Scholar

28 Programme for 16 December 1904.Google Scholar

29 Yorkshire Observer, 17 February 1912.Google Scholar

30 Yorkshire Observer Budget, 15 May 1909Google Scholar

31 I am very grateful to Elsie Arnold for supplying me with some of Midgley's writings Midgley was her husband, Denis Arnold's, great-uncle Midgley's autobiography is a useful source on a number of musical issues Samuel Midgley, My Seventy Years' Musical Memories (London, 1934)Google Scholar

32 Yorkshire Daily Observer, 20 and 28 September 1907.Google Scholar

33 Ibid., 31 August 1907 His most sustained argument fur municipal sponsorship came in his lecture ‘Music and the Municipality’, Bradford, 1912.Google Scholar

34 Yorkshire Daily Observer, 17 August 1907.Google Scholar

35 Adelman, Paul, The Rise of the Labour Party (London 1972), 36. J. Anthony Jowitt, ‘Late Victorian and Edwardian Bradford’, in his Bradford 1890–1914 The Cradle of the Independent Labour Party (Bradford, 1980), 423Google Scholar

36 These are aggregate figures over the three separate votes. Voting Figures from Bradford Council Minute Book no 20, Bradford Archives; party affiliations from Bradford Trade and Labour Council Yearbooks. 1904–8.Google Scholar

37 Yorkshire Observer, 17 August 1907.Google Scholar

38 Ibid., 26 October 1907Google Scholar

39 For Leeds, see Russell, Popular Music, 38–40; for Plymouth and Salford, The Musical Times, January 1910 and February 1914Google Scholar

40 His Musical England (London, 1910) is a rich source for the whole topic of state sponsorship For a recent academic viewpoint, see Minihan, Janet, The Nationalisation of Culture (London, 1977), 148–50.Google Scholar

41 Yorkshire Observer, 2 February 1911.Google Scholar

42 At amateur level as well as professional. Eric Mackerness, Somewhere Further North (Sheffield, 1975), argues that there were so many amateur bodies that they put each other out of business. The Musical Times gives an excellent record of provincial orchestral life at this time.Google Scholar

43 The Musical Times, April 1914Google Scholar

44 Extract from their ‘Performing Arts. The Economic Dilemma’, 1966, repr. in Mark Blaug, The Economics of the Arts (London, 1976), 170 They were talking of the North American experience, but claim Britain to be ‘remarkably’ similar In a different context, such as at a brass band contest or in a music-hall, art music did become available to a very broad social spectrum.Google Scholar