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Chapter 3 - Realising The Enraged Musician

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2023

James Grande
Affiliation:
King's College London
Carmel Raz
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für Empirische Ästhetik

Summary

Dubbed ‘the noisiest picture in English art’ by Martin Meisel, William Hogarth’s The Enraged Musician (1741) has enjoyed a long and prominent afterlife. Long before it became a canonical image in sound studies, it was adapted for the London stage as a musical afterpiece, Ut Pictura Poesis, at the Haymarket Theatre (1789). Though the performance took its plot, very loosely, from Ben Jonson’s Epicœne, its central conceit was not just the embodied reenactment of an image, but its conversion into a linear sequence of music. In this chapter, Oskar Cox Jensen interrogates this adaptation through a combination of close reading (of playtext, score, and imagined performance) and contextualisation, considering the key roles played by both the theatrical space itself and the members of the company – particularly the scene painter Michael Angelo Rooker (1746–1801). The resulting blend of sound, sight, and movement, Cox Jensen contends, reveals much about wider issues of the era, from the construction of national identities to the interplay between stage, street, and social class.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 3.1 Michael Angelo Rooker, The Scene-Painter’s Loft at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, c. 1785. Pen and ink, grey wash, and watercolour, 37.6 × 30.3 cm. British Museum, London, no. 1861,0518.1138.

© The Trustees of the British Museum.
Figure 1

Figure 3.2 George Cruikshank, ‘The Beautiful Maid’, 1811. Hand-coloured etching, 30.1 × 25.7 cm (sheet). British Museum, London, no. 1865,1111.2060.

© The Trustees of the British Museum.
Figure 2

Example 3.1 Samuel Arnold and George Colman the Elder, The Enraged Musician, a Musical Entertainment Founded on Hogarth (London, 1789), 15–16, bars 18–33 of the ‘Trio’.

British Library, London, music collections, E.100.b (3), http://access.bl.uk/item/viewer/ark:/81055/vdc_100049121912.0x000001 (accessed 19 January 2023).
Figure 3

Example 3.2 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 18, bars 47–50 of the ‘Trio’.

Figure 4

Figure 3.3 Edward Rooker after Michael Angelo Rooker, ‘The Horse-Guards’, from Six Views of London, 1768. Etching, 41.5 × 55.5 cm. British Museum, London, no. 1978,U.3601.

© The Trustees of the British Museum.
Figure 5

Figure 3.4 James Stow after George Jones, ‘Interior of the Little Theatre, Haymarket’, 1815 (detail), from a series published by Robert Wilkinson, 1825.

Hand-coloured engraving, 30.5 × 22 cm. Public Domain.
Figure 6

Example 3.3 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 28–29, bars 11–32 of ‘Knives to Grind’.

Figure 7

Example 3.4 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 29, bars 39–46 of ‘Knives to Grind’.

Figure 8

Example 3.5 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 28–37, bars 5–12of the finale.

Figure 9

Example 3.6 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 38–39, bars 38–49 of the finale.

Figure 10

Example 3.7 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 39, bars 53–56 of the finale.

Figure 11

Example 3.8 Arnold and Colman, The Enraged Musician (1789), 39–40, bars 62–76 of the finale.

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