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For centuries, the sea and those who sail upon it have inspired the imaginations of British musicians. Generations of British artists have viewed the ocean as a metaphor for the mutable human condition - by turns calm and reflective, tempestuous and destructive - and have been influenced as much by its physical presence as by its musical potential. But just as geographical perspectives and attitudes on seascapes have evolved over time, so too have cultural assumptions about their meaning and significance. Changes in how Britons have used the sea to travel, communicate, work, play, and go to war have all irresistibly shaped the way that maritime imagery has been conceived, represented, and disseminated in British music. By exploring the sea's significance within the complex world of British music, this book reveals a network of largely unexamined cultural tropes unique to this island nation. The essays are organised around three main themes: the Sea as Landscape, the Sea as Profession, and the Sea as Metaphor, covering an array of topics drawn from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first. Featuring studies of pieces by the likes of Purcell, Arne, Sullivan, Vaughan Williams, and Davies, as well as examinations of cultural touchstones such as the BBC, the Scottish fishing industry, and the Aldeburgh Festival, The Sea in the British Musical Imagination will be of interest to musicologists as well as scholars in history, British studies, cultural studies, and English literature.
ERIC SAYLOR is Associate Professor of Musicology at Drake University.
CHRISTOPHER M. SCHEER is Assistant Professor of Musicology at Utah State University.
CONTRIBUTORS: Byron Adams, Jenny Doctor, Amanda Eubanks Winkler, James Brooks Kuykendall, Charles Edward McGuire, Alyson McLamore, Louis Niebur, Jennifer Oates, Eric Saylor, Christopher M. Scheer, Aidan J. Thomson, Justin Vickers, Frances Wilkins
Louis Niebur’s chapter 13, ‘Case Studies of Women in Electronic Music: The Early Pioneers’, considers a range of the earliest ground-breaking women working with electronic music, including Daphne Oram and Delia Derbyshire, at the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop in the UK, and Wendy Carlos, Pauline Oliveros, and Suzanne Ciani, in the US.
The traditional narrative of the development of musique concrète and elektronische Musik tells a story of esoteric, academic branches of musical modernism emerging out of Paris and Cologne in the 1950s. But this narrative clouds our understanding of the unique ways this music developed in Britain, largely filtered through the BBC, as a relatively populist, accessible iteration of Continental techniques. This article explores how British reactions to contemporary music and, in particular, musique concrète and elektronische Musik, reflected on the one hand continued suspicion towards Continental music and on the other a deep insecurity about Britain's musical position in the world. The predominantly hostile attitude towards electronic music from within establishment musical cultures betray profound concerns about trends that were seen to exert a harmful influence on British musical society.
No inner mystery in the music is revealed by the simple acknowledgement of his homosexuality and its consequences, but the way is at least cleared for us to approach the works a little closer and with more understanding.
Philip Brett
In this essay, I will circle various and conflicting interpretations of Benjamin Britten's Canticle I, “My Beloved Is Mine,” an extended “cantata” that struck me on first hearing as a work filled with a fascinating hermeneutic ambiguity. As Philip Brett's examination of Britten's life (and that of his professional and life partner Peter Pears) has shown, their negotiation of the “open secret” of their relationship offers ways of interpretation that center on a complex interaction of words, music, and performance rather than a strict analysis of the notes. In other words, perhaps “meaning” could be found in more abstract notions of context, live realization, and audience, bearing in mind the performative, intangible aspects of irony and polyvalence contained within a work's reification in actual performance. Canticle I, written in September 1947, was first performed on 1 November of that same year in Central Hall, London, with the composer, Britten, playing the piano, and tenor Peter Pears singing – just one recital performance among countless others in their long concertizing relationship. My approach is heavily influenced by music critic Edward T. Cone's 1974 book The Composer's Voice, but while Cone suggests some very useful concepts I will use his theories as a springboard for other notions. This essay also attempts to move beyond a simple understanding of the canticle as “an ecstatic reflection on the trust and confidence of Man in his Creator,” as Timothy Day wrote, or as just “an expression of spiritual feeling in intensely lyrical language,” as David Brown believed. The Canticle is certainly those things. But who says that it can only be these? In one way, “My Beloved is Mine” has precedent in the nineteenth-century genre of the sacred parlor song, but that tradition, as I will show, has also been useful as a way for subaltern groups to create work that transcends the genre's supposed straightforward ambitions.
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
PRIOR TO THE mid-twentieth century, British artists’ depictions of the sea spanned a host of contradictory metaphors. The sea could represent danger, instability, or ‘rudderlessness’, a depiction traceable at least as far back as Shakespeare's The Tempest. Alternatively, the sea's apparent timelessness and impassivity effectively contrasted with humanity's own ephemeral and emotionally transitory nature. W. H. Auden, in his poem ‘Dover’, evoked this aspect of the sea when he observed how ‘the eyes of departing migrants are fixed on the sea, / conjuring destinies out of impersonal water’. For working-class Britons, the seaside was a locale for enjoying hard-fought leisure entertainment, of British-specific art forms such as the pierside music hall, Punch and Judy shows, and evening dance-band performances. For others, Britain's proud seafaring tradition represented a fundamental aspect of national identity. One very popular (if ‘pathologically conservative’) depiction of sea life was that of the stratified world of the battleship, as portrayed in films such as In Which We Serve (1942), in which the bold Sons of Albion reliably conquered the forces of evil. But as British art began embracing elements of Continental and American modernism in the early 1950s, new associations began to emerge that presented the sea as symbolic of humanity's engagement with modernity – particularly in ways that considered how Britain's diminished political and cultural status in the post-war world would affect that engagement. These new conceptions of the sea continued to stand alongside older meanings, however, forming a fascinating (if anarchic) semiotic jumble.
This essay will examine two radio plays produced by Donald McWhinnie – James Hanley's The Ocean (1958) and Samuel Beckett's Embers (1959) – that were contemporaneous with the genesis of the BBC's Radiophonic Workshop. Both plays feature the sea as the primary antagonist, and employed state-of-the-art technology to depict it in new and unfamiliar ways. In both works, the electronic representation of the sea reflects a desire to alienate, disorient, and distance the listener from normality, serving as a sonic analogue for the way in which the inescapable sea surrounds the main characters, either literally or symbolically.
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)
Edited by
Eric Saylor, Associate Professor, musicology (Drake University),Christopher M. Scheer, Associate Professor, musicology (Utah State University)