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A towering figure in the musical and cultural evolution of modern
Ireland, Brian Boydell (1917-2000) has been described as a
'renaissance man' and by President Mary Robinson as a 'tireless
wheeler-dealer for music'. One of Ireland's leading
twentieth-century composers, he was also an outspoken agitator and
positive disruptor for the enrichment and expansion of music and
cultural identity in Ireland. He became a household name as
composer, broadcaster, adjudicator, public lecturer, performer,
musicologist, professor of music at Trinity College Dublin and
long-term member of the Arts Council. Stimulated by the centenary
of his birth in 2017, this collection of 15 essays presents a
welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on Boydell's
legacy and provides fresh perspectives on his diverse contributions
to Ireland's music and culture. The wide range of contributors to
the book parallels the breath of connection that Boydell continues
to engender in generations of scholars and fellow enthusiasts.
Essays consider his music, from his earliest works to his
orchestral music and his pioneering compositions for Irish and
concert harp; others focus on his dynamic contributions including
his musicology, his decisive involvement as a founding member of
the Music Association of Ireland, his transformational
professorship at Trinity College Dublin, and his illuminating radio
broadcasting. Less well known is that Brian Boydell exhibited as a
painter in the 1940s, an aspect of his artistic creativity that is
also explored in this book, as is his extensive collection of
private papers now in Trinity College Library. Above all else,
Creative Impulses, Cultural Accents: Brian Boydell's Music,
Advocacy, Painting and Legacy celebrates an entirely fascinating
figure who contributed immensely to the cultural evolution of a
modern nation.
Christ Church cathedral is an Anglican cathedral in a catholic
country. Musical and archival sources (the most extensive for any
Irish cathedral) provide a unique perspective on the history of
music in Ireland. Christ Church has had a complex and varied
history as the cathedral church of Dublin, one of two Anglican
cathedrals in the capital of a predominantly Catholic country and
the church of the British administration in Ireland before1922. An
Irish cathedral within the English tradition, yet through much of
its history it was essentially an English cathedral in a foreign
land. With close musical links to cathedrals in England, to St
Patrick's cathedral in Dublin, and to the city's wider political
and cultural life, Christ Church has the longest documented music
history of any Irish institution, providing a unique perspective on
the history of music in Ireland. Barra Boydell, a leading authority
on Irish music history, has written a detailed study drawing on the
most extensive musical and archival sources existing for any Irish
cathedral. The choir, its composers and musicians, repertoire and
organs are discussed within the wider context of city and state,
and of the religious and political dynamics which have shaped
Anglo-Irish relationships since medieval times. More than just a
history of music at one cathedral, this book makesan important
contribution to English cathedral music studies as well as to Irish
musical and cultural history. BARRA BOYDELL is Senior Lecturer in
Music, National University of Ireland, Maynooth.
The Encyclopaedia of Music in Ireland (EMIR) is the first
comprehensive attempt to chart Irish musical life across recorded
history. It also documents Ireland's musical relations with the
world at large, notably in Britain, continental Europe and North
America, and it seeks to identify the agencies through which music
has become an enduring expression of Irish political, social,
religious and cultural life. In these respects, EMIR is the
collective work of 240 contributors whose research has been
marshalled by an editorial and advisory board of specialists in the
following domains of Irish musical experience: secular and
religious music to 1600; art music, 1600-2010; Roman catholic
church music; Protestant church music; popular music; traditional
music; organology and iconography; historical musicology;
ethnomusicology; the history of recorded sound; music and media;
music printing and publishing; and, music in Ireland as trade,
industry and profession. EMIR contains some 2,000 individual
entries which collectively afford an unprecedented survey of the
fabric of music in Ireland. It records and evaluates the work of
hundreds of individual musicians, performers, composers, teachers,
collectors, scholars, ensembles, societies and institutions
throughout Irish musical history, and it comprehends the
relationship between music and its political, artistic, religious,
educational and social contexts in Ireland from the early middle
ages to the present day. In its extensive catalogues, discographies
and source materials, EMIR sets in order, often for the first time,
the legacy and worklists of performers and composers active in
Ireland (or of Irish extraction), notably (but not exclusively) in
the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It offers to the
general reader a regiment of 'brief lives' of Irish musicians
throughout history, and it affords the specialist a detailed
retrieval of information on music in Ireland hitherto unavailable
or difficult to access. Above all, it is (proverbially)
encyclopaedic in its address on the plurality and diversity of
Irish musical experience. To this end, EMIR represents the single
largest research project on music in Ireland to have been
undertaken to date.
"The 17th century is a pivotal but unfamiliar period in Irish
musical history: reflecting political and cultural changes, the
ancient harp tradition declined as European musical styles became
more widespread. In this volume, the 10th in the Irish Musical
Studies series, musicologists begin to establish a picture of music
in Ireland at that time. Contents: Barra Boydell, The 17th century
and the history of music in Ireland; Raymond Gillespie (NUIM),
17th-century Irish music and its cultural context; Sean Donnelly,
The harp in 17th-century Ireland; John Cunningham (U Leeds), The
Irish harp in non-Irish contexts in the 17th century; Adrian
Scahill (NUIM), 'Traditional' music in 17th century Ireland; Barra
Boydell, The earl of Cork's musicians; Barra Boydell & Maire
Egan-Buffet (UCD), Books on music in the library of Lord Edward
Conway (1602-55); Christopher D.S. Field (U Edinburgh):
Birchensha's 'Mathematical way of composure'; Andrew Robinson,
Narcissus Marsh; Martin Adams (TCD), Henry Purcell and the 'Awful
matron'; Kerry Houston, The repertoire in the Dublin cathedrals at
the restoration of Charles II; Denise Neary (RIA of Music), Church
music in the 17th century." (Series: Irish Musical Studies)
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