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Women and Music in Ireland (Hardcover)
Laura Watson, Ita Beausang, Jennifer O'Connor-Madsen; Contributions by Laura Watson, Jennifer O'Connor-Madsen, …
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R2,678
Discovery Miles 26 780
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Explores the world of women's professional and amateur musical
activity as it developed on and beyond the island of Ireland. In a
story which spans several centuries, the book highlights
representative composers and performers in classical music, Irish
traditional music, and contemporary art music whose contributions
have been marginalised in music narratives. As well as
investigating the careers of public figures, this edited collection
brings attention to women who engaged with and taught music in a
variety of domestic settings. It also shines a spotlight on women
who worked behind the scenes to build infrastructures such as
festivals and educational institutions which remain at the heart of
the country's musical life today. The book addresses and
reconsiders ideas about the intersections of music, gender, and
Irish society, including how the national emblem of the harp became
recast as a symbol of Irish womanhood in the twentieth century. The
book is divided into four parts. Part 1 surveys women musicians in
Irish society of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Part 2
discusses women and practice in Irish traditional music. Part 3
studies gaps and gender politics in the history of
twentieth-century women composers and performers. Part 4 situates
discourses of women, gender, and music in the twenty-first century.
The book's contributors encompass musicologists, cultural
historians, composers, and performers.
The Irish composer, Ina Boyle (1889-1967), was born in Enniskerry,
Co. Wicklow, where she enjoyed a sheltered childhood as a member of
an Anglo-Irish family with roots in the medical, military and
diplomatic professions. Her first music teacher was her clergyman
father, who made violins for a hobby. She started to compose from
an early age and soon found a passion for music that lasted a
lifetime, spanning two world wars, the 1916 rebellion, the war of
independence, the civil war and the economic war.Ina Boyle studied
privately in Dublin with C.H. Kitson and Percy Buck, she had her
first success in 1919 when her orchestral rhapsody, `The magic
harp', which was selected for publication by the prestigious
Carnegie United Kingdom Trust and was performed by the London
Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Adrian Boult. From 1923, realising
the need to expand her musical horizons, she visited London for
composition lessons with Ralph Vaughan Williams whenever family
duties allowed, until her travels were curtailed by the outbreak of
the Second World War. Vaughan Williams thought highly of her works
but, despite her best efforts to promote them, few were performed
in public. During the 1940s some of her orchestral music was
broadcast on Radio Eireann in a series of programmes on Irish
composers. After the death of her father in 1951, she was again
free to travel to London while devoting the rest of her life to
composition. As one of twentieth-century Ireland's most prolific
composers and the first Irishwoman to undertake a symphony, a
concerto and a ballet, this first book on the life and music of Ina
Boyle is long overdue.
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