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Bringing together established authorities and new voices, this book
takes off the 'protective arm' around Britten. Benjamin Britten
Studies brings together established authorities and new voices to
offer a fresh perspective on previous scholarship models and a
re-contextualization of previously held beliefs about Britten.
Using the mostrecent and innovative historical, musicological,
sociological, psychological, and theoretical methodologies, the
authors take off the 'protective arm' around Britten and disclose
an unprecedented amount of previously unpublishedand disregarded
primary source materials. The collection considers difficult
questions of identity such as Britten's retreat to America, his
re-entry into the British musical scene, and late-life revisions of
his American works; scrutinizes the fraught establishing of the
English Opera Group contemporaneous with the founding of the
Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts; explores his break with
Boosey & Hawkes and inspects international copyright concerns
in the Soviet Union' investigates sensitive issues of intimacy and
Britten's relationships; and combines closer analysis of Britten's
musico-rhythmic, harmonic, and compositional practices with a
description of the more overtlypolitical context within which he
found himself. Benjamin Britten Studies ends by asking what we can
actually know about the composer in a reconsideration of the
materials he left behind. All of this coalesces into avolume that
not only serves as a model of on-going and future Britten research
but which generates a greater understanding of the overall trends
within the ever-synthesizing and interdisciplinary musicological
field of the twenty-first century. VICKI P. STROEHER is Professor
of Music History at Marshall University. JUSTIN VICKERS is
Assistant Professor of Voice at Illinois State University.
Contributors: Byron Adams, Nicholas Clark, Jenny Doctor, Paul
Kildea, Christopher Mark, Thornton Miller, Louis Niebur, Philip
Reed, Colleen Renihan, Philip Rupprecht, Kevin Salfen, Vicki P.
Stroeher, Justin Vickers, Lucy Walker, Danielle Ward-Griffin, Lloyd
Whitesell
Britten is the most literary British composer of the twentieth
century. His relationship to the many and varied texts that he set
was deeply committed and sensitive. As a result, both his responses
to poetry and his collaborationswith his librettists tell us a
great deal about his music, and often, about the man himself.
Britten is the most literary British composer of the twentieth
century. His relationship to the many and varied texts that he set
was deeply committed and sensitive. As a result, both his responses
to poetry and his collaborationswith his librettists tell us a
great deal about his music, and often, about the man himself. This
book takes a unique approach to Britten, drawing together
well-known Britten experts alongside English, music, modern
language andhistory scholars who bring their own perspective to
bear on Britten's work. Chapters examine all aspects of Britten's
text setting, from his engagement with a wide variety of poetry to
his relationship with his librettists. By approaching Britten's
operas and songs through their literature, this book offers fresh
insights into his vocal works. KATE KENNEDY is the Weinrebe
Research Fellow in Life-writing at Wolfson College, Oxford, where
she is an associate of both Music and English Faculties. She is a
frequent broadcaster for the BBC and specialises in
interdisciplinary biography and has published widely on twentieth
century music and literature. Contributors:JOANNA BULLIVANT, PHILIP
ROSS BULLOCK, NICHOLAS CLARK, MERVYN COOKE, DAVID FULLER, JOHN
FULLER, PETER HAPPE, J. P. E. HARPER-SCOTT, JOHN HOPKINS, KATE
KENNEDY, ADRIAN POOLE, HANNA ROCHLITZ, PHILIP RUPPRECHT, REBEKAH
SCOTT, VICKISTROEHER, JUSTIN VICKERS, LUCY WALKER, BRIAN YOUNG
Benjamin Britten, pianist, conductor, educator, composer of a wide
range of music from large-scale operas and choral works to string
quartets and songs, is acknowledged as a pivotal figure in
mid-twentieth-century Britain. This volume explores the contexts
for his multi-faceted career and his engagement with his
contemporaries in music, art, literature, and film, British musical
institutions, royal and governmental entities, and the church, as
well as his ground-breaking projects, philosophical and ideological
tenets. The book is thematically structured in five parts:
Britten's relationships with Peter Pears, his close friends,
mentors, and colleagues; musical life in Britain; his interactions
with previous and contemporary generations of composers; his
professional work with choreographers, librettists, stage
designers, and directors; and his socio-cultural, religious, and
political environment. The chapters shed light on the many
opportunities and challenges of post-war British musical life that
shaped Britten's creative output.
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