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This volume gathers together a cross-section of essays and book
chapters dealing with the ways in which musicians and their music
have been pressed into the service of political, nationalist and
racial ideologies. Arranged chronologically according to their
subject matter, the selections cover Western and non-Western
musics, as well as art and popular musics, from the eighteenth
century to the present day. The introduction features detailed
commentaries on sources beyond those included in the volume, and as
such provides an invaluable and comprehensive reading list for
researchers and educators alike. The volume brings together for the
first time seminal articles written by leading scholars, and
presents them in such a way as to contribute significantly to our
understanding of the use and abuse of music for ideological ends.
Shortly before his death, Percy Grainger (1882-1961) lodged over
twenty unpublished sketches in his Australian Museum. Self-Portrait
of Percy Grainger draws exclusively from these sketches, revealing
for the first time an illuminating portrait of the composer's life.
With such titles as "The Aldridge-Grainger-Strom Saga," "Thunks,"
"Ere-I-Forget," "The Love-Life of Helen and Paris," and
"Anecdotes," these manuscripts were intended as precursors to
Grainger's autobiography, My Wretched Tone-Life, which he only
commenced in his final years. Expertly shaping these sketches, the
editors have created a "self-portrait" along the lines that
Grainger himself had intended.
The volume first introduces Grainger's forebears, parents,
friends, wife, and himself before moving on to his views on
composition, performance, and the musical world. In these sketches,
Grainger addresses such topics as racial and national identity, the
meaning of work, physical culture, language reform, sexual
practice, and artistic patronage. Grainger also probes the nature
of musical genius, discussing a broad range of composers including
Igor Stravinsky, Thomas Beecham, Frederick Delius, Edvard Grieg,
Charles Stanford, Cyril Scott, Fritz Kreisler, Donald Tovey,
Ferruccio Busoni, and Balfour Gardiner. Among the works of his own
that Grainger most featured are his The Warriors --Music for an
Imaginary Ballet, Colonial Song, the Lincolnshire Posy series of
band pieces, his greatest "hit" Country Gardens, and his many
settings of English folk-music.
Written in Grainger's own self-created "Nordic English" as well as
translated from Danish, the language of his most intimate
confessions, Self-Portrait of Percy Graingersheds light on some of
the most revealing details of the composer's life. The sketches
trace Grainger's changing self-perception, from the romantically
tinged, even lustful, views of his forties and fifties, through a
period of wistfulness in his sixties, to the bitterness and
self-loathing of his old age. The volume also includes several of
Grainger's own drawings as well as both public and private
photographs. A fascinating and revealing collection of vignettes,
this extraordinary book will appeal to instructors, students, and
enthusiasts in musicology, music history, cultural studies, and
Australian, British, and American history.
This book places the radicalization of art music in early post-war
France in its broader socio-cultural and political context. It
pursues two general and intersecting lines of inquiry. The first
details the stances towards musical conservatism and innovation
adopted by cultural strategists representing Western and Soviet
ideological interests at the onset of the Cold War. The second,
which draws upon the commentaries of Theodor Adorno and Jean-Paul
Sartre, recognizes that the Cold War generated a heightened
political awareness amongst French musicians at the very time when
the social relevance of avant-garde music had become the subject of
widespread debate. The study considers the implications of the
performance at L'Oeuvre du XXe siecle, an international arts
festival staged in Paris in 1952 with the intention of discrediting
socialist realism by means of two opposing musical types:
neo-classicism (represented by Stravinsky's Symphony in C) and
serialism (Boulez's Structures 1a).
Like all fields of creative endeavour, music has long been caught
up - voluntarily and otherwise - in matters political. Music has
been used and abused, claimed and disowned, for propaganda
purposes, as a vehicle for protest, as a means of articulating
national, racial and sexual identities, and in the name of
religious, courtly, party political and commercial imperatives.
Scholarly interest in the political dimensions of music and music
making has increased greatly in recent decades to the point where a
consolidated overview has become indispensable to furthering our
understanding of the forces at play. This timely four volume series
brings together classic essays addressing the intersection of music
and politics, in the broad sense of the word, written by leading
international scholars over the past few decades. The essays, which
encompass art and vernacular musics in western and non-western
cultures, ancient and modern, are grouped together under the
headings of patronage, ideology, protest and identity politics.
Each volume is edited by a recognized authority in their field and
includes a select bibliography and an introduction which offers an
authoritative overview of research in the area. This four-volume
series offers a significant benefit to students, lecturers and
libraries as it brings together leading articles in the field from
disparate journals which are often difficult to locate and of
limited access. Students are thus able to study leading articles
side by side for comparison whilst lecturers are provided with an
invaluable 'one-stop' teaching resource.
Mark Carroll was for over 30 years a biochemistry lecturer at one
of London's premier medical schools. He was introduced to family
history by his sister in 2002. His first major project was to
research his mother's maiden name, Orriss. Little did he know that
it would not be so easy, despite the apparently rare surname. He
also did not realise that he would come up against the
genealogist's worst nightmare: a Smith family from London! In spite
of these challenges he made substantial progress. Along the way he
was helped by archivists and by some distant cousins who had been
researching the shared family for years. With their combined
sleuthing, he and they together took the Orriss line back to a
marriage in Suffolk in 1597. But what to do when you hit a
genealogical 'brick wall'? In recent years DNA analysis has opened
up new possibilities for family historians. With his professional
background in human biochemical genetics, Mark was well placed to
take advantage of this novel technology. In this fascinating and at
times amusing book Mark takes you on a journey to discover the
origins of his mother's family. He describes, in an engaging and
non-technical way, his successes and failures, the research methods
he employed, the skills he developed, and his use of DNA analysis.
He has yet to overcome his greatest genealogical challenge - to
prove whether his mother's Orriss family is descended from King
Alfred the Great!
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