Originally posted by Heldenleben
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The Arts in Victorian Britain
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYou make some very good points here . But it is still a bit of a mystery as to why ,given the economic conditions were ripe for domestic composers in the 19th century and also that there was a receptive audience , no British composers of the very first rank emerged until Elgar when if anything economic decline had commenced . I have often thought that despite our our pre eminence in fiction the Victorian era was one of general cultural decline with no poets in the early Wordsworth , Blake , Keats league , and no painters up to Turner and Constable standard , and as for drama - nothing really. Why should music be any different ? I wonder whether there was a certain complacency in Victorian England - a tolerance for the mediocre , a conviction that the Germans, Italians and French did that sort of thing better. Or it could just be that , given the rarity of genius it was our turn for a dry period ....
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMight it have something to do with our education system? Ruling Empire possibly required a somewhat macho view of life; a view which probably put music in a not-to-do box.
I agree that theory doesn't explain our 19th cent authors and poets.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhich is more-or-less what I was saying above.
Books - poetry, but especially romances - comprised a large part of Victorian leisure time, and of course were very effective transmitters of moral values. It does explain to the extent that publishing books takes a lot less effort and time than promoting and funding concerts or, rather, indigenous providers of the music for the same. Members of society's upper echelons were happy for the working masses to be confined to their own entertainments, provided these did not show signs of political subversiveness or, principally, undermine the work ethic. Composers could provide suitable church music.
Incidentally the work Eliot put into the Westminster Review or Dickens put into Household Words would I suspect eclipse that of your average 19th century concert promoter but only having dabbled in doing either I can only guess...
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Which is more-or-less what I was saying above.
Slight change of tack. One of my most interesting books is "Studies of Great Composers" by Hubert Parry. His chapters are:
Palestrina
Handel
Bach
Haydn
Mozart
Beethoven
Weber
Schubert
Mendelssohn
Schumann
Wagner
So apart from the guy from Italy, no composer outside the Austria/Germany block was 'great' in Parry's eyes.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostThing is I think all those authors I mentioned were politically subversive . So were G and S themselves in a milder way. We mustn’t think of Victorian culture (whatever that is ) as monolithic . There were plenty of literally ‘dissenting ‘voices. It always makes me laugh when people talk of Victorian values . Whose values ? Those of Ruskin ? Or George Eliot ? Disraeli?
Incidentally the work Eliot put into the Westminster Review or Dickens put into Household Words would I suspect eclipse that of your average 19th century concert promoter but only having dabbled in doing either I can only guess...
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIndeed, but I was suggesting that at school level music just wasn't encouraged. Public schools these days have massive lists of music staff, but that was certainly not so even in the early 20th century. On old friend of mine (long since departed) and ex Kings choral scholar went to Marlborough in the early 1920s. Apart from Chapel music (and that no doubt applied even more at schools such as Eton and Winchester) there wasn't much apart from a military-style wind band.
Slight change of tack. One of my most interesting books is "Studies of Great Composers" by Hubert Parry. His chapters are:
Palestrina
Handel
Bach
Haydn
Mozart
Beethoven
Weber
Schubert
Mendelssohn
Schumann
Wagner
So apart from the guy from Italy, no composer outside the Austria/Germany block was 'great' in Parry's eyes.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostThing is I think all those authors I mentioned were politically subversive . So were G and S themselves in a milder way. We mustn’t think of Victorian culture (whatever that is ) as monolithic . There were plenty of literally ‘dissenting ‘voices. It always makes me laugh when people talk of Victorian values . Whose values ? Those of Ruskin ? Or George Eliot ? Disraeli?
Incidentally the work Eliot put into the Westminster Review or Dickens put into Household Words would I suspect eclipse that of your average 19th century concert promoter but only having dabbled in doing either I can only guess...
'G&S' have had an influence on theatre which is still potent today, especially in America. Not to allow Sullivan the musical status he so thoroughly deserves is a grave mistake of historical perspective, as well as aesthetic taste (in my opinion, of course!) We really do need to get over our antimacassar complex, when it comes to Victorian art and music. The pre-Raphaelites and Alma-Tadema are only "fake" when examined through the wrong end of the aesthetic telescope.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostSubversion is key to Browning too - while nobody is more aware of the need for it than Matthew Arnold. I don't agree with you, by the way, that a "classical grounding" is needed to experience the incomparable power and beauty of his Dover Beach or The Scholar Gypsy / Thysis, let alone some of the shorter lyrics. He is a very direct writer. The problem for many readers today is his intelligence, not his learning.
'G&S' have had an influence on theatre which is still potent today, especially in America. Not to allow Sullivan the musical status he so thoroughly deserves is a grave mistake of historical perspective, as well as aesthetic taste (in my opinion, of course!) We really do need to get over our antimacassar complex, when it comes to Victorian art and music. The pre-Raphaelites and Alma-Tadema are only "fake" when examined through the wrong end of the aesthetic telescope.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYes you're right of course. What I would question (because I really don't know) is how much of the population would have got to know or learn about writers such as Eliot and Ruskin, though it seems probable many had Dickens on their shelves.
Westminster review peaked at 3,000 copies per issue.
Middlemarch was expected to sell 10,000 in first edition but sold 5,000 - that would be ok for first novel (though it wasn’t GE’s first ) these days but not exactly best seller land
All the year round (successorto Household Words) 300,000 for Xmas editions otherwise 100,000 per issue.
So Dickens vastly more popular...
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Right! I've moved the posts from the Malcolm Arnold Thread (well - one of them!) so that this fascinating "diversion" can continue in its own terms.
It's late - but to get things (re)-started, I'd just wish to mention Gerard Manley Hopkins - one of the greatest poets in the language, and by far the finest and most interesting working in Britain in the second half of the 19th Century. Interesting that he was completely neglected during his lifetime, and it was only the generation of TS Eliot who "discovered" his significance (the parallels with Emily Dickinson I've always found interesting). An outsider, due to his Catholicism - as Elgar considered himself, but without the keenness to become an "insider"?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostRight! I've moved the posts from the Malcolm Arnold Thread (well - one of them!) so that this fascinating "diversion" can continue in its own terms.
It's late - but to get things (re)-started, I'd just wish to mention Gerard Manley Hopkins - one of the greatest poets in the language, and by far the finest and most interesting working in Britain in the second half of the 19th Century. Interesting that he was completely neglected during his lifetime, and it was only the generation of TS Eliot who "discovered" his significance (the parallels with Emily Dickinson I've always found interesting). An outsider, due to his Catholicism - as Elgar considered himself, but without the keenness to become an "insider"?
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Oakapple
I agree with the comments about our education system in the 19th century. We gave the world football, rugby and cricket rather than symphonies. At least Lytton Strachey in Eminent Victorians and Kipling with his "muddied oafs and flanneled fools" had the sense to see through it.
And I'm so pleased that Master Jacques has spoken up for Arthur Sullivan. I'm fed up hearing that nothing happened until Elgar came along. I much prefer Sullivan's wit and invention (even if he does sound like Mendelssohn and Schubert sometimes) to Elgar's occasional Brahmsian stodge. Try the music for The Tempest, the Macbeth overture, the Irish Symphony and parts of Ivanhoe or The Light of the World if you're not convinced.
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Richard Tarleton
A word about Victorian Ireland, which gave rise to the Irish Ring, 3 operas which were popular at home and abroad - The Bohemian Girl, Maritana and the Lily of Killarney. I used to have an LP with highlights from the three - I Dreamt that I Dwelt in Marble Halls was one of Joan Sutherland's party pieces in her younger years. And here's Eily Mavourneen from The Lily of Killarney, sung by Heddle Nash.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostA word about Victorian Ireland, which gave rise to the Irish Ring, 3 operas which were popular at home and abroad - The Bohemian Girl, Maritana and the Lily of Killarney. I used to have an LP with highlights from the three - I Dreamt that I Dwelt in Marble Halls was one of Joan Sutherland's party pieces in her younger years. And here's Eily Mavourneen from The Lily of Killarney, sung by Heddle Nash.
Sadly, when John Huston came to make his (otherwise rather good) film adaptation of The Dead, he misread "The Bohemian Girl" as a translation of "La Boheme", and gave us tiny frozen hands instead of marble walls![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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