Petroc Trelawny has a reasonable piece in Radio 3 online - "Why do we think Elgar's music sounds English?":
Quite good of its type until you read this:
Forget the typo (perhaps Elgar's father-in-law was actually a bureaucrat) but the rather prim Caroline Alice Roberts would surely have been shocked to find out Elgar was a bigamist, for she had married him in 1889. Perhaps, too, EE had a fetish for 'Caroline Alice', since both Miss Roberts and Miss Edwards shared the names.
Petroc makes a questionable claim here, too:
EE did say something of the sort, but about the theme, not Nimrod.
Computers are so easy to use that we don't need sub-editors any more.
Quite good of its type until you read this:
in 1899, when he married Caroline Alice Edwards, the daughter of a senior British Army office, her family disinherited her.
Forget the typo (perhaps Elgar's father-in-law was actually a bureaucrat) but the rather prim Caroline Alice Roberts would surely have been shocked to find out Elgar was a bigamist, for she had married him in 1889. Perhaps, too, EE had a fetish for 'Caroline Alice', since both Miss Roberts and Miss Edwards shared the names.
Petroc makes a questionable claim here, too:
[Elgar] wrote that Nimrod, from the Enigma Variations, expressed 'my sense of the loneliness of the artist … and to me, it still embodies that sense’
EE did say something of the sort, but about the theme, not Nimrod.
Computers are so easy to use that we don't need sub-editors any more.
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