Here we go again. wait for all the old fallacies to be revived again . There's one already on the rubric. 'Far more than with their male contemporaries, obstacles have been thrown in their way'. this is untrue. Many., many male composers had obstacles in their way . Neither Elgar nor Havergal Brian ever had a composition lesson. Many women composers have had, and still have, excellent professional musical education. If their music isn't good enough there's no point in making excuses any more than there is for wel-educated male composers who aren't good enough.
Music Matters : Jenni Murray's Women Composers.
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While I share some of your dislike for the way the subject is approached these days, I would point out that a major obstacle women composers( and performers) faced was being forbidden, or curtailed, to pursue their music, especially if they were married. I don't think male composers were forbidden to compose or perform by their wives, and I think were also less likely to be constrained by society expectations about suitable occupations. I am not suggesting that the latter did not exist, but that going against the grain was more possible.
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Just waiting for the series on the barriers to composers from a working class background. Brian of course being one of the tiny number who came from such a background. It would also have the merit of contemporary relevance as those barriers still exist today- they might , with the decline of church attendance and choirs , be even worse . Even rock and pop is dominated by the sons and daughters of the middle classes .
Such a series of course would demand the sort of originality of thinking and editorial bravery that is rare in BBC Radio these days and sadly it’s even fizzing out in the much better funded TV .It’s all so utterly predictable.
PS the sound on Jenni Murray’s trail is not of broadcast standard - was it recorded in a cupboard?
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI don't think male composers were forbidden to compose or perform by their wives, and I think were also less likely to be constrained by society expectations about suitable occupations. I am not suggesting that the latter did not exist, but that going against the grain was more possible.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostJust waiting for the series on the barriers to composers from a working class background. Brian of course being one of the tiny number who came from such a background. It would also have the merit of contemporary relevance as those barriers still exist today- they might , with the decline of church attendance and choirs , be even worse . Even rock and pop is dominated by the sons and daughters of the middle classes .
Such a series of course would demand the sort of originality of thinking and editorial bravery that is rare in BBC Radio these days and sadly it’s even fizzing out in the much better funded TV .It’s all so utterly predictable.
PS the sound on Jenni Murray’s trail is not of broadcast standard - was it recorded in a cupboard?
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I think some people on here could do with some diversity training, The idea that there weren't massive obstacles in the face of women composers until the middle of the 20th century strikes me as antedluvian in its approach to discrimination. Women have suffered and continue to sufffer discrimination on grounds of their sex throoghout history. There is nil reason why that doesn't apply to music .
You might not like the music of those composers played or illustrated but to suggest that there wasn't discrimination is bilge of the first order.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Quite so. The latter certainly did exist, particularly in Victorian England. Arthur Sullivan's prospective father-in-law, the great engineer and shipbuilder John Scott Russell, loved music but actively discouraged his daughter Rachel's engagement to Sullivan, on the grounds that being a musician was incompatible with being a gentleman. As a poor army bandmaster's son born in a Lambeth terrace, Sullivan needed all the luck he could get and to talk of "male privilege" would be ludicrous in his case, as in so many others. It was his talent which opened doors, not his sex.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI think some people on here could do with some diversity training, The idea that there weren't massive obstacles in the face of women composers until the middle of the 20th century strikes me as antedluvian in its approach to discrimination. Women have suffered and continue to sufffer discrimination on grounds of their sex throoghout history. There is nil reason why that doesn't apply to music .
You might not like the music of those composers played or illustrated but to suggest that there wasn't discrimination is bilge of the first order.
It’s all anecdotal Barbs .There’s quite a bit of (again anecdotal evidence) I believe that the high water mark of these “barriers “ wasn’t the 1900’s to 1930’s but the supposedly enlightened 1950’s, 60, 70, 80’s and 90’s. One way of establishing the truth would be a comprehensive analysis of performances and publications and broadcasts but very few historians in this field have the resources for such a mammoth undertaking. The other confusing factor is definition. The most successful female musical artist in musical history is Taylor Swift - do we include or leave out such figures?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe most successful female musical artist in musical history is Taylor Swift - do we include or leave out such figures?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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It has always puzzled me that the great female writers of the nineteenth century managed to get published and recognized for their genius whilst the composers did not (although performers did). So was there something about musical composition specifically that differed from those other activities in terms of opportunity?
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Originally posted by Roslynmuse View PostIt has always puzzled me that the great female writers of the nineteenth century managed to get published and recognized for their genius whilst the composers did not (although performers did). So was there something about musical composition specifically that differed from those other activities in terms of opportunity?
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Originally posted by Roslynmuse View PostIt has always puzzled me that the great female writers of the nineteenth century managed to get published and recognized for their genius whilst the composers did not (although performers did). So was there something about musical composition specifically that differed from those other activities in terms of opportunity?
Writing a novel or poem requires little more than education to 18 year old level. For all but the Elgars of this world classical composition requires some form of further tuition. It also requires patronage to get performance (an interesting and revealing word in itself) . Female novelists had to battle discrimination- either by hiding their identity (Austen ) or gender (the Brontës). Others like Mrs Gaskell found enlightened patrons like Dickens (hmm maybe enlightened not exactly the right word) . They also benefitted from the sexist perception that novel writing was somehow an acceptable trade for a middle class woman. Music was , apart from piano performance ,not such a trade nor ( emphatically) was the stage. There’s a massive “intersection “ of class and sex in all this . No one cared what the working class did - but how many of them would ever get the chance to write a symphony?Last edited by Ein Heldenleben; 08-02-25, 12:42.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Generalising like mad but first thoughts.,
Writing a novel or poem requires little more than education to 18 year old level. For all but the Elgars of this world classical composition requires some form of further tuition. It also requires patronage to get performance (an interesting and revealing word in itself) . Female novelists had to battle discrimination- either by hiding their identity (Austen ) or gender (the Brontës). Others like Mrs Gaskell found enlightened patrons like Dickens (hmm maybe enlightened not exactly the right word) . They also benefitted from the sexist perception that novel writing was somehow an acceptable trade for a middle class woman. Music was , apart from piano performance ,was not such a trade nor ( emphatically) was the stage. There’s a massive “intersection “ of class and sex in all this . No one cared what the working class did - but how many of them would ever get the chance to write a symphony?
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