"Britten's Boys" article in The Guardian
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by mercia View Postto take two sentences from that article
"No one with even a brief acquaintance of Britten's music can possibly miss the prominent and privileged place that music for the unbroken male voice occupies in his output".
I would change that to
No one with even a brief acquaintance of Britten's music can possibly miss the prominent and privileged place that music for the tenor voice occupies in his output.
Doing a quick calculation from wikipedia's list, I would say only four works of the ninety-six are exclusively for boy's voices
"The last thing his music needs is to be subverted by a pointless denial of his complex sexuality"
I would change that to
the last thing his music needs is to be subverted by a pointless obsession with his sexuality
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI can't find my copy at the moment but Bridcut's Britten's Children contains a moving testimony from David Hemmings who created the part of Miles in Britten's Turn of the Screw about how he felt both safe and loved by Britten while they were working together, and indeed that if there were any trauma in their relationship it arose from Britten's discarding of him when his voice broke. I gained the impression that Hemmings grew to understand and appreciate this too.
Comment
-
-
I'm afraid the Saville business has stirred a lot of interest in this sort of thing. My doctor left recently and false rumours by one nitwit were heard by a nurse, who explained why he had left suddenly for another practice.
I hope the Britten centenary next year will have shaken off all this stuff that detracts from his true greatness.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by salymap View PostI'm afraid the Saville business has stirred a lot of interest in this sort of thing. My doctor left recently and false rumours by one nitwit were heard by a nurse, who explained why he had left suddenly for another practice.
I hope the Britten centenary next year will have shaken off all this stuff that detracts from his true greatness.
Comment
-
-
I am not quite so sure as the rest of you that this article is to be wholly condemned. I find much of it very ill-reasoned such as equating his writing for the treble voice with paedophilia .It may be naive of me but I don't necessarily believe that the affection he showed them should be construed as sexual either and it does not appear that the objects of that affection saw it that way either .
I still found Britten's Children uncomfortable, however, viewing not because I thought there was any suggestion of inappropriate or criminal sexual behaviour on his part but because it showed him to be rather emotionally warped . His discarding of these children with whom he had formed close almost parental like supportive relationships simply because they were no longer musically useful to him is close to emotional abuse .
Britten appears to have discarded adults that offended him in the same way but to do that to children strikes me as reprehensible.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI am not quite so sure as the rest of you that this article is to be wholly condemned. I find much of it very ill-reasoned such as equating his writing for the treble voice with paedophilia .It may be naive of me but I don't necessarily believe that the affection he showed them should be construed as sexual either and it does not appear that the objects of that affection saw it that way either .
I still found Britten's Children uncomfortable, however, viewing not because I thought there was any suggestion of inappropriate or criminal sexual behaviour on his part but because it showed him to be rather emotionally warped . His discarding of these children with whom he had formed close almost parental like supportive relationships simply because they were no longer musically useful to him is close to emotional abuse .
Britten appears to have discarded adults that offended him in the same way but to do that to children strikes me as reprehensible.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mercia View Postnot quite sure how we can expect children to become interested in music-making unless music is written exclusively for them
bit of a no-brainer I would have thought
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMost humiliating of all is a crass exhibitionist like Jimmy Savile (who may well have behaved abhorently) being put into the same box as BB who was almost certainly a perfect gentleman. I suppose someone at The Guardian will call it "cutting edge journalism".
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI think that, whilst you may have a point that relates to certain specific flaws and difficulties in Britten's personality, there may arguably be some difference in that the kind of emotional abuse to which you refer can be - and, perhaps, in some so permanently busy as Britten, almost certainly was in most if not all cases - committed unwittingly, whereas one can hardly say the same of the commission of acts of pædophilia; perhaps it might have been helpful had someone whom Britten trusted and respected taken him to one side and tried to point out that behaving in this way could be and almost certainly would be hurtful although, since one of Britten's insecurities manifested itself in his finding it more difficult than most to accept adverse criticism, however sincere and well-meant, this might well have backfired, at least initially in the heat of the moment.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostNot so sure about that - I am sure I recall David Hemmings referring to being in essence " cut " by Britten and his distress as a consequence .
Comment
-
-
Simon
I'm with Mary, mostly, on this one. Britten had his faults, as do we all, but it's unfair to smear him with being a paedophile without evidence, just because he was homosexual. I'm fairly sure (with hindsight and experience of life) that one of my former teachers was at the very least attracted to boys, but we all adored him (perhaps because in a strange way we sensed his gentleness and that he cared so much for us?) and I do not believe that he would ever, or ever did, do anything illegal or unsavoury. I suspect Britten was similar in attitude.
Where I'm not with Mary is of course the laughable idea that people who read the Guardian are more intelligent than people who read the Mail. I rarely read either, but I would have guessed that both groups have a very similar proportion of naive dunderheads amongst their respective readerships.
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Simon View PostI'm with Mary, mostly, on this one. Britten had his faults, as do we all, but it's unfair to smear him with being a paedophile without evidence, just because he was homosexual. I'm fairly sure (with hindsight and experience of life) that one of my former teachers was at the very least attracted to boys, but we all adored him (perhaps because in a strange way we sensed his gentleness and that he cared so much for us?) and I do not believe that he would ever, or ever did, do anything illegal or unsavoury. I suspect Britten was similar in attitude.
Where I'm not with Mary is of course the laughable idea that people who read the Guardian are more intelligent than people who read the Mail. I rarely read either, but I would have guessed that both groups have a very similar proportion of naive dunderheads amongst their respective readerships.
Comment
Comment