[Ed: detached from the Prom 46 - RVW thread in Concerts 2012. ff]
On the last series of comments, might I mildly suggest that we exercise some caution on the terminology.
'Nationalism' and 'conservatism' aren't necessarily interchangeable in any sphere. In music, the latter to me denotes 'not the avant-garde' for want of a better phrase. More importantly, nationalism splits into two, albeit with overlap, and this is true of 20C English classical music. There is a difference between 'the people celebrating their country through music' and a patriotic ra-ra-ra.
If RVW and others responded to accusations that English classical music didn't dig deep enough into history, then in a sense what was being alleged was that it lacked enough depth to be nationalistic. It seems to me that they might be seen as 'nationalistic' to the extent that they created a new national music. But the way in which they did it, not least in rooting some of the music in forgotten folk song, was hardly 'for king and country'. Folk music was the people's music and often created in rebellion.
So I sometimes wonder if the English have such a problem with their countryside, or the underbelly of urban life, that they seek to link them inextricably with "Evil Empire". In truth, many here were the victims of Empire. The common music of, say, Spain or Latin America is a celebration of ordinary life there or, often, a critique of political regimes. I don't see why our national music should be very different, even if as the piece by John Ireland showed some days ago, it has often been pegged on to patriotic events.
I could also speak about how one might view those inputs as turning nationalism into something more acceptable by enabling it to be more encompassing, rather than as being compromised by nationalism, but that requires more words and this is not the place.
On the last series of comments, might I mildly suggest that we exercise some caution on the terminology.
'Nationalism' and 'conservatism' aren't necessarily interchangeable in any sphere. In music, the latter to me denotes 'not the avant-garde' for want of a better phrase. More importantly, nationalism splits into two, albeit with overlap, and this is true of 20C English classical music. There is a difference between 'the people celebrating their country through music' and a patriotic ra-ra-ra.
If RVW and others responded to accusations that English classical music didn't dig deep enough into history, then in a sense what was being alleged was that it lacked enough depth to be nationalistic. It seems to me that they might be seen as 'nationalistic' to the extent that they created a new national music. But the way in which they did it, not least in rooting some of the music in forgotten folk song, was hardly 'for king and country'. Folk music was the people's music and often created in rebellion.
So I sometimes wonder if the English have such a problem with their countryside, or the underbelly of urban life, that they seek to link them inextricably with "Evil Empire". In truth, many here were the victims of Empire. The common music of, say, Spain or Latin America is a celebration of ordinary life there or, often, a critique of political regimes. I don't see why our national music should be very different, even if as the piece by John Ireland showed some days ago, it has often been pegged on to patriotic events.
I could also speak about how one might view those inputs as turning nationalism into something more acceptable by enabling it to be more encompassing, rather than as being compromised by nationalism, but that requires more words and this is not the place.
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