Music and Performance Culture in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Essays in Honour of Nicholas Temperley.
Taylor, Ian
Music and Performance Culture in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Essays
in Honour of Nicholas Temperley. Edited by Bennett Zon. Aldershot:
Ashgate, 2012. [364 p. ISBN 978-1-4094-3979-0. 65 [pounds sterling]]
A cursory glance at the contents page of this volume--alongside a
recognition of the fact that, in itself, it forms part of Ashgate's
now firmly established series on Music in Nineteenth-Century
Britain--should serve to reassure anyone embarking on work in this
domain that, unlike Nicholas Temperley in the 1950s, they no longer run
the risk of 'throw[ing] away' a promising academic career on
apparently 'inconsequential music and its inconsequential
culture' (p. 1). The list of contributors, all nationally- and
internationally-recognized scholars whose reputations rest either solely
or in large part on their contributions to the study of music in
Britain, is indication enough that, whilst there remains much exciting
work to be done in completely overhauling the 'land without
music' myth, the validity of such work is no longer in question.
Editor Bennett Zon's own excellent introduction--in which he,
Temperley-like, integrates biographical detail with an illustration of
importance and implication--offers a potent reminder of the centrality
of this book's dedicatee to this not insignificant reversal of
fortunes. As Zon notes, 'from his doctoral thesis to Music and the
Wesleys, Nicholas has been prosecuting a campaign against ignorance and
prejudice, subtly reconfiguring the way we think about
nineteenth-century British musical history by unsettling certitudes with
compellingly argued ideas' (p. 3). Since the completion of
Instrumental Music in England, 1800-1850 (Cambridge, 1959), Temperley
has held academic positions at leading institutions in both the UK and
the USA, notably at the University of Cambridge and at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he remains today as Emeritus
Professor. The complete bibliography with which this volume concludes
offers a timely reminder of his vast and varied output which, in
addition to a number of pioneering books and monographs, incorporates,
according to Zon's summary, '25 chapters, 55 articles and
hundreds of encyclopaedia entries' and covers topics from
'composers, performers, conductors' to 'genres, styles
[and] instruments' (p. 3). Temperley has also played a leading role
in the establishment of a number of academic initiatives, including the
biennial conference on Music in Nineteenth-Century Britain--at which he
was the first keynote speaker in 1997 and out of which this collection
of articles has arisen--and the North American British Music Studies
Association. The latter's Temperley Prize for student work is, we
are told, a testimony 'not only to Nicholas's centrality
within the field, but to his encouragement and cultivation of upcoming
talent' (p. 3).
Though the contributors to this volume have long since discarded
the tag of 'upcoming talent', the range of topics covered here
reflects the diversity of Temperley's interests. The volume falls
logically into four distinct sections--Musical Cultures, Societies,
National Music and Methods--across which topics range chronologically
from Peter Holman's fascinating discussion of the 'long
method' of orchestral direction first established at the Handelian
oratorios of the mid-eighteenth century (The Conductor at the Organ, or
How Choral and Orchestral Music was Directed in Georgian England',
pp. 243-61), through to Leanne Langley's illustration of how the
carefully constructed comparison between English and French orchestral
ensembles served to define the face of public concert culture in London
during the final decades of the 1800s ('Joining Up the Dots:
Cross-Channel Models in the Shaping of London Orchestral Culture,
1895-1914', pp. 37-58). The 'long nineteenth century'
which underpinned Temperley's own consideration of The Romantic Age
in the 1980s appears to be getting longer, but scholarship is the more
enriching and exciting for it.
Similarly, the acceptance of all forms of music-making evident in
The Romantic Age is to be found here. Temperley's pioneering
contribution to the history of British sacred music is evident, most
obviously, in chapters by Philip Olleson ('Samuel Wesley and the
Development of Organ Pedals in England', pp. 283-97) and Sally
Drage ('William Cole's View of Modern Psalmody', pp.
263-81). At the same time, however, Susan Wollenberg's chapter on
Anglo-Jewish relations in late nineteenth-century synagogues uncovers a
potent new line of enquiry ('Charles Garland Verrinder and Music at
the West London Synagogue, 1859-1904', pp. 59-81), whilst Charles
Edward McGuire's exploration of Anglo-American musical crossover in
the context of the English Temperance cantata ('American Songs,
Pastoral Nationalism and the English Temperance Cantata', pp.
173-91) offers a reminder of the inclusivity of Temperley's
musicology. Moreover, both articles reflect the fact that, as McGuire
reminds us, 'a major benefit of ... Temperley's scholarly work
has been the encouragement ... of musicological inquiry into the more
ephemeral areas and genres of English music, noting how these heretofore
unnoticed nooks and crannies often reflected (or even presaged) larger
trends and developments in Victorian culture' (p. 173). Such a
working outwards from the music towards broader cultural significance is
equally evident in Derek B. Scott's typically vivacious exploration
of the edifying qualities of music for the Victorian middle-class home
('Music, Morality and Rational Amusement at the Victorian
Middle-Class Soiree, pp. 83-101).
Indeed, the strongest contributions to this volume are probably
those inspired by Temperley's methodology and approach rather than
by his specific areas of interest. Temperley's 'determination
to change musicological boundaries' is now firmly established but
it is instructive to be reminded that his attempts to do so are largely
underpinned by a process of 'expanding and deepening our knowledge
of nineteenth-century British music and then setting that knowledge
within larger cultural contexts' (p. 2). This is certainly the case
with Peter Horton's chapter on the development of British vocal
composition ('The British Vocal Album and the Struggle for National
Music', pp. 195-220). Here, Horton uses a close analytical reading
of certain songs by key contributors to The British Vocal Album--a
series published in London in the 1840s by Wessel & Stapleton--not
only to challenge the detail of the 'land without music' myth
but to explain its very existence, thereby further undermining its
validity. His study considers the underlying tension, endured by many
British composers of this period, between the desire to develop a
national school of composition and the need to acknowledge models
provided from overseas. Although adopting a more documentary approach,
Julian Rushton's chapter on Elgar's Caractacus offers a
similar insight into the difficulties faced by British composers
throughout the 20th century ('Musicking Caractacus', pp.
221-40). Drawing extensively on the unpublished diaries and letters of
Herbert Thompson, critic to the Yorkshire Post, Rushton addresses the
role of this cantata in forging a sense of national identity by
exploring the work's often challenging relationship with the
changing notions of empire.
Simon McVeigh's chapter--written in memory of the late
Meredith McFarlane, who was to have been a co-author--serves
simultaneously to illuminate a previously largely-ignored institution
within British musical culture and to place it within the context of
more familiar canonic works and ideas ('Trial by Dining Club: The
Instrumental Music of Haydn, Clementi and Mozart at London's
Anacreontic Society', pp. 105-38). Focussing on the London
Anacreontic Society, McVeigh argues that an organisation traditionally
dismissed as little more than a convivial drinking club actually
functioned as a highly important, and hugely influential, arbiter of
artistic taste. Whilst the Society's most obvious legacy might
appear to be such popular tunes as 'To Anacreon in
Heaven'--now heard regularly as the melody to 'The Star
Spangled Banner'--McVeigh reveals that a series of pre-dinner
concerts at the Anacreontic not only employed many of London's
leading musicians but offered a discerning audience of influential
amateurs and members of the musical establishment the opportunity to
'vet' the latest performers and composers before their
transference to more prestigious public concert venues such as the
Hanover Square Rooms. Even more significantly, McVeigh uncovers the
pivotal role that the Anacreontic Society played in shaping public
musical taste in London. By comparing the preferential treatment enjoyed
by Haydn and Pleyel with the problematic reception of Clementi and, more
notably, Mozart, McVeigh argues that the contrasting fortunes of these
composers within turn-of-the-century West-End concert culture can be
traced in no small part to the levels of success, or otherwise,
experienced within the concerts at the Anacreontic. Once again, we are
encouraged to reconsider long-held assumptions and to view musical
development through a more refined critical lens: despite its
'informal and quaintly bibulous setting' (p. 107), the
Anacreontic had a critical role in 'providing a forum for serious
artistic debate about modern instrumental music, in that very British
way: empirical, practical and convivial' (p. 138).
Like McVeigh, Michael Allis considers the influence of networks of
private promotion on patterns of public reception, exploring the
influence of the Working Men's Society--a collective of four
prominent pianists--on the promotion of so-called 'progressive
piano repertory' in late nineteenth-century London
('Performance in Private: "The Working Men's
Society" and the Promotion of Progressive Repertoire in
Nineteenth-Century Britain', pp. 139-71). With these topics, both
Allis and McVeigh reflect one of the major methodological advances upon
Temperley's work contained in this volume. This is an advance made
all the more explicit by Leanne Langley who notes that, for all the
strengths of Temperley's research--his Athlone History in
particular--it 'never seriously examined any aspect of performance
history--the making of performers or listeners, the achievements of
institutions devoted to performance, the processes connecting
professionalization, repertory formation and public reception' (p.
37). Langley's own chapter goes a long way to redress this,
examining the manner in which conductors Henry Wood and Thomas Beecham
and entrepreneurs such as Robert Newman managed their orchestras in
order to establish viable audiences for serious orchestral music by the
end of the nineteenth century. Whilst the focus remains on the canonic
nineteenth-century repertory with which modern concert audiences are now
familiar, Langley offers a clear and coherent illustration of how this
familiarity was achieved, revealing the mechanics of the music industry
and dispelling the former stigma attached to issues of commercialism and
corporate organisation.
Composers and their works, judged by critics and
criticism, have not dropped out of view. But genuine
questions about a range of economic interactions
involving performers and audiences have
continued to stimulate new thinking about the
practical realities for serious music in a free-market
system based on supply and demand--with
no state or civic subsidy (p. 38).
Although focused on what, in many ways, represents an altogether
different, less obviously commercial, sphere of activity, Christina
Bashford's chapter on networks of violin activity in the late
nineteenth century is no less impressive ('Hidden Agendas and the
Creation of Community: The Violin Press in the Late Nineteenth
Century', pp. 11-36). As she has done so successfully on a number
of occasions in the past, Bashford utilizes a biographical study to
illustrate the interdependence of a number of strands of activity during
this period, revealing that the 'craze for fiddling' was not
simply a product of cultural uprising but rather a carefully constructed
interdependence between performers, publishers and examination boards.
Whilst McVeigh and Allis's reception histories focus on the
relationship of 'public' and 'private' spheres,
therefore, Bashford and Langley explore the position of the composer
within a broader range of market focus and illustrate the importance of
what Bashford has previously referred to as the 'enablers' of
the music industry.
In short, this volume offers both a fitting tribute to the work of
Nicholas Temperley and a testimony to what this work served to generate.
The range of topics covered provides the reader with an illustration of
the diversity of musical life within a country which can no longer be
dismissed as the 'land without music' whilst the shared
methodology underlying many of these studies reveals the gathering
strength which challenges the very premises on which that myth has been
allowed to develop. It is rewarding to see that a clearer picture of
history of music and musical activity in Britain is emerging in tandem
with an ever more convincing reconstruction of the narrative of its
historiography.
Ian Taylor
Thatcham, Berkshire, England