BY COMMON CONSENT THE LEADING BRITISH COMPOSER OF THE
TWENTIETH-CENTURY'S MIDDLE DECADES, BRITTEN CONTINUES TO CREATE
SIGNIFICANT CONTEXTS FOR THE WORK OF THOSE WHO SURVIVED AND SUCCEEDED
HIM.
This collection of revised reprints of essays, reviews and analyses
first published between 1995 and 2018 surveys a cross-section of
contemporary classical composition in the UK. The governing
perspective is the impact of the lifeand work of Benjamin Britten
(1913-1976) on British composers who, with the exception of Michael
Tippett and Robert Simpson, were born between the 1930s and the 1980s.
Despite obvious and considerable differences in character andstyle,
British composers like Harrison Birtwistle and Thomas Adès, Robin
Holloway and James Dillon, have continued, like Britten himself, to
seek personal perspectives on the still prominent procedures and
personalities of more distant baroque, classical and romantic eras.
Most if not all of these composers would deny being influenced by
Britten, and many have reservations about his music. Yet, in light of
the fact that British musical life and the institutions that support
it have not changed radically since Britten's own time - the pace of
technological change notwithstanding - to speak of 'British music
after Britten' inevitably involves something more than mere
chronology. Asby common consent the leading British composer of the
twentieth-century's middle decades, Britten continues to create
significant contexts for the work of those who survived and succeeded
him.
ARNOLD WHITTALL is Professor Emeritus of Music Theory & Analysis,
King's College London and one of the leading authorities on
twentieth-century music and analysis.
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Product details
ISBN
9781787448698
Published
2021
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author