Propaganda music in second world war Britain: John Ireland's Epic March
Propaganda music in second world war Britain: John Ireland's Epic March
While biographical studies of British composers’ experiences in the Second World War abound, little attention has been paid to how the demands of ‘total’ war impacted on music’s ideological status. This article sheds new light on how composers and critics negotiated the problematic relationship between art music and politics in this period. John Ireland’s Epic March – a BBC commission that caused the composer considerable anxiety – provides a case study. Drawing first on the correspondence charting the lengthy genesis of the work, and then on the work’s critical reception, I consider how Ireland and his audiences sought to reconcile the conflicting political and aesthetic demands of this commission. With its conventional musical style, Epic March offers an example of a ‘middlebrow’ attempt to bridge the gap between art and politics
137-175
Guthrie, Kate
d005b936-78dd-4713-a623-63106ae8e082
22 April 2014
Guthrie, Kate
d005b936-78dd-4713-a623-63106ae8e082
Guthrie, Kate
(2014)
Propaganda music in second world war Britain: John Ireland's Epic March.
Journal of the Royal Musical Association, 139 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/02690403.2014.886430).
Abstract
While biographical studies of British composers’ experiences in the Second World War abound, little attention has been paid to how the demands of ‘total’ war impacted on music’s ideological status. This article sheds new light on how composers and critics negotiated the problematic relationship between art music and politics in this period. John Ireland’s Epic March – a BBC commission that caused the composer considerable anxiety – provides a case study. Drawing first on the correspondence charting the lengthy genesis of the work, and then on the work’s critical reception, I consider how Ireland and his audiences sought to reconcile the conflicting political and aesthetic demands of this commission. With its conventional musical style, Epic March offers an example of a ‘middlebrow’ attempt to bridge the gap between art and politics
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02690403.2014.886430
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Published date: 22 April 2014
Organisations:
Music
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Local EPrints ID: 373620
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373620
ISSN: 1471-6933
PURE UUID: 7a63e36c-6dc1-43a5-9575-9f6d6e034b18
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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2015 08:48
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:54
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Author:
Kate Guthrie
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