Sound Within Sound (eBook)

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2022 | 1. Auflage
256 Seiten
Faber & Faber (Verlag)
978-0-571-36324-7 (ISBN)

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Sound Within Sound -  Kate Molleson
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A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. 'Wonderful . . . This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. ' COSEY FANNI TUTTI 'A marvellous book that opens our ears to sonic worlds that will enrich and delight us, whoever and wherever we are.' IAN McMILLAN 'A clear-eyed, utterly fascinating exploration of outsiders in classical music. Molleson's excellent book challenges and enlightens.' SINÉAD GLEESON This is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of classical music in the twentieth century. Traversing the globe from Ethiopia and the Philippines to Mexico, Jerusalem, Russia and beyond, journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson tells the stories of ten figures who altered the course of musical history, only to be sidelined and denied recognition during an era that systemically favoured certain sounds - and people - over others. A celebration of radical creativity rooted in ideas of protest, gender, race, ecology and resistance, Sound Within Sound is an energetic reappraisal of twentieth-century classical music that opens up the world far beyond its established centres, challenges stereotypical portrayals of the genre and shatters its traditional canon. 'Sound Within Sound is absolutely inspiring. Everyone who loves music should own this book.' CHARLOTTE HIGGINS 'Introduces us to thrilling dreamers from the last century who believed that music could fundamentally - and disruptively - recalibrate our lives . . . Molleson's enthusiastic style and eye for character and place give them life.' JUDE ROGERS, OBSERVER 'The vividness and passion of Molleson's portraits of these ten extraordinarily gifted, exasperating, headstrong individuals is wonderfully engaging.' DAILY TELEGRAPH

Kate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster and one of the UK's leading commentators on contemporary classical music. She presents BBC Radio 3's New Music Show and Music Matters, and her articles have been published in the Guardian, New Statesman, Prospect, The Herald, BBC Music Magazine and elsewhere. Having grown up in a sprawling musical family in Scotland and the far north of Canada, she studied clarinet performance at McGill University and musicology at King's College London. She lives in Edinburgh.
A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. 'Wonderful . . . This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. 'COSEY FANNI TUTTI'A marvellous book that opens our ears to sonic worlds that will enrich and delight us, whoever and wherever we are.'IAN McMILLAN'A clear-eyed, utterly fascinating exploration of outsiders in classical music. Molleson's excellent book challenges and enlightens.'SINEAD GLEESONThis is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of classical music in the twentieth century. Traversing the globe from Ethiopia and the Philippines to Mexico, Jerusalem, Russia and beyond, journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson tells the stories of ten figures who altered the course of musical history, only to be sidelined and denied recognition during an era that systemically favoured certain sounds - and people - over others. A celebration of radical creativity rooted in ideas of protest, gender, race, ecology and resistance, Sound Within Sound is an energetic reappraisal of twentieth-century classical music that opens up the world far beyond its established centres, challenges stereotypical portrayals of the genre and shatters its traditional canon. 'Sound Within Sound is absolutely inspiring. Everyone who loves music should own this book.'CHARLOTTE HIGGINS'Introduces us to thrilling dreamers from the last century who believed that music could fundamentally - and disruptively - recalibrate our lives . . . Molleson's enthusiastic style and eye for character and place give them life.'JUDE ROGERS, OBSERVER'The vividness and passion of Molleson's portraits of these ten extraordinarily gifted, exasperating, headstrong individuals is wonderfully engaging.'DAILY TELEGRAPH

Molleson is tremendous at describing music . . . And among these vivid musical details is an important political point: Molleson will not allow her book to be used as a weapon in the culture wars.

Wonderful . . . This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. It highlights the challenges of breaking free from the rigours of classical training to explore the potential and power of sound, and reveals new ways of thinking about and making 'music'.

An attempt to set the tanker of contemporary classical music on a slightly different course. It's a course aligned much more closely with the best new work of today . . . It's noticeable how how little overlap there is between this book and earlier guides to 20th-century music . . . Molleson's is a more intimate, personal, exploratory animal, digging up alternative futures . . . Generous, expansive, alarming, fantastic, perverse, humane, beautiful and ugly, provisional and incomplete: here finally is a portrait that reflects the messy contours of 20th century classical music.

Molleson is a passionate advocate for this more expansive definition of classical music and, as this important and engrossing book establishes, she is particularly engaged in extolling the work and telling the stories of the many composers from around the world whose music has been side-lined, undervalued and ommitted from the mainstream histories . . . this is not only an important book but an ear-opener, a revelation and a portal to another world.

The fierce music of Kate Molleson's prose demands that we think differently about the accepted classical music canon. Here is a marvellous book that opens our ears to sonic worlds that will enrich and delight us, whoever and wherever we are.

Molleson has the ability to present the difficult, the weird and strange with knowledge, insight an intelligence . . . vital and necessary . . . Molleson writes in a rich, clear, amiable style, making sense of each composer's music within the context of their biography and nationality and, so often illustrating how fear, prejudice and misogyny play a role in silencing, forgetting or overlooking them . . . as a primer on adventurous musical listening it takes some beating.

Many of the biographies prove quite fascinating reading in themselves and they are deftly interweaved with potted accounts of the historical and political contexts of the composer's country of origin . . . No matter how wide your musical knowledge is, there is bound to be something new for you in the book and Molleson's infectious enthusiasm is guaranteed to make you put the book aside and begin your own explorations of the exciting array of music that is out there waiting for a listener with open ears.

Masterful . . . a mind-expanding selection that challenges the reader to enlighten themselves.

The vividness and passion of Molleson's portraits of these ten extraordinarily gifted, exasperating, headstrong individuals is wonderfully engaging.

A clear-eyed, utterly fascinating exploration of outsiders in classical music. Molleson's excellent book challenges and enlightens.

It was early one morning at a hotel breakfast table in Hesse that I had the pivotal conversation with George E. Lewis. That sweltering summer of 2018 we were both teaching at the Darmstadt Summer Course, a biennial happening in provincial south-west Germany that started up after the Second World War and has become an improbable new-music Mecca. Lewis – an African-American composer, trombonist and intellectual powerhouse – was a generous and jovial presence around campus that year with his resplendent chuckle and inspirational lectures on decolonising the canon. (I was meanwhile attempting to teach a bunch of fierce-minded students how to write about new music. Their conclusion: grab the subject by both shoulders, use words with wit and abandon. They were wonderful.)

On the last morning of seminars, over rye bagels and coffee, I finally summoned the courage to ask Lewis’s advice about a notion I’d been mulling over for a while. ‘George,’ I ventured. ‘I’m thinking of writing some sort of new history of twentieth-century composers. I don’t mean the usual suspects. I mean composers who get left out. What do you reckon?’

Anyone who has been in Lewis’s company will recognise what came next. He nodded a breezy nod. The sort of nod that says: No big deal, what are you waiting for? ‘Sure,’ he said, taking a bite of his bagel. ‘Someone’s gotta write that book. It’s way overdue. You should do it.’ But! I argued against my own case. Isn’t the proposition too vague? Too vast? Too reductive? Too — ‘Why should it be?’ he shrugged. ‘Choose some interesting composers who don’t make it into the mainstream history books. Tell their stories. Prove that they were all doing amazing stuff. Prove that they existed. Make your readers want to hear their music. What’s reductive about that? Oh, it’s time.’ With that, he drained his coffee and left me to it.

‘Tell their stories.’

• • •

As a kid growing up in a cottage in rainy rural Scotland, I became obsessed with classical music. Who can say why, exactly, given five of my six brothers are folk musicians, but classical music is what caught my tiny ear. I fixated on the sounds emerging from the kitchen radio (ever tuned to BBC Radio 3) and from the family tape collection, which, alongside Bob Dylan and Planxty, included Mozart’s late symphonies, Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos and the thrillingly titled compilation The Greatest Hits of the 17th Century. Noticing how often I would fall asleep clutching my little Fisher-Price tape machine, Monteverdi madrigals playing on repeat, my parents bought me audio books about the lives of the ‘great composers’ for children. I inhaled those tales of Beethoven with his ear trumpets in Vienna, flame-haired Vivaldi on his gondola romps around Venice, Tchaikovsky heading off on steam trains to ‘discover America’. These became the legends that framed the music I loved. The music I still love.

That was the 1980s. As the years passed, I pursued the radical innovation of classical music into twentieth-century repertoire – and when I reached the margins of the mainstream and discovered the ear-altering sounds made there using everything from sirens to silence, something began to irk. Why were so many innovative figures missing from my history books? It kept happening. Throughout undergraduate and postgraduate music studies in Canada and the UK, as a newspaper music critic in my twenties, now as a presenter for BBC Radio 3 – why did the official narrative, the concert programmes, the festival line-ups, always revolve so narrowly around the same clutch of ‘core’ composers that I’d learned about in my kids’ stories? Why were they so exclusively white and so male, so European and so American? Where were all the others? Because there were plenty of others. There are.

Things have changed somewhat in the decade since I was a student. Even since that breakfast with George Lewis in 2018, mainstream conversations around race, gender, inclusion and the arts have shifted – to an extent. In the summer of 2020, the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent expansion of the Black Lives Matter movement forced the issue into the headlines. Questions were asked, publicly and forcefully, about how we tell our histories and who gets to tell them. Statues were pulled down, alternative road names nailed up. There was a backlash. The term ‘culture wars’ reared its mucky head in the tabloids and in the mouths of government ministers intent on profiteering from division. Oxford University was accused of an ‘attack of the woke’ after it announced plans to broaden its music curriculum to include more non-Western traditions. To be clear: Oxford was not planning to drop any core repertoire from its syllabus, merely to extend the scope a little. Which it has done, as far as I know jeopardising neither the well-being of students nor the future of classical music.

Here is a myth I keep coming up against. It is an odd and spurious fear that The Great Works – the Passions of Bach, the symphonies of Beethoven and Brahms, the earth-shaking ballets of Igor Stravinsky – are somehow threatened if classical music becomes more inclusive. Nobody is mooting that we should ditch Mozart or Mahler. Nobody is suggesting that their music doesn’t speak for our times and for all time. I would be the first to fight back if anyone did. So I wonder what fuels this pernicious insecurity that composers who are already in the fold will be devalued if border controls around the genre are relaxed. Societal parallels aren’t too hard to spot. It is the mentality of gate-keeping, of wall-building, of door-closing behind oneself.

The irony is that the opposite is true. Stagnation will be the death of any living art form. Defensiveness is what suffocates. The longevity of the whole classical music ecosystem depends on embracing the boldest and broadest sounds as much as breathing new life into beloved old ones. The score of a Beethoven symphony is a blueprint for revolution but performed in a vacuum its message is mute. Healthy musical culture depends on who’s playing, who’s listening, who’s genuinely impacted. The visionary director Graham Vick said that if opera has a place in the world, it must be of the world. He refused to watch the music he loved become ‘the guarded privilege of an ever-smaller section of British society’, so he took opera out of its hallowed spaces and got citizens of Birmingham singing Verdi. This was no tokenism. Disproving the false dichotomy between inclusion and excellence time and time again, Vick showed that opera can enrich every life, and in fact that the strength of the genre relies on it doing so.

Compensating for a lack of diversity in classical music of past eras is a genuine stumper. We cannot readily make up for the opportunities denied to nearly everyone except white men of previous centuries, though we must make darn sure we shout about the courageous composers who did manage to write music in spite of the odds. However: there is no excuse for ignoring the explosion of creative voices made possible by social changes around the globe after 1900. The composer Charles Seeger, husband of Ruth Crawford, admitted he had a ‘not-very-high’ opinion of female composers ‘based mostly upon the absence of mention of them in the histories of music’. Seeger wasn’t alone in his lazy assumption that if we don’t generally read about someone, or hear their music much in concerts, they probably aren’t good enough to be included. It’s a myth of absence that pervades much of the industry. More fool us. What ear-expanding sounds we’ve been missing.

I write this book out of love and anger. The love: because I want to shout from the rooftops that classical music is gripping, essential, personally and politically game-changing. The anger: because I can’t shout proudly about a culture that wilfully closes its doors on perceived outsiders. And it does. The Brazilian musicologist Paulo Costa Lima, who has been a great help in my research on Walter Smetak and Bahian composers of the 1960s, wrote this to me: ‘Is “neglect” a mere slip of our musicological machine, or’, he suggested, ‘is it the very essence and substance’ of how the classical music industry operates? Costa Lima pointed out that continuing to celebrate established ‘centres’ at the exclusion of ‘peripheries’ is a reaffirmation that the rest of the world ‘is not capable of producing valid propositions’. In other words, he perceives Western-centric musicology as ‘a colonialist enterprise renewed in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries’.

If classical music is serious about wanting change, it needs to reclaim its innate and vital sense of adventure. I mean adventurous listening as well as adventurous creating. The kind of listening that makes us vulnerable, that reawakens us, that ‘unmakes us, but steadies us again’, in the words of the modernist writer Nan Shepherd, who roamed the Cairngorms her whole life in search of surprise. If we want to embrace a genuine range of life experiences, we’ll need to stop prescribing and start embracing a genuine range of sound. Various orchestras...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 5.7.2022
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Klassik / Oper / Musical
Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Pop / Rock
Schlagworte Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise, Music A Subversie History, Ted Gioia, Monolithic Undertow, Harry Sword, Foghorn's Lament, Jennifer Lucy Allan • Annea Lockwood, Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou, Eliane Radigue, Galina Ustvolskaya, Julian Carrillo, Jose Maceda, Walter Smetak, Else Marie Pade, Muhal Richards Abrams • Classical music, music books, global music, experimental music, alternative history • Ninth Street Women, Mary Gabriel, Square Haunting, Francesca Wade, Circles and Squares, Caroline Maclean, Metaphysical Animals, Clare Mac Cumhaill, Romantic Moderns, Alexandra Harris • Pitchfork, Gramophone, Opera, BBC Music Magazine, NPR • Proms, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, New Music Show, Music Matters, Sticky Notes, Crashing Classical, The Gramophone Podcast • Tom Service, The Listening Service, Stephen Hough, Rough Ideas, Music for Life, Fiona Maddocks, The Importance of Music for Girls, Lavinia Greenlaw
ISBN-10 0-571-36324-5 / 0571363245
ISBN-13 978-0-571-36324-7 / 9780571363247
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