The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons

In eighteenth-century England, the art-forms of painting, poetry and gardening were often collectively labelled, the ‘sister arts’. The increasing interest taken in the apprehension and appraisal of scenes of English landscape by artists in these fields, alongside an emerging taste for nature ‘touri...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Groves, Stephen
Other Authors: Clery, Emma
Published: University of Southampton 2011
Subjects:
782
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560801
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-560801
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5608012018-09-05T03:28:01ZThe sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The SeasonsGroves, StephenClery, Emma2011In eighteenth-century England, the art-forms of painting, poetry and gardening were often collectively labelled, the ‘sister arts’. The increasing interest taken in the apprehension and appraisal of scenes of English landscape by artists in these fields, alongside an emerging taste for nature ‘tourism’, gave rise to the term, the ‘picturesque movement’. English music was seldom considered as belonging to this ‘sisterhood’ or discussed as a medium for conveying artistic expressions of national scenic beauty. When the picturesque was discussed alongside music it was adopted as an analogy to explain the tactics of novelty and surprise deployed by contemporaneous German composers of instrumental music; these ‘plays’ with regularity and expectation were felt to be similar to the techniques of landscape gardeners who had studied and adopted the elements of surprise and irregularity observed in picturesque ‘beauty spots’. Recent musicological references to the picturesque have also preferred to employ it in this way in order to problematize the subversion of formal characteristics in the fantasias and unconventional symphonies by German composers. This thesis addresses the silent aporia in these discourses – namely the apparent absence of any participation in the picturesque by English composers, natives of the country most associated with the picturesque sensibility. Revealing the connections between the veneration of national landscape and eighteenth-century English vocal music, it is the ‘pictorialisms’ present in their texts, and their musical treatment, which are the focus of this project. In the process, secular song, the glee and national theatre music are positioned as appropriate sites for expressions of a uniquely English, painterly engagement with national landscapes, making possible reclamation of a neglected repertoire through the lens of the picturesque. And at the end of the project, Haydn’s oratorio, The Seasons, is shown to be as much a part of the English picturesque expression as a product of the German Enlightenment.782M MusicUniversity of Southamptonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560801https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/367391/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 782
M Music
spellingShingle 782
M Music
Groves, Stephen
The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
description In eighteenth-century England, the art-forms of painting, poetry and gardening were often collectively labelled, the ‘sister arts’. The increasing interest taken in the apprehension and appraisal of scenes of English landscape by artists in these fields, alongside an emerging taste for nature ‘tourism’, gave rise to the term, the ‘picturesque movement’. English music was seldom considered as belonging to this ‘sisterhood’ or discussed as a medium for conveying artistic expressions of national scenic beauty. When the picturesque was discussed alongside music it was adopted as an analogy to explain the tactics of novelty and surprise deployed by contemporaneous German composers of instrumental music; these ‘plays’ with regularity and expectation were felt to be similar to the techniques of landscape gardeners who had studied and adopted the elements of surprise and irregularity observed in picturesque ‘beauty spots’. Recent musicological references to the picturesque have also preferred to employ it in this way in order to problematize the subversion of formal characteristics in the fantasias and unconventional symphonies by German composers. This thesis addresses the silent aporia in these discourses – namely the apparent absence of any participation in the picturesque by English composers, natives of the country most associated with the picturesque sensibility. Revealing the connections between the veneration of national landscape and eighteenth-century English vocal music, it is the ‘pictorialisms’ present in their texts, and their musical treatment, which are the focus of this project. In the process, secular song, the glee and national theatre music are positioned as appropriate sites for expressions of a uniquely English, painterly engagement with national landscapes, making possible reclamation of a neglected repertoire through the lens of the picturesque. And at the end of the project, Haydn’s oratorio, The Seasons, is shown to be as much a part of the English picturesque expression as a product of the German Enlightenment.
author2 Clery, Emma
author_facet Clery, Emma
Groves, Stephen
author Groves, Stephen
author_sort Groves, Stephen
title The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
title_short The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
title_full The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
title_fullStr The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
title_full_unstemmed The sound of the English picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and Haydn's The Seasons
title_sort sound of the english picturesque in the late eighteenth century : native vocal music and haydn's the seasons
publisher University of Southampton
publishDate 2011
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560801
work_keys_str_mv AT grovesstephen thesoundoftheenglishpicturesqueinthelateeighteenthcenturynativevocalmusicandhaydnstheseasons
AT grovesstephen soundoftheenglishpicturesqueinthelateeighteenthcenturynativevocalmusicandhaydnstheseasons
_version_ 1718729549939736576