Programme And Module Handbook
 
Course Details in 2024/25 Session


If you find any data displayed on this website that should be amended, please contact the Curriculum Management Team.

Module Title LI Landscape, Counterpoint and Morality: The British Symphony, 1880–1960
SchoolLan, Cult, Art Hist & Music
Department Music
Module Code 10 28181
Module Lead Ben Earle
Level Intermediate Level
Credits 20
Semester Semester 1
Pre-requisites
Co-requisites
Restrictions None
Contact Hours Seminar-20 hours
Guided independent study-180 hours
Total: 200 hours
Exclusions
Description Between the last two decades of the nineteenth century and the 1960s, it is hard to find a major British composer who did not produce at least one composition in symphonic form. Many wrote ‘cycles’: those of Stanford, Parry, Vaughan Williams, Bax, Rubbra, Tippett, Arnold and Simpson are only the most familiar. Such a prolific production of symphonies, which reached a peak of intensity between 1935 and 1960, cannot be observed in other Western European countries of the period, though parallels can be found in the USA and Soviet Russia. In these latter cases, as in the British, an emphasis on symphonic production reflects convictions about the public role of music in both the shaping of national identity and the cultivation of social attitudes. British music of the first half of the twentieth century is often regarded as preoccupied above all with evocations of landscape. In this module we shall explore how British composers also employed symphonic form to engage pressing issues of the day (especially those arising from two World Wars), typically promoting a mood of collective moral engagement by means of strenuous contrapuntal argument.
Learning Outcomes By the end of the module students should be able to:
  • Recognize the essential stylistic features of British symphonic composition as it develops over a period of 80 years
  • Demonstrate an understanding of how ‘purely musical’ compositions may be understood to engage with ‘extra-musical’ concerns, such as national identity, important historical events, landscape and morality
  • Discuss specific compositions in detail in relation both to ‘purely musical’ and ‘extra-musical’ concerns and to their interrelations
Assessment 28181-01 : Essay 1 : Coursework (50%)
28181-02 : Essay 2 : Coursework (50%)
Assessment Methods & Exceptions Assessment:
Two essays (2500 words, 50% each).

Reassessment:
Re-submit failed component
Other
Reading List