What might a feminist history of music look like?

Similar documents
Date: Wednesday, 17 December :00AM

In western culture men have dominated the music profession particularly as musicians.

Part IV. The Classical Period ( ) McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Gender and music: can we hear a difference between female and male composers and performers?

Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide

MUSIC GRADE 5 TERM 2

Musicians, Singers, and Related Workers

Classical Time Period

The Classical Period-Notes

MOZART, THE COMPOSER Lesson Plans

Symphony No. 101 The Clock movements 2 & 3

Music (MUSC) MUSC 114. University Summer Band. 1 Credit. MUSC 115. University Chorus. 1 Credit.

Instruments can often be played at great length with little consideration for tiring.

Franz Joseph Hayden ( ) Classical Era Composer

Chapter 13. Key Terms. The Symphony. II Slow Movement. I Opening Movement. Movements of the Symphony. The Symphony

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

MUSIC FOR THE PIANO SESSION FOUR: THE PIANO IN VICTORIAN SOCIETY,

COURSE OUTLINE MUS103

Requirements for the aptitude tests at the Folkwang University of the Arts

Course Descriptions Music MUSC

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

GREAT STRING QUARTETS

Saskatoon Music Festival 2018 Supplementary Classes to the Provincial Syllabus

STRATEGY. notes. Talent is a special and precious gift given to people. It is up to the holder of the talent to put it to good use.

DOWNLOAD OR READ : MOZART 21 OF HIS MOST POPULAR PIECES FOR THE PIANO INCLUDING ORIGINAL PIANO WORKS AND TRANSCRIPTION PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Choral Music

Course Descriptions Music

The Netherlands Institute for Social Research (2016), Sport and Culture patterns in interest and participation

Women in Brass: re-examining gendered involvement in music, a preliminary report in to Musical Preference Stereotypes

Haydn: Symphony No. 97 in C major, Hob. I:97. the Esterhazy court. This meant that the wonderful composer was stuck in one area for a large

ARCHITECTURE AND EDUCATION: THE QUESTION OF EXPERTISE AND THE CHALLENGE OF ART

Chapter 13. The Symphony

Preface: People have created music for centuries, but it wasn t until the fourteenth century that music began to be notated, or written down.

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

Capturing the Mainstream: Subject-Based Approval

SENTENCE WRITING FROM DESCRIPTION TO INTERPRETATION TO ANALYSIS TO SYNTHESIS. From Cambridge Checkpoints HSC English by Dixon and Simpson, p.8.

Chapter 17: Enlightenment Thinkers. Popular Sovereignty: The belief that all government power comes from the people.

Community Choirs in Australia

An Interview with Kirby Shaw ACDA Choral Journal Vol. 45, Issue 7

Gender and genre in sports documentaries: critical essays, edited by Zachary Ingle

Joint Steering Committee for Revision of RDA

Historical/Biographical

Music in the Baroque Period ( )

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

The value of music and the value of silence Agustín Castilla-Ávila

A New Approach: The Feminist Musicology Studies of Susan McClary and Marcia J. Citron

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

2011 New Brunswick Provincial Music Festival Finals Syllabus

Franz Joseph Haydn. Born in Rohrau, Austria in 1732 (the same year as George Washington) Died in Vienna, Austria in 1809

Bas C. van Fraassen, Scientific Representation: Paradoxes of Perspective, Oxford University Press, 2008.

Audio Metering Measurements, Standards, and Practice (2 nd Edition) Eddy Bøgh Brixen

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1. MUS 108H. *MUSIC CULTURES OF THE WORLD. (3 Credits)

Axel Theimer Interviewed by Peter Myers at Golden Valley Lutheran Church, April 27, 2008

Philadelphia Theodore Presser Co Chestnut Str. Copyright, 1915, by Theodore Presser Co. Printed in the U.S.A. Page 2

SCHEME OF WORK College Aims. Curriculum Aims and Objectives. Assessment Objectives

Musical Vienna in A LIFE Institute Course Fall 2018 Bob Fabian LIFEcourses.ca

MUSIC (MUSI) MUSI 1200 MUSI 1133 MUSI 3653 MUSI MUSI 1103 (formerly MUSI 1013)

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name

FINE ARTS Institutional (ILO), Program (PLO), and Course (SLO) Alignment

Date: Wednesday, 8 October :00AM

Transactional Theory in the Teaching of Literature. ERIC Digest.

Beethoven was known for his emotions, both in life and in his music. This is one of the qualities that sets his music apart from his predecessors.

The Music Education System and Organisational Structure

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS - COMPOSITION

Mu 101: Introduction to Music

I ve been involved in music all my adult life. I didn t plan it that way,

This is the fifth year for Diocesan-wide Music assessments on the Elementary level so most should be familiar with the process.

New Course MUSIC AND MADNESS

New Course MUSIC AND MADNESS

*SOME SOURCES FOR RESEARCH ON MUSIC AND DANCE AVAILABLE AT THE MESA COLLEGE LIBRARY*

Genre theory and the early nineteenth century

An Die Musik (To Music) - Keyboard Sheet Music By Franz Coleman Henry Schubert READ ONLINE

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS MUSIC THEORY

MUSIC-PERFORMANCE (MUSP)

2014 Music. National 5. Finalised Marking Instructions

Agreed key principles, observation questions and Ofsted grade descriptors for formal learning

Guidelines for Repertoire Selection

2019 GRADUATE AUDITION, INTERVIEW & PORTFOLIO GUIDELINES

FORWARD. Publisher, James Schoepflin, Department of Music, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington

MUSIC Hobbs Municipal Schools 6th Grade

RE: ELECTIVE REQUIREMENT FOR THE BA IN MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY/HTCC)

Piano Concerto In E-flat Major, WoO 4 (Recent Researches In The Music Of The Classical Era)

THE ALBERTA MUSIC FESTIVAL ASSOCIATION 2015 Syllabus Like AMFA on Facebook

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University

How is Wit Defined and Portrayed in Aphra Behn s The Rover? C.S. Lewis believed Rational creatures are those to whom God has given wit (qtd.

Florida Performing Fine Arts Assessment Item Specifications _Intermediate_Elementary_1_Responding

Factual Drama. Guidance Note. Status of Guidance Note. Key Editorial Standards. Mandatory referrals. Issued: 11 April 2011

Prodigy: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Michael Haydn Born in Austria, Michael Haydn was the baby brother of the very famous composer Joseph Papa Haydn. With the loving support of

2014 Music Style and Composition GA 3: Aural and written examination

City, University of London Institutional Repository

A didactic unit about women and cinema

Running Head: FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE: A STUDY OF RUSSIAN TRUMPET 1

Great Choral Classics

Music (MUS) Courses. Music (MUS) 1

Music Appreciation Spring 2005 Music Test: Music, An Appreciation, Fourth Brief Edition by Roger Kamien (with CD s)

Music. Program Level Student Learning Outcomes

Bach s Profound Influence Module 10 of Music: Under the Hood

Graduate Certificate: Professional Studies

Transcription:

What might a feminist history of music look like? July 1763. Two child prodigies are setting out on a tour of Europe which will shape both their lives. One will come to be seen as possibly the greatest composer of all time. The other, aged just 18, will be forced to surrender a life of music and return home to take a domestic role. The key difference between them? Unlike Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Maria Anna Mozart was female. The story of Mozart s sister encapsulates many of the reasons why men dominate music history. Her musical career was made possible by men, but also defined and limited and ultimately curtailed by them. In most cultures, in most times, women have had roles in music, but subsequent generations of (mostly male) historians have typically ignored or forgotten them, reinforcing the marginalisation that many experienced in their lifetimes. It is this that creates the need to ask what a feminist history of music could be. This essay is a collection of notes towards what a feminist history of music might look like, and how we could create one. It focuses on the Western Classical tradition, which is perhaps the best documented of any, but many of its suggestions could be applied to any musical culture. We cannot know what a feminist history of music might look like without first understanding our aims in creating it. Every school of feminism, and indeed every feminist, could have different opinions on what these aims should be, and in some ways the advocacy of one correct approach to history is an inherently antifeminist stance: a monolithic approach which excludes those who do not conform to its idea of proper history. Feminism covers such a broad spectrum of thought that the creation of aims that all feminists could agree on would make the argument so general as to render it meaningless. The aims I set out below are not the aims of all feminists; they are simply one possible set. The first edition of Gender and History stated its aim as to examine all historical social relations from a feminist perspective, to construct a comprehensive analysis of all institutions that takes their gender-specific characters into account [and to] illuminate the ways in which societies have been shaped by the relations of power between women and men. 1 Adapting these ambitions to apply to music history, we can create the following objectives: 1. Re-examine conventional music history from a feminist perspective and propose solutions for any inadequacies. 2. Look at how certain roles in music have become associated with one gender. 1 Gender and History, Volume 1, Issue 1, March 1989 1

3. Question how male influence has affected female musicians (both positively and negatively). What is music history? Dahlhaus sums up the conventional view: music history is made up primarily, if not exclusively, of significant works of music. 2 We select these significant works because they stand out from those around them. In the words of Nicholas Cook, a value system is in place within our culture [ ] which places innovation above tradition, creation above reproduction, expression above the market-place. 3 Ironically, this means that what we think of as the mainstream in music history is largely made up of composers who were exceptions. And returning to our first objective (looking at conventional music history from a feminist perspective), we can see that this exposes a problem. The composers that we see as innovative, and thus rank highly, are overwhelmingly male. This raises a question: what are the prerequisites for innovation, and why have women lacked them? Innovation is inherently assertive, and female assertiveness has been widely discouraged throughout history. Innovation could even be described as organised, well-resourced assertiveness and female composers have typically not had access to the musical material, social support and personal resources necessary for this. Furthermore, many have faced a permanent crisis of confidence. Even if no one was specifically making them lose confidence in their abilities as individuals, enough criticisms were aimed at female composers as a category to increase their artistic insecurity and therefore reduce their power to innovate. A case study of this insecurity is Germaine Tailleferre. Robert Orledge writes that her continual financial problems led her to compose mostly to commission, resulting in many uneven and quickly written works. Also, her natural modesty and unjustified sense of artistic insecurity prevented her from promoting herself properly. 4 The phrase natural modesty is revealing the words are rarely applied to male musicians. Many societies have required female modesty, but modesty is dangerous in a profession as competitive as composition. Female composers like Tailleferre were caught in a two-way trap: if they promoted their own work they were unfeminine, so their music should not be played, but if they didn t, their music was not played anyway. This Catch-22, in which femininity was regarded as trivial but masculine characteristics were seen as undesirable in female composers is further exemplified by the reception of works by Cécile Chaminade, whose work was 2 Dahlhaus, Foundations of Music History, p3 3 Cook, Music: A Very Short Introduction, p14 4 http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo- 9781561592630-e-0000027390 2

simultaneously criticised for being too virile and for having a certain feminine daintiness and grace, but [being] amazingly superficial and wanting in variety. 5 Beyond examining its causes, how can a feminist history address the lack of female innovators? One approach would be to re-examine the value system that exalts innovation. We might dream of a history that included every musical event that ever occurred (and perhaps even many that didn t). But in the real world, history is a process of selection. Our feminist history of music should aim to alter this selection process so that women are included. One way to do this would be to consider works according to the musical impact they had when they were written. So, for instance, we could include both the songs of Maude White 6 and Beethoven s symphonies, because they both affected the musical lives of the many people who came into contact with them. This might be a similar approach to New Historicism, focusing on historical significance instead of perceived artistic significance. But it would also need to consider the mechanisms through which Beethoven s works continued to be popular in fact, increased in popularity after his death, like those of most other great composers, while those of women composers, less promoted by performers and publishers, fell from favour. One factor in this may be the restrictions in the musical education that was historically available to women. Their access to lessons in harmony and counterpoint, for example, was often limited. So much music written by female composers was often not very developed, and was therefore seen as more ephemeral. How could a feminist history of music address this? We could write about female composers alone, without making value judgements on their works. This would be a history of women writing music, but would it be a feminist history of music? Not really. With little sense of artistic progression or cultural continuity, it would be more like an album of social vignettes. There is a tradition of separatist histories and dictionaries of women in music, dating at least as far back as 1888. 7 But biographical dictionaries fall outside the scope of this essay, and a separatist history of music, although useful to highlight the contributions of female musicians, is ultimately Hamlet without the prince. How else could a feminist history compensate for the fact that, in most cases, the education available to men (like much else available to men) was significantly better than that available to women? I don t think it could. Although we can address exclusion from history, we are powerless to 5 Citron, Gender and the Musical Canon, pp186-187 6 Fuller, The Pandora Guide to Women Composers, p330 7 http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo- 9781561592630-e-0000052554 3

correct historical exclusions. A feminist history must accept the gaps left by female composers who never realised their full potential. It should be self-reflexive, examining the reasons for and distribution of these lacunae instead of trying to fill them. In one sense, the injustice is the history. Another approach (addressing our first objective) could be a form of feminist critical theory, analogous to feminist literary criticism. One problem would be that music tends towards the abstract, making it difficult, if not impossible, to find something in the music itself which tells us about a composer s (possibly subconscious) views on gender. But there may be other ways to scrutinise instrumental music from a feminist perspective. For example, people have, throughout history, used gendered terms to describe music. In one example among many, WSB Mathews, in 1891, wrote that Chopin is a woman s composer [ ] he is exactly opposite to Schumann and Beethoven, whose works, however delicate and refined, have always a manly strength. 8 A feminist history could consider how such gendered musical language reflects broader gender relations. One way in which composers have specifically used gendered terms in instrumental music is in sonata form, where the first subject used to be called masculine and the second feminine. As Citron notes in Gender and the Musical Canon, it is ironic that the typical key of the first appearance of the feminine theme, at least in major key movements, is called the dominant, for in the end the dominant is subordinate. 9 This is self-evidently true; however, before reading too much into it, we might be wise to question whether composers were genuinely thinking in such gendered terms when they wrote in sonata form. Certainly some were - Citron cites D Indy and Riemann 10 - but showing this requires an external source. Charles Rosen suggests that the masculine-feminine distinction amounts to nothing more than the fact that the very opening of a sonata is often more direct and forthright. 11 Regardless of which view you take, it is clear that by attempting to study gender relations in instrumental pieces, we risk learning more about ourselves than about the music. Feminist criticism might be applied more fruitfully to vocal music. Leaving aside children and castrati, vocal music is unique because the sex of the performer is immediately apparent to the listener. It would be interesting to analyse how composers used male and female voices in lieder: what words did they choose to set and how did they set them? Unfortunately, very often a voice type is not specified, so it isn t possible to tell if the composer is writing from a male or female perspective. However, a feminist history of music could look at which songs have been adopted by male and female singers, and use this to explore shifting gender relations. 8 Mathews, A Popular History of the Art of Music: From the Earliest Times Until the Present 9 Citron, Gender and the Musical Canon, p139 10 Ibid, pp135-136 11 Rosen, The Classical Style: Haydn, Beethoven, Mozart, p81 4

Obviously voice type is clearer in opera, and Citron makes interesting comments on how operatic musical devices (disjunct leaps and jagged rhythms) can represent heroism when sung by a man but hysteria when sung by a woman. 12 A feminist history of music might examine the variety of ways in which men and women are characterised in opera and how this characterisation relates to wider social attitudes. Opera s need to include women for musical, not social, reasons raises another area which a feminist history of music could address. Female opera singers formed a community which, by definition, did not compete with the equivalent male community. And music history includes a number of allfemale communities, from the religious (literal) communities such as Hildegard of Bingen s and the Venetian ospedali, to examples from more recent history such as the Woman s Symphony Orchestra of Chicago and Zohra, an all-female orchestra from Afghanistan. Such communities show that women with a greater degree of autonomy, in situations where they have not been required to compete with (or compromise for) men, have achieved innovation and high musical standards. A crucial question is why women in these communities were often so much more successful than those outside. We might speculate that musical women have been able to behave in ways considered more masculine when not constrained by the presence of men. Perhaps we can find another clue in the story of a great male musician, Haydn. Reflecting on his many provincial years with the Esterházy court, Haydn said: I could make experiments [ ] I was isolated from the world; no one in my vicinity could make me lose confidence in myself or bother me, and so I had to become original. 13 He meant, of course, that he was isolated along with a choir, an orchestra and two opera houses. Perhaps female musicians fortunate enough to be isolated in similar ways have enjoyed advantages that their counterparts, suffering from more conventional sorts of personal musical isolation in society, have lacked. A feminist history of music could examine these isolated communities and their causes and effects (both positive and negative). Another area of interest, in terms of our second objective, will be women s history as performers. While there have been professional female musicians since the sixteenth century, their scope has frequently been restricted by social prejudice and convention. In Regency England, for example, playing the piano (or to a lesser extent the harp) was a social accomplishment for a young lady, rather than a career. It is interesting to note the choice of instrument; a piano or a harp is part of the furniture and so part of the domestic fabric in a way that, say, a violin is not. (The author of The Girl s Own Indoor Book, looking back from the 1880s, recalled that she had in former days known 12 Citron, Gender and the Musical Canon, p73 13 Sisman, Haydn and his World, p3 5

girls of whom it was darkly hinted that they played the violin, as it might be said that they smoked big cigars, or enjoyed the sport of rat-catching. 14 ) This does not mean that there were no female woodwind, brass or bowed string players just that the few women who did play tended to be from musical or theatrical backgrounds. It wasn t something a respectable girl could do. A feminist history of music might explore what made different instruments suitable for different women at different times in history. It might also try to illuminate some of the amateur music making done by women particularly of chamber music (whose name emphasises its domestic associations) and vocal and choral music. In conclusion, there cannot be just one feminist history of music. A variety of approaches is required, and not all of them will be appropriate to all places and times. Fluidity, self-reflection and creativity are also needed. A feminist history of music cannot believe in its own infallibility or universality. It will not just know its own limits, it will be about its own limits. A feminist history of music is one in which we can hear, however softly, Maria Anna Mozart playing the fortepiano for her own amusement in Salzburg, writing the pieces we know she wrote but which are now probably forever lost. Word Count: 2497 14 https://songofthelarkblog.com/2011/11/25/ 6

Bibliography Beer, Anna, Sounds and Sweet Airs: The Forgotten Women of Classical Music, Oneworld, London, 2016 Bowers, Jane and Judith Tick, eds. Women Making Music: The Western Art Tradition, 1150-1950, University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago, 1986 Citron, Marcia, Gender and the Musical Canon, University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago, 1993 Cook, Nicholas, Music: a Very Short Introduction, OUP, Oxford, 1998 Dahlhaus, Carl (translated JD Robinson), Foundations of Music History, CUP, Cambridge, 1983 Eagleton, Mary, ed., Feminist Literary Criticism, Longman, London, 1991 Fuller, Sophie, The Pandora Guide to Women Composers: Britain and the United States 1629-Present, Pandora, London, 1994 Mathews, William Smythe Babcock, A Popular History of the Art of Music: From the Earliest Times Until the Present, "Music" Magazine Publishing Company, Chicago, 1891 Pendle, Karin, ed., Women and Music: A History, 2 nd edition, Indiana University Press, 2001 Rosen, Charles, The Classical Style: Haydn, Beethoven, Mozart, Faber and Faber, London, 1971 Sisman, Elaine, Haydn and His World, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1997 Gender and History, Volume 1 Issue 1, March 1989 www.anim-music.org www.oxfordmusiconline.com www.songofthelarkblog.com www.zohra-music.org 7