Dear Lutenetters,

 

Maybe a bit OT, but I think probably of interest to most of us here is a new
book by the Oboist Bruce Haynes called "The End of Early Music".

I have just finally just got round to having a look at it and it is a
fascinating read particularly being published 20 years after Nicolas
Kenyon's "Authenticity and Early Music". 

 

Here is a review from Opera Today.com that gives a good idea of what it is
about.

 

http://www.operatoday.com/content/2007/10/haynes_the_end.php

 

"Once upon a time, there was something known as
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_music> early music. This was not so much
a repertoire, a musico-historical epoch, as an attitude, a counter-cultural
group. There was classical music, the boring old standard-repertoire taught
at conservatories, and played in the same old way by people who fetishized
the lineage of their teachers, and their teacher's teachers, and then there
was early music, the music of Bach and his predecessors, played by amateur
performers (often musicologists) on "old" instruments (recorder,
harpsichords, viola da gamba), something which fit right in with the
reclaiming of folk music and folk instruments by the hippie resistance to
manufactured mass culture. At the same time Albert Ayler and John Coltrane
were exploring the outer limits of free jazz, and Jefferson Airplane
combining psychedelics and folk-rock, amateur ensembles with krummhorns,
sackbuts, shawms, and other dead instruments were reviving centuries of
forgotten repertoire from Machaut onwards. Early music managed to be cutting
edge by going deep into music which had been only of interest to historians,
and transgressive by suggesting that this music and the music which followed
did not belong only to its self-anointed priesthood, which seemed to be only
mumbling half-understood inherited formulas, with no sense of the enlivening
spirit within.

            Time passes, and nothing from 1967 seems very current anymore,
with the possible exception of Purple Haze
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple_Haze> . The amateur (and hippie) tinge
to early music was washed away by decades of musicians who managed to
perform early music professionally on period instruments, and with an
historical awareness of the performance issues involved. Their success drew
the barbed words of musicologist Richard
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Taruskin> Taruskin, himself once an
amateur performing-musicologist, pointing out the lack of authenticity
involved in this recuperation of both unknown and well-known repertoire. The
End of Early Music may be seen as a response to the criticisms of Taruskin
and others.

            Oboist Bruce Haynes is one who has been involved with
historically-informed performance for decades, since the first successes of
four or five decades ago, and unlike the younger Taruskin, whose recordings
are safely entombed on LP in music libraries, his recordings are still
commercially available. His survey of the history and issues involved with
period performance is compulsively readable. Though the volume has the
standard scholarly apparatus of notes and bibliography, there is nothing of
the dry-as-dust scholarly compendium about it. An innovation which is
particularly useful is the provision of sound examples at the publisher's
site, even if means that the book can be best used with your network-enabled
computer close at hand. 

            The notion that concert-going has become a secular ritual
substituting for more explicitly religious rites has become widely accepted,
but Haynes goes farther in looking at the amount of fetishism and ritual
involved in musical interpretation and consumption in general, disassembling
the various fetishes we take for granted as part of musical experiences -
the notion of the canon, of absolute music, of genius, of score-fidelity,
and others. Evidently I sympathize with Haynes' position, but even so I
think it must be clear to any reader that he has done his work well."

 

All the best

Mark

 

 


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