Broadcasting was one of the principal means by which the affective, social, and political meanings of Armistice Day were constituted in British culture, and music programming was crucial to that process. In the years leading up to its nationalization in 1927, the BBC was inventing itself; and its varying approaches to the selection and scheduling of specific musical repertoire for 11 November over that period have much to tell us about changing responses to the Great War, as well as conflicting notions of national identity, modernity, and tradition. Building on recent historical and musicological scholarship, this article examines the basis of Armistice Day programming decisions at the BBC; reconstructs the internal dialogue surrounding spe...
Sounds and silences are an integral to the history and memory of the First World War. The aural land...
International audienceVictorian music hall has been much studied, Edwardian music hall much less, an...
This thesis investigates the way that music was commissioned for the BBC Proms between 1960 and 1985...
Broadcasting was one of the principal means by which the affective, social, and political meanings o...
This article, the first of a pair covering the interwar years, examines developments in music progra...
This article makes the case for incorporating music into the history of war commemoration in 1920s B...
The First World War and the industrialization of the era changed the world drastically, and much of ...
Commissioned, peer-reviewed contribution to the first American volume of Elgar essays, arising from ...
Carols floating across no-man's-land on Christmas Eve 1914; solemn choruses, marches, and popular so...
The use of classical music as a tool of propaganda in Britain during the War can be seen to have bee...
Part of the Performance-as-Commemoration project, this practice-as-research performance took place o...
This monograph examines the relationship between music and memory as it relates to the Gallipoli Cam...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In the wake of the First Wor...
This essay attempts to re-assess the early history of British broadcasting by drawing attention to t...
British television programmes about 1914–18 are generally produced, broadcast and received as memori...
Sounds and silences are an integral to the history and memory of the First World War. The aural land...
International audienceVictorian music hall has been much studied, Edwardian music hall much less, an...
This thesis investigates the way that music was commissioned for the BBC Proms between 1960 and 1985...
Broadcasting was one of the principal means by which the affective, social, and political meanings o...
This article, the first of a pair covering the interwar years, examines developments in music progra...
This article makes the case for incorporating music into the history of war commemoration in 1920s B...
The First World War and the industrialization of the era changed the world drastically, and much of ...
Commissioned, peer-reviewed contribution to the first American volume of Elgar essays, arising from ...
Carols floating across no-man's-land on Christmas Eve 1914; solemn choruses, marches, and popular so...
The use of classical music as a tool of propaganda in Britain during the War can be seen to have bee...
Part of the Performance-as-Commemoration project, this practice-as-research performance took place o...
This monograph examines the relationship between music and memory as it relates to the Gallipoli Cam...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In the wake of the First Wor...
This essay attempts to re-assess the early history of British broadcasting by drawing attention to t...
British television programmes about 1914–18 are generally produced, broadcast and received as memori...
Sounds and silences are an integral to the history and memory of the First World War. The aural land...
International audienceVictorian music hall has been much studied, Edwardian music hall much less, an...
This thesis investigates the way that music was commissioned for the BBC Proms between 1960 and 1985...