Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

‘Where should this music be?’: Cataloguing Shakespeare Music’

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    Cataloguing Shakespearean Music

    Abstract: This article analyses the main collections centred on Shakespearean music published in the nineteenth century with a view to determining the underlying cultural processes that led to their creation. Largely through the frequent revivals of the plays, by the early nineteenth there developed a significant number of settings of the songs, several of which held the stage since the early eighteenth century. William Linley was first to anthologise the plays songs thus presenting them as a coherent body deserving of prominence in the cultural imagination. By the end of the century the repertoire had become vast enough to warrant catalogues of musical references and musical settings. This article argues that this emergence of “Shakespearean songs” as a whole was an expression of cultural nationalism, in which the idea of Shakespeare as inherently musical dramatist filled the cultural void created by the perceived failure of English music.
    This essay discusses nineteenth-century collections of and on ‘Shakespearean music’: how they relate to bardolatory, the formation of a quasi-canonic repertoire, and the shift from antiquarian concerns to the beginnings of modern scholarship into Shakespearean music.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationThe Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Music
    EditorsChristopher R. Wilson, Mervyn Cooke
    Place of PublicationOxford
    PublisherOxford: OUP
    Chapter1
    Pages33–74
    Number of pages41
    ISBN (Print)9780190945145
    Publication statusPublished - May 2022

    Keywords

    • Shakespeare
    • Shakespeare and music
    • Shakespeare Reception

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of '‘Where should this music be?’: Cataloguing Shakespeare Music’'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this