Posts Tagged Women

The Classical Music Listicle

The Classical Music Listicle

I’m so deeply disappointed in this article series by the Guardian that I don’t even know where to begin. How could they possibly think that, right in the midst of Black Lives Matter, and at a time when many living musicians are having to sell their instruments to survive because there is so little support for artists during covid, that a series featuring the music of 14 dead white male composers, and 0 composers who are non-white, non-male, and/or non-dead, is exactly what people need? When I wrote to express my disappointment with the content of the series, I was told that it had to be all dead white men because it was a series aimed at beginners, and not at a musicologist such as myself. I am not actually a musicologist, but I do write for academic and non-academic contexts, and I know that it’s no harder to write an introductory article about Clara Schumann than it is about Robert (and indeed, no harder to write a specialist article about Robert than it is about Clara). I love many – most, even – of the composers included in the canon, but I can’t believe that there are still people out there who think there’s anything immutable, timeless, or objective about which composers are included. Lists of the “most influential” or “best known” XYZ are never simply neutral accounts of historical fact. They reflect which information has been preserved and which has been forgotten, as well as whatever lens the list-maker sees history through (and this lens is very likely to be affected by both historical and contemporary biases and prejudices). Even more dangerously, they help determine who is going to continue to be “most influential” or “best known” XYZ in the future (whether or not this is the list-maker’s intent). I’m not against making lists: they can be helpful for developing shared bodies of knowledge for enjoyment or discussion, and they can be fun! But from now on I’m going to refer to the Classical Music™ canon as the Classical Music Listicle, as a reminder that any list of the most important, best, and/or best-known composers is inherently subjective, context-dependent, and a bit silly.

 

Musings on the Pultizer

Musings on the Pultizer

I have no great attachment to the Pulitzer Prize being for “classical music,” so if Kendrick Lamar’s DAMN is a great album, then fantastic that it won! I haven’t heard it yet, but I’m looking forward to listening! The thing I wrestle with is that so often becoming more inclusive gets equated with including new genres — while still leaving out the women, people of colour, and other marginalized people whose works have been overlooked in the original genre. Eg. I’m sure there are many black “classical” composers whose work continues to get overlooked by the Pulitzer and similar awards. I can’t speak to how black “classical” composers are feeling about the Pulitzer (and if you know of any commentaries, please point me in their direction), but I can speak to how I feel in a parallel situation. I’ve always hated how when classical music anthologies and form and analysis texts decide to add some women composers for their second (or 25th) edition, they usually just add a couple of popular songs. I mean yes, song-writing is great, and it’s a genre in which women have often had more opportunity to succeed than, say, Romantic opera — but it’s still overlooking all the “classical” women composers. I feel like just adding a couple contemporary women song-writers and no-one else to a text/anthology that is clearly mainly about “classical” music actually serves to reinforce the idea that women can’t or don’t write “classical” music even more than leaving out women entirely! At least the text or anthology with no women can’t pretend it’s trying to be egalitarian, while the text with two women popular song writers and 102 male “classical” composers will claim that it is being inclusive! Of course I’m in favour of including new genres in things too — just tired of the way “inclusion” and “new genres” get equated, and many people still get left out!