Joining in text Q6 - Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

Joining in text Q6 - Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Joining in text Q6 - Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

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ANTHONY EVERITTJOINING INAN INVESTIGATION INTO PARTICIPATORY MUSICCALOUSTE GULBENKIAN FOUNDATION, LONDON


For RoddyPublished by the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>98 Portland PlaceLondon W1N 4ETTel: 0171 636 5313© 1997 <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>The right of Anthony Everitt to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted<strong>in</strong> accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.ISBN 0 903319 76 4British Library Catalogu<strong>in</strong>g-<strong>in</strong>-Publication DataA catalogue record for this book is available from the British LibraryDesigned by Chris HydePr<strong>in</strong>ted by Expression Pr<strong>in</strong>ters Ltd, London N5 1JTDistributed by Turnaround Publisher Services Ltd, Unit 3, Olympia Trad<strong>in</strong>g Estate,Coburg Road, Wood Green, London N22 6TZ. Tel: 0181 829 3000


CONTENTSForeword 6Preface 7Selective glossary of acronyms 8Introduction 111 The case for participation 192 The music-makers 333 Transform<strong>in</strong>g the curriculum 634 The re-creation of community 795 The turn of the tide 1016 The electronic soundscape 1177 Relative values 1318 The subsidy revolution 1479 What next? 159Action po<strong>in</strong>ts 171Appendix oneSome useful addresses for music participants 176Appendix twoSteer<strong>in</strong>g Group and list of those consulted 179Appendix threeUseful books, reports and other documents 182Index 187


6FOREWORDFew would dispute that they have been profoundly moved by music, at ceremony,concert or rave, or had their personal histories touched, to quote Noël Coward, by ‘thepotency of cheap music’. Which of us has not, after check<strong>in</strong>g that the house is empty,practised bel canto <strong>in</strong> the bath, strummed an imag<strong>in</strong>ary guitar before the mirror or energeticallyconducted a rous<strong>in</strong>g film score on the radio? This report is for everyone who wanted toknow about participat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> music but was afraid to ask.The research <strong>in</strong> this book reveals that there is an astound<strong>in</strong>g number and variety <strong>in</strong> musicmak<strong>in</strong>g,from members of steel pan bands to choirs, bhangra groups, brass bands, jazz bands,pop groups, folk groups, operatic companies, str<strong>in</strong>g quartets and much more. There is somewonderful music be<strong>in</strong>g made and we can learn from each other’s examples. What’s more,there are plenty of opportunities for us all to overcome our tentativeness and jo<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>.This book’s purpose also has an element of missionary zeal. The latest <strong>in</strong> scientific research isbeg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to prove that music is good for us. It helps us to communicate and learn more easily,it makes us respect each other <strong>in</strong> group situations and allows us to express our identities and asense of belong<strong>in</strong>g even <strong>in</strong> a potentially disconnected society. In short, its <strong>in</strong>clusion <strong>in</strong> our dailylives is essential to our well-be<strong>in</strong>g as <strong>in</strong>dividuals and social creatures. Let’s have more of it.Some years ago the Sports Council broadcast the idea that sport was good for us all – not justthe hearty souls or the keen spectators. The idea caught on and <strong>in</strong>fluenced national and localpolicies for provision. Now access to good leisure centres and sports halls is commonplace.We can take up new sports, hire equipment, jo<strong>in</strong> classes, watch our team, improve our gameor simply do it for fun. Anyone can take part. The analogy between sport and music wouldbecome stra<strong>in</strong>ed if pursued too far, but the notions of easy access and lack of elitism areimportant ones and they should <strong>in</strong>fluence the policy-makers. The time is particularly ripegiven the potentially radical changes to the fund<strong>in</strong>g situation as a result of the NationalLottery. There is much work to be done and this book is only a start.When I first presented Anthony Everitt with the brief, none of us knew what his researchwould reveal or where it might lead. As he went about tirelessly over the ensu<strong>in</strong>g months,read<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong>terview<strong>in</strong>g and travell<strong>in</strong>g, we became more and more surprised at the size of thetask and the implications the research might have for policy-makers and <strong>in</strong>dividual participantsalike. I am <strong>in</strong>debted to him for his energy, <strong>in</strong>sight, creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and great good humour.I am also grateful to our dist<strong>in</strong>guished Steer<strong>in</strong>g Group, whose fasc<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g discussions shouldhave been recorded, and especially to its Chair, Jo Shapcott, who managed the debates with<strong>in</strong>telligence and wit and also did a lot of encourag<strong>in</strong>g work beh<strong>in</strong>d the scenes. I am sure thatreaders will enjoy this book for its own sake. I very much hope it will <strong>in</strong>spire us all to changethe culture of participation <strong>in</strong> music <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> over the next few years.Siân EdeAssistant Director (Arts)<strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>September 1997


7PREFACE<strong>Jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g</strong> In is the story of a journey through a country I have often visited as a tourist, butwith whose true character I was unfamiliar. Like all travel writ<strong>in</strong>g, it is a mix of factsand impressions. It makes no claims to comprehensiveness, but I hope the book (the first,I th<strong>in</strong>k, to attempt a synoptic view of this particular field) will be useful to other travellersas well to the natives. That is its purpose.I owe a great deal to my guides, especially Siân Ede at the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> (UK branch) who commissioned this report, the poet Jo Shapcott and thedist<strong>in</strong>guished Steer<strong>in</strong>g Group which she chaired. I am also grateful to those I met on mytravels, the musicians and the composers, the managers and the officials, whouncompla<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gly gave me so much of their time and attention – more than a hundred ofthem <strong>in</strong> all. I have not been able to make use of everyth<strong>in</strong>g they told me because I havetried to tell my story through selective examples rather than overburden the reader withcomprehensive list<strong>in</strong>gs of common practice. They did their best to steer me away fromthe elephant traps I kept stumbl<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to and gave me good directions through difficultterra<strong>in</strong>; some of them were k<strong>in</strong>d enough to read sections of the draft. They deservemost of the credit for whatever is good <strong>in</strong> this volume, but I alone am responsible forany mistakes.Anthony EverittWivenhoeSeptember 1997


8Selective glossary of acronymsABOACEACGBACNIACW/CCCADOORALPAPCBABSBASBWEBASCABBCBBHTBBMABFBBBFMFBFYCBMICCBSOCBTOCEMACGGBCIPFACMECMHCMLCMWCOMADfEEDNHEFDSEFDSSELLSOEMA (EMAB)EMSENOFEFCFSSHMIINSETISMLABAssociation of British OrchestrasArts Council of EnglandArts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>Arts Council of Northern IrelandArts Council of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau CymruAssociation for the Development of Open Opportunity <strong>in</strong> RecreationAdult Learn<strong>in</strong>g ProjectAssociation of Professional ComposersBritish Association of Barbershop S<strong>in</strong>gersBritish Association of Symphonic Bands and W<strong>in</strong>d EnsemblesBritish Association of Songwriters, Composers and AuthorsBritish Broadcast<strong>in</strong>g CorporationBrass Band Heritage TrustBritish Bluegrass Music AssociationBritish Federation of Brass BandsBritish Federation of Music FestivalsBritish Federation of Youth ChoirsBritish Music Information CentreCity of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Symphony OrchestraCity of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Tour<strong>in</strong>g OperaCouncil for the Encouragement of Music and the ArtsComposers’ Guild of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>Chartered Institute for Public F<strong>in</strong>ance and AccountancyCommunity Music EastCouncil for Music <strong>in</strong> HospitalsCommunity Music LondonCommunity Music WalesContemporary Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g for AmateursDepartment for Education and EmploymentDepartment of National Heritage (s<strong>in</strong>ce this book went to press thename has changed to the Department of Culture, Media and Sport)English Folk Dance SocietyEnglish Folk Dance and Song SocietyEast London Late Starters OrchestraEast Midlands Arts (Board)Enterprise Music ScotlandEnglish National OperaFurther Education Fund<strong>in</strong>g CouncilFolk Song SocietyHer Majesty’s InspectorateIn-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g (for teachers)Incorporated Society of MusiciansLondon Arts Board


9LCMLEALIPALMNLPOLSOMUNACNCANCETNEYNNFDSWNFERNFMSNIACENODANYBBGBNYBBWNYCWOFSTEDOMTFPRSRAARABRAMRCMRNEWROHRPORSARSCDSRSPBASACSAMPADSBCSCAASCOSHAPESOASSPNMSTIWSWICATAPSTMSACVANWAMFWOMADYANLondon College of Music (at Thames Valley University)Local Education AuthorityLiverpool Institute of Perform<strong>in</strong>g ArtsLive Music NowLondon Philharmonic OrchestraLondon Symphony OrchestraMusicians’ UnionNational Association of ChoirsNational Campaign for the ArtsNational Council for Educational TechnologyNational Early Years NetworkNational Folk Dance Society of WalesNational Federation for Educational ResearchNational Federation of Music SocietiesNational Institute for Adult and Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g EducationNational Operatic and Dramatic AssociationNational Youth Brass Band of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>National Youth Brass Band of WalesNational Youth Choir of WalesOffice for Standards <strong>in</strong> EducationOpera and Music Theatre ForumPerform<strong>in</strong>g Right SocietyRegional Arts AssociationRegional Arts BoardRoyal Academy of MusicRoyal College of MusicRoyal National Eisteddfod of WalesRoyal Opera HouseRoyal Philharmonic OrchestraRoyal Society of ArtsRoyal Scottish Country Dance SocietyRoyal Scottish Pipe Band AssociationScottish Arts CouncilSouth Asian Music Performance and DanceSouth Bank CentreSchools Curriculum and Assessment Authority(now the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority)Scottish Chamber OrchestraNot an acronymSchool of Oriental and African StudiesSociety for the Promotion of New MusicSociety for the Traditional Instruments of WalesSouth Wales Intercultural Community ArtsTraditional Arts ProjectsTraditional Music and Song Association of ScotlandVoluntary Arts NetworkWelsh Amateur Music FederationWorld of Music and DanceYouth Arts Network


photo: Marcus Tate


INTRODUCTION


12 INTRODUCTIONIf I had to live my life over aga<strong>in</strong>, I would have made a rule to read some poetry and to listen tosome music at least once every week. For perhaps parts of my bra<strong>in</strong> now atrophied would thus havebeen kept active through use. The loss of these tastes is a loss of happ<strong>in</strong>ess and may possibly be<strong>in</strong>jurious to the <strong>in</strong>tellect and more probably to the moral character by enfeebl<strong>in</strong>g the emotional parts ofour nature.CHARLES DARWIN, AUTOBIOGRAPHYAt the outset of this project to survey participation <strong>in</strong> music, my aim was quitestraightforward. It was to produce a report; it would be comprehensive andobjective and would close with a list of crafted recommendations. It would, <strong>in</strong>the language of arts bureaucracy, ‘identify examples of good practice’ and ‘address therelevant issues’.I plunged <strong>in</strong>to a cascade of <strong>in</strong>terviews and soon realised that this approach would not do;someth<strong>in</strong>g rather more <strong>in</strong>formal and discursive was required, for two reasons. The BritishIsles resound to a multitude of musics, most of them amateur. Millions of people s<strong>in</strong>g orplay <strong>in</strong>struments for love and not for money. They play the tabla and the church organ. Ina restless ferment, they form rock or pop groups. They come together <strong>in</strong> youth orchestrasor brass bands. They revive and br<strong>in</strong>g up to date the folk musics of past centuries. Theyuse the latest technologies to manipulate and customise the music of others. They stageoperas and musical comedies <strong>in</strong> village halls up and down the country. Communitymusicians work with those who, for educational or economic reasons, have not had theopportunity to express themselves creatively or who, from disability or other forms ofexclusion, f<strong>in</strong>d themselves disbarred from access to cultural engagement. In Wales anetwork of eisteddfodau keeps alive the long traditions of a proud culture. In Scotland anew spirit of national consciousness feeds on the vigour of Gaelic music. Professionalmusic organisations, among them the country’s orchestras and opera companies, havedeveloped education and community outreach w<strong>in</strong>gs.An unrecorded number of local musicians help to service and facilitate this mass ofmusical activity, mov<strong>in</strong>g easily between professional and amateur roles. These are themusic teachers, the church organists, the choir leaders, the jazz musicians, the music critics<strong>in</strong> local newspapers.This is a largely uncharted world. Maps have been produced of one territory or another, butno one has yet designed a Mercator’s projection which embraces the full complexity ofBritish music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. A central purpose of this book is to give some account of what isactually go<strong>in</strong>g on. That this has not been done before (so far as I am aware) is a consequenceno doubt of a long-stand<strong>in</strong>g lack of serious attention or value accorded to the field.But op<strong>in</strong>ion is now decisively shift<strong>in</strong>g. The professional music world and the arts fund<strong>in</strong>gsystem, which for many years (and with some strik<strong>in</strong>g exceptions) turned a bl<strong>in</strong>d eye onamateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and focused their approval on a professional virtuosity which theysaw as constitut<strong>in</strong>g true excellence, are com<strong>in</strong>g to accept the diversity of British cultureand to recognise that the high achievements of the European classical tradition are only apart, albeit a crucial one, of a larger scene.This survey is aimed <strong>in</strong> part at them, the op<strong>in</strong>ion-formers and decision-makers, anddescribes a doma<strong>in</strong> of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g with which they may not yet be altogether familiaror comfortable. I hope too that it will be of <strong>in</strong>terest to general readers, especially thosewho s<strong>in</strong>g or play <strong>in</strong> their leisure hours.


JOINING IN 13The second reason why <strong>Jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g</strong> In will not read altogether as a conventional report is that Idiscovered dur<strong>in</strong>g my enquiries a kaleidoscope not simply of music, but of conflict<strong>in</strong>gideas about music. These ideas are expressed with passion. Genres jostle competitively withone another and even with<strong>in</strong> them there are different po<strong>in</strong>ts of view. Unless these mattersare carefully exam<strong>in</strong>ed and debated, with<strong>in</strong> a historical perspective, it will be hard toachieve a consensus about the importance of the participatory pr<strong>in</strong>ciple.The nature of participation <strong>in</strong> music is the first question to address and forms the themeof the follow<strong>in</strong>g chapter. It takes us directly to the heart of the matter, for there has longbeen discord between the claims of participation and of performance. There are thosewho argue that a piece of music must be performed to the highest possible standards ofexcellence. This is held to imply the need for a class of well-tra<strong>in</strong>ed, dedicated playersable to take <strong>in</strong>structions from the great composers of past and present. If the rest of uswant a s<strong>in</strong>g-song or a knees-up, that is f<strong>in</strong>e, but fun and social bond<strong>in</strong>g should not beconfused with art. Conversely, for others the specialisation of music and its isolationfrom ord<strong>in</strong>ary life – the cult of professionalism <strong>in</strong> the concert hall – is an <strong>in</strong>novation ofthe last couple of centuries: history, they say, confirmed by the richness of today’sparticipatory musics, teaches us that music is a social art and should be returned to thepeople at large.A related claim is made which, at first glance, seems much more unexceptional. This isthat some music is better than others. While it begs the question of what is meant by‘good’, many would go along with the view that it is possible to discrim<strong>in</strong>ate (say)between two sonatas <strong>in</strong> ways which would ga<strong>in</strong> at least the rough-and-ready consent ofthoughtful listeners. Likewise, some performances are thought to be better than others.Even if people differ <strong>in</strong> their judgments, discussion of any k<strong>in</strong>d would be po<strong>in</strong>tless if therewere not the possibility of agreement. But this is not to say that there is a hierarchy ofmusical genres, ordered accord<strong>in</strong>g to merit. One of my aims is to illustrate the extent ofBrita<strong>in</strong>’s musical diversity and to show that there is wonderful music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of everyk<strong>in</strong>d to be enjoyed. Instead of a contrast between extremes, music <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> is amulticoloured cont<strong>in</strong>uum where every genre has its place.It is essential to be clear from the outset what is meant by participation <strong>in</strong> music and whyit is right to give it a high value. Participation is usually understood to mean hands-on<strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> a process. But an engagement with art as a listener, reader or spectator isalso an active act. The dist<strong>in</strong>ction between ‘mak<strong>in</strong>g’ and ‘us<strong>in</strong>g’ has always been anartificial one, but it has never been more so than today when a comb<strong>in</strong>ation of social andtechnological change has blurred the boundaries between the two.The concept of musical participation cannot be readily understood outside thecontemporary social and cultural con<strong>text</strong>. Social change on a massive scale has transformedmost aspects of life today and it would be surpris<strong>in</strong>g if it had left our attitudes to musicuntouched. A number of factors need to be taken <strong>in</strong>to account – <strong>in</strong> particular, the decl<strong>in</strong>eof old ideas of community, the rise of <strong>in</strong>dividualism and the emergence of relative valuesystems. I argue that consumption of goods and services is <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly an active, ratherthan a passive, process. The day of the couch potato is pass<strong>in</strong>g. While it may be true thatmass culture has homogenised taste, it is also creat<strong>in</strong>g novel opportunities for <strong>in</strong>dividualsto def<strong>in</strong>e themselves and to customise their lifestyles.For all that, the live event is as popular as ever, if for reasons somewhat different fromthose that applied <strong>in</strong> the past. It is less a way of assert<strong>in</strong>g or celebrat<strong>in</strong>g one’s sense ofsocial and physical place than of explor<strong>in</strong>g today’s diverse menu of possibilities. As much


14 INTRODUCTIONas ever, people still want to associate to make art – perhaps partly <strong>in</strong> reaction to thesolitary pleasures afforded by the electronic technologies.The participatory arts have a special contribution to make to the ongo<strong>in</strong>g debate aboutcivil society. When people come together <strong>in</strong> voluntary associations (whether to makemusic or, for that matter, to play chess or to protect birds), they are contribut<strong>in</strong>g to astable and <strong>in</strong>ventive society where state structures guard, but are not allowed toovershadow, the freedoms and creativity of <strong>in</strong>dividuals.The value of creativity has received remarkable support from a completely differentquarter. Scientific research <strong>in</strong>to music and the bra<strong>in</strong> and psychological studies of the valueof music <strong>in</strong> education have made great advances <strong>in</strong> recent years. They demonstrate thatmusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g is <strong>in</strong>terl<strong>in</strong>ked with a range of mental activities and can foster personal and<strong>in</strong>tellectual development. Charles Darw<strong>in</strong>’s assertion of the <strong>in</strong>tellectual and emotionalimportance of listen<strong>in</strong>g to music, which I quote at the open<strong>in</strong>g of this chapter, turns outto be well-grounded <strong>in</strong> fact – and <strong>in</strong>deed is equally true of play<strong>in</strong>g and s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g it.After discuss<strong>in</strong>g these issues, I move on to give an extended description of the musicalscene <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> today. It can only be a sketch because no comprehensive audit exists.Nobody knows, for example, how much f<strong>in</strong>ancial support is given by local authorities tocommunity music, or how many community musicians there are, or exactly how much<strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is on offer to music teachers.What is certa<strong>in</strong>, however, is that a huge number of amateur music-makers exist, with awide range of activity. The network of music societies and clubs is mostly <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>classical music of one k<strong>in</strong>d or another. But the situation is beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to change <strong>in</strong> favourof a more catholic taste. Many of the numerous choral societies which flourished <strong>in</strong> thelast part of the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth and the first half of the twentieth centuries are still go<strong>in</strong>gstrong, but have age<strong>in</strong>g memberships (<strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>gly, this is not a problem faced by themore family-oriented brass band movement). Amateur groups have tended to take a ratherconventional approach to the music they play or present, <strong>in</strong> part at least because thefund<strong>in</strong>g system has paid them so little attention and also because of the technical difficultyof much contemporary composition. However, for some time they have been show<strong>in</strong>g agrow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> commission<strong>in</strong>g new work and some music societies are beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to<strong>in</strong>volve themselves <strong>in</strong> community activity. 1 While brass bands are regular commissioners,choirs are rather less so than <strong>in</strong> the past.1 ‘Community’ is aword with manymean<strong>in</strong>gs which Idiscuss <strong>in</strong> a laterchapter. Self-evidently,amateurs live and work<strong>in</strong> the community. It isenough to say for thetime be<strong>in</strong>g that what Imean by the phrase‘community activity’ ismusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g with thespecific aim of open<strong>in</strong>gaccess to all sections ofthe community,especially those whomay f<strong>in</strong>d themselvesexcluded from the artsand from opportunitiesfor creative expression.Other forms of non-professional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g are burgeon<strong>in</strong>g, but often <strong>in</strong> f<strong>in</strong>anciallydifficult circumstances. There has been what one might call a revived revival of folkmusic, build<strong>in</strong>g on the work of early twentieth-century pioneers, but this time round lessconcerned with preserv<strong>in</strong>g and record<strong>in</strong>g the past than with adapt<strong>in</strong>g tradition for newtimes and new publics. Among today’s musicians there is less of an obsession with puritybut a greater <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> allow<strong>in</strong>g folk to meet, or ‘fuse’, with other forms, especially rockand pop and non-European musics. Some of them are fully professional performers, anunwelcome development for those who believe folk’s strength lies <strong>in</strong> its rootedness amongthe people and their <strong>in</strong>formal social gather<strong>in</strong>gs. For them, from be<strong>in</strong>g a way of liv<strong>in</strong>g itrisks becom<strong>in</strong>g an art.In some parts of the UK, the folk resurgence raises political issues around notions ofcultural identity – <strong>in</strong> the North-East, for example, but even more powerfully <strong>in</strong> Scotland,where Gaelic music has been ‘rescued’ from an Anglicised rul<strong>in</strong>g class and now speaks, orplays and s<strong>in</strong>gs, for nationalist aspirations.


JOINING IN 15With the general decl<strong>in</strong>e of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the home <strong>in</strong> the last 70 years or so, schoolprovides the first <strong>in</strong>troduction for many children to s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and play<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>struments.Music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools has undergone a transformation. A long process of reth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gby educationists, highly critical of much classroom practice, has led to a new musiccurriculum which emphasises the importance of compos<strong>in</strong>g and music-mak<strong>in</strong>g as well asappreciation and understand<strong>in</strong>g. This is a remarkable advance and, if effectivelyimplemented, could <strong>in</strong> the course of time revolutionise not only school<strong>in</strong>g but also thequality of musical life <strong>in</strong> society at large. In many respects the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples of the curriculumare analogous to the th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g that underlies community music workshop practice.However, many music teachers, accustomed to another way of do<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs, feelthemselves to be ill-tra<strong>in</strong>ed and ill-equipped to deal with the new imperatives. There arealso, quite simply, too few of them to do justice to the demands of the new curriculum.In addition, a good number of schools <strong>in</strong> the public sector apparently rema<strong>in</strong> unconv<strong>in</strong>cedof the contribution music can make to personal and <strong>in</strong>tellectual development.The term ‘community music’ has socio-political overtones. Emerg<strong>in</strong>g from the ferment ofthe 1960s, it is as much concerned with personal and social development among thosedisadvantaged by poverty, and with the failure of the educational system, as it is withmusic <strong>in</strong> itself. It is part of the larger community arts movement, but has taken longer toestablish itself than some of the other art-forms. Despite lack of recognition and low levelsof public fund<strong>in</strong>g, it has substantial achievements to its credit, but coverage across thecountry is patchy and community musicians are so poorly resourced that they often f<strong>in</strong>dthemselves cha<strong>in</strong>ed to a treadmill of one-off projects which, although worthwhile <strong>in</strong>themselves, raise long-term expectations that prove difficult to satisfy.The efforts of musicians, composers and educationists to develop theories which canunderp<strong>in</strong> efforts to re<strong>in</strong>tegrate music <strong>in</strong>to the broader streams of cultural and social life andreflect the startl<strong>in</strong>g f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs of psychological and neurological research have had importantresults. They have established a new set of common values: <strong>in</strong>clusiveness, a commitment todiversity and participation, a concern for <strong>in</strong>dividual creativity among ‘ord<strong>in</strong>ary’ people andan understand<strong>in</strong>g of the relevance of social change to music and vice versa.The <strong>in</strong>clusiveness has created a framework <strong>in</strong> which non-European musicians, whether asBritish citizens or visitors from abroad, can make a contribution to the musical scene andreceive due acknowledgment for do<strong>in</strong>g so. At the same time, <strong>in</strong>digenous musicians haveresponded with enthusiasm to the culturally diverse nature of contemporary society. Somehave brought together musics from many cultures, mak<strong>in</strong>g use of the reservoirs of talent<strong>in</strong> the settled British communities of African, Afro-Caribbean and Asian orig<strong>in</strong>. Theaccessibility of these musics has been one of the factors which challenge the long-stand<strong>in</strong>gdom<strong>in</strong>ance and prestige of the Western tradition. The popularity of world music isstimulat<strong>in</strong>g a greater public awareness of the validity of other cultures across the globeand, <strong>in</strong> the last 10 years or so a grow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terculturalism has led to the development ofhybrid or ‘fusion’ music, where different cultural conventions m<strong>in</strong>gle.The arrival of recorded music, both as a technology and as an <strong>in</strong>dustry, has had aprofound impact, both for listeners and for players. Where previously the enjoyment ofmusic had <strong>in</strong> the nature of th<strong>in</strong>gs been a social act, it is now commonly a private and<strong>in</strong>dividual one. For millions of people today, their front rooms have become artscentres which many prefer to use <strong>in</strong> place of the sometimes daunt<strong>in</strong>g anduncomfortable experience of concert-go<strong>in</strong>g. The notion of the live performance hasbeen subverted <strong>in</strong> another way; the record<strong>in</strong>g of a Beethoven symphony or a DavidBowie album does not capture a s<strong>in</strong>gle real-life event (as it implicitly purports to do),


16 INTRODUCTIONfor it usually consists of a collage of bits and pieces of record<strong>in</strong>gs selected and stucktogether to create a ‘perfect’ render<strong>in</strong>g.The new technologies, controlled by mult<strong>in</strong>ational corporations, have enabled theemergence of rock and pop as a hugely powerful cultural and artistic force. What we haveseen over the last half-century is the triumph of a newly <strong>in</strong>vented mass ‘folk’ tradition <strong>in</strong>the sense of a music that is very close to people’s lives and where participation is <strong>in</strong> manyways as important as performance. A rave or a rock concert is not simply a presentationwhich audiences attend, but a communal event (like a secular church service) <strong>in</strong> whicheveryone has an active part. In addition, it is a form which many thousands of its admirerscan and do play as well as listen to. Rock and pop are generationally def<strong>in</strong>ed and closelyassociated with a dist<strong>in</strong>ct youth culture; but this is less of a limit<strong>in</strong>g factor than it used tobe, for 40 years on those who grew up with the rock and pop ‘revolution’, although nowage<strong>in</strong>g, have seldom abandoned their early tastes.The power to record and manipulate sound has not only helped to create new forms ofmusic with mass appeal; it has also opened new avenues for composers who can now, ifthey wish, abandon <strong>in</strong>struments and the notes they make for the raw noises of the naturalworld and the sounds which computer software can <strong>in</strong>vent. This has had the effect ofmak<strong>in</strong>g the bus<strong>in</strong>ess of composition available <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple to everybody who is <strong>in</strong>terestedand it is likely to make a huge contribution to the delivery of the new music curriculum.It also facilitates hybridisation and transfers the responsibility for musical virtuosity fromthe professional <strong>in</strong>strumentalist to a mach<strong>in</strong>e.The f<strong>in</strong>al chapters of <strong>Jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g</strong> In offer an analysis of problems that need to be addressed anda list of suggested solutions which could help to ensure that the present richness of activitycont<strong>in</strong>ues to develop and flourish <strong>in</strong> the future.While there is by no means universal agreement, there is a grow<strong>in</strong>g consensus about thevalue of amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and community-based practice. Further than that, it ispossible to dist<strong>in</strong>guish, even if tentatively, an <strong>in</strong>tegrated philosophy of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g thatembraces the complete, rich variety of practice. Old labels have <strong>in</strong> consequence lost muchof their force and, except when mak<strong>in</strong>g specialist po<strong>in</strong>ts, I shall abandon conventionalcategories such as ‘amateur’ and ‘community’ music <strong>in</strong> favour of the wider scope of‘participation’ and ‘participatory’.However, the new philosophy is not comprehensively applied or fully understood.Sometimes there is a reluctance to co-operate across sectors and a lack of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> othermusicians’ work. If I am right to say that there are more th<strong>in</strong>gs that unite music-loversthan divide them, there are many ways <strong>in</strong> which different <strong>in</strong>terest groups could w<strong>in</strong>practical benefits by acknowledg<strong>in</strong>g their mutual <strong>in</strong>terdependence.The first major problem I try to address picks up on the theme of artistic standards. There isa failure of critical debate <strong>in</strong> that it is not always clear what community musicians wish toachieve when launch<strong>in</strong>g projects nor whether they can show they achieved it once they areover. This is not altogether surpris<strong>in</strong>g when one considers the difficult conditions <strong>in</strong> whichmany of them work. They are often isolated and have comparatively little opportunity tosee and judge each others’ work, or learn from it. Pay and conditions are so poor that thereis a high turnover of musicians work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the field. One particular approach – workshoppractice, as it is called – has become someth<strong>in</strong>g of an orthodoxy and there is a good case forparticipatory musicians to make use of a more extensive range of means, suit<strong>in</strong>g cases tocircumstances rather than rout<strong>in</strong>ely apply<strong>in</strong>g a dom<strong>in</strong>ant methodology.


JOINING IN 17But, most importantly, we need to confront a difficulty <strong>in</strong>herent <strong>in</strong> an artistic processwhich is not just concerned with turn<strong>in</strong>g out ‘excellent’ product but with encourag<strong>in</strong>gcritical understand<strong>in</strong>g and the stimulation of <strong>in</strong>dividual creativity. Evaluation of anyhuman activity is tough at the best of times, but even more so when what is be<strong>in</strong>gevaluated is <strong>in</strong>ternal rather than external, subjective rather than objective, and when oneof its key purposes is self-evaluation. I try to set out a more decentralised model ofevaluation demand<strong>in</strong>g greater trust by all the parties <strong>in</strong>volved – the fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies,managers, project leaders and, above all, those actually tak<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong> projects. Just as weneed to move away from a hierarchy of musics, so we should avoid suppos<strong>in</strong>g that there isa superior class of functionaries equipped to pass judgment on practitioners who, <strong>in</strong> somecases or at some levels, are the only ones capable of giv<strong>in</strong>g a value to what they are do<strong>in</strong>g.These questions are relevant not only to professional musicians who work <strong>in</strong> thecommunity or <strong>in</strong> education, but also to amateur music-makers who are <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>community and outreach work themselves or explicitly see their activities as fitt<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to asocial con<strong>text</strong> or a culture of personal development. Even where music is no more than anenjoyable leisure pursuit, is the notion of self-improvement completely beside the po<strong>in</strong>t?A second, much less theoretical, challenge relates to tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. Amateur musicians <strong>in</strong> everygenre from rock to folk would benefit from musical and organisational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. In highereducation there are limited opportunities to learn musics other than the Western classicaltradition. The conservatoires are beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to widen the scope of their courses to takeaccount of the community and educational work <strong>in</strong> which more and more professionalmusicians are engaged. Music teachers <strong>in</strong> schools have only patchy access to effectiveINSET tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g to help them handle the music curriculum. Although money and facilitiesare required to address these deficiencies, a great deal could be done through <strong>in</strong>creasedplann<strong>in</strong>g and collaboration. There is much excellent tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g practice <strong>in</strong> different cornersof the musical world and, rather than re-<strong>in</strong>vent<strong>in</strong>g the wheel, we would be wiser toidentify these resources and enable them to be shared. So, to cite just one example frommany, the <strong>in</strong>itiative of the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire <strong>in</strong> work<strong>in</strong>g with a local communitymusic group, Sound It Out, on the development of a community music module iswarmly to be welcomed.A third reason why participatory musics are disparate, fragmented and under-resourced isthe lack of appropriate well-funded <strong>in</strong>stitutions which can offer space, equipment,<strong>in</strong>struments and (most important of all) meet<strong>in</strong>g places where amateurs and professionalscan exchange ideas and practice.F<strong>in</strong>ally, the situation has been aggravated by the way <strong>in</strong> which the state funds music.Certa<strong>in</strong> k<strong>in</strong>ds of music receive the lion’s share of the available money, even if itsrecipients feel it to be woefully <strong>in</strong>sufficient. Meanwhile, others have been largely ignoredand at best have to survive on leav<strong>in</strong>gs from the feast. On the face of it the commercialmusic <strong>in</strong>dustry thrives, but focuses its attention on a conservative view of what will beprofitable. In the meantime, there is a large h<strong>in</strong>terland of music-makers – professional,amateur and pro-am – who seem to ga<strong>in</strong> little benefit from either subsidy or commerce,but who attract substantial follow<strong>in</strong>gs.But th<strong>in</strong>gs change. It is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g to see that <strong>in</strong> the last few years the public fund<strong>in</strong>gagencies have become more will<strong>in</strong>g to widen their policies. The latest dramatic step <strong>in</strong>this process was taken last year when the Arts Councils announced new Lottery schemeswhich prioritise amateur, youth and community-based arts practice. There are, however, anumber of contradictions <strong>in</strong> the present arrangements that may lead to difficulties and I


18 INTRODUCTIONsuggest ways by which they can be resolved. Above all, I argue that an arts fund<strong>in</strong>g systemwhich is mov<strong>in</strong>g from a policy of br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g art to the citizen to one which recognises thecitizen as artist will have to become less judgmental and <strong>in</strong>terventionist and more open,responsive – and humble.The arrival of the National Lottery has been timely. Vast f<strong>in</strong>ancial resources have suddenlybecome available at the very moment when people of good will are com<strong>in</strong>g to set a truevalue on the cultural contribution made by the many millions who participate <strong>in</strong> musicmak<strong>in</strong>gof every k<strong>in</strong>d. They <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly see the overrid<strong>in</strong>g need to heal the schismbetween the amateur and the professional, and between the social and aesthetic uses of anart-form that penetrates every corner of our mental and emotional lives. Music is tooimportant to be left to musicians: it belongs to all of us.photo: mac, The Centre for Birm<strong>in</strong>gham


1 THE CASE FORPARTICIPATION


20 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONEveryone is potentially creative. An overemphasis on rationality alone, technocratic reason<strong>in</strong>g,restrictive organisational or community structures and an over-reliance on traditional approaches canrestrict or destroy this potential. This is why it is important that the prestige attached to the artsshould not lead to the neglect of countless, modest imag<strong>in</strong>ative undertak<strong>in</strong>gs that <strong>in</strong>ject a vitalsubstance <strong>in</strong>to the social fabric. All people need to communicate their experiences, their hopes andfears, as they have always done.OUR CREATIVE DIVERSITY, 1996 1Of all the world, few <strong>in</strong>herit themselves.LAURA RIDINGWhat do we mean by participation?Participation <strong>in</strong> music and the arts is widespread, almost universal, yet generallyundervalued. It is assumed – <strong>in</strong> a loose, vague way – either to be worthwhile, or(worse) worthy. In comparison with professional practice, it is a C<strong>in</strong>derella, asecond-class activity for those who must be, by implication, second-class citizens. It keepsthe kids off the streets. It is a sort of fatigue duty for the ranks.The cause of cultural participation is not helped by those who promote its virtues. Atypical note is struck <strong>in</strong> a recent consultative document on new National Lotteryprogrammes, published by the Arts Council of England.‘Take participation. The assumption here is that participat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts is good for<strong>in</strong>dividuals and good for society. ... We expect children to be taught to pa<strong>in</strong>t or s<strong>in</strong>g,and as parents we praise their work and their <strong>in</strong>itiative when they br<strong>in</strong>g home a pot orwhen they take part <strong>in</strong> a school concert. For what, if we don’t encourage the same <strong>in</strong>adults? It is patronis<strong>in</strong>g to suggest that anyone prefers do<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs badly [but] it isprimarily about tak<strong>in</strong>g part ... The quality of the product or the artistic event, thoughit may <strong>in</strong>deed be high, is secondary to the right to have a go.’ 2The <strong>text</strong> gives itself away when it refers to children’s creative activity. Which of us cannotremember the determ<strong>in</strong>ed benevolence of adults when confronted with juvenile work,whether botched or brilliant? The po<strong>in</strong>t is to praise, not to value. Is ‘hav<strong>in</strong>g a go’ enoughto justify the importance the author gives to cultural participation? Is the unexam<strong>in</strong>edassumption that it is good for us all that there is to say on the subject?1 Our CreativeDiversity, Report of theWorld Commission onCulture and Development(Paris, UNESCOPublish<strong>in</strong>g, 1996) p.79.2 New LotteryProgrammes (London,Arts Council ofEngland, June 1996)p.25.3 Shorter OxfordDictionary (OxfordUniversity Press, 1964).It would hardly be worth devot<strong>in</strong>g a book to participation <strong>in</strong> music if that were the case.Fortunately, it is not. My aim <strong>in</strong> this chapter is to seek out the reasons for suppos<strong>in</strong>g thatcreative <strong>in</strong>volvement is of value. They turn out to be both specific and wide-rang<strong>in</strong>g.The first step <strong>in</strong> this search is to be clear what participation entails. The dictionarydef<strong>in</strong>ition speaks of ‘shar<strong>in</strong>g’ or ‘partak<strong>in</strong>g’. 3 Broadly speak<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> the field of music, wecan identify three dist<strong>in</strong>ct levels of engagement. The first is a comparatively <strong>in</strong>ert jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> – s<strong>in</strong>galongs, mov<strong>in</strong>g and clapp<strong>in</strong>g to gospel music and chants at football matches areexamples. The second <strong>in</strong>volves a certa<strong>in</strong> degree of reflection. One th<strong>in</strong>ks of Victorianfamilies s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and play<strong>in</strong>g music to each other dur<strong>in</strong>g their long television-less even<strong>in</strong>gsor, to come up to date, the activity of choral societies and brass bands. Choices are madeabout ‘when’, ‘how good’, ‘what k<strong>in</strong>d’, ‘who with’ and so forth, but such choices areprobably based on <strong>in</strong>st<strong>in</strong>ct and taste rather than analysis. The third overlaps with thesecond level, but is no longer simply a question of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g but of discuss<strong>in</strong>g mattersof taste, quality and style and of becom<strong>in</strong>g knowledgeable about the material to be played


JOINING IN 21or sung, its history and con<strong>text</strong>. We are talk<strong>in</strong>g here not just of practice, for the sake of itor the fun of it, but of the conscious development of critical understand<strong>in</strong>g.So participation <strong>in</strong> music can be, at its most <strong>in</strong>tensive, a serious bus<strong>in</strong>ess of learn<strong>in</strong>g, andlearn<strong>in</strong>g about, an art-form and, <strong>in</strong> the process, of extend<strong>in</strong>g and develop<strong>in</strong>g one’sknowledge and creativity.However, before we look further <strong>in</strong>to the practicalities, we must assess the nature andsignificance of participation itself. It has long been one of the key objects of culturalpolicy: accord<strong>in</strong>g to the United Nations Declaration of Cultural Rights, Covenant 15, itis a fundamental human right and encompasses all those activities which open culture to asmany people as possible. In a democratic society, culture should belong to everybody, notjust to a social elite or a circle of specialists, and the division between those who make itand those who use it should be elim<strong>in</strong>ated.Participation is a means of assert<strong>in</strong>g and enjoy<strong>in</strong>g one’s membership of an identifiablecommunity. We usually do this through cultural means – that is:‘through the use of coded, expressive modes of behaviour or communication,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g language, dress, traditional k<strong>in</strong>ship patterns, <strong>in</strong>stitutions, religion and the arts... our cultural identity is what makes us feel we belong, <strong>in</strong> a deep and permanent way,to a group, a community.’ 4In this sense, membership of a choral society, danc<strong>in</strong>g with one’s coevals at a party ors<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a local production of a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta are not only examples ofartistic enterprise, but can be a way of show<strong>in</strong>g one’s loyalty to one’s village,neighbourhood or town.In fact, most music by far is used <strong>in</strong> social con<strong>text</strong>s from which it ga<strong>in</strong>s much of its forceand mean<strong>in</strong>g. It is heard at private ceremonies such as funerals as well as at officialoccasions such as coronations or the State Open<strong>in</strong>g of Parliament. It is an importantdimension of socialised leisure. National anthems are not the only mechanism fordeploy<strong>in</strong>g music as political rhetoric. The churches long ago made sure the Devil did nothave all the best tunes. The history of twentieth-century popular music is evidence (apartfrom anyth<strong>in</strong>g else) of its capacity to assert class discrim<strong>in</strong>ations – whether it is Coward’scamp celebration of middle-class tastes and values, the breakthrough of the lower middleclasses <strong>in</strong> the songs of the Beatles or the traditional work<strong>in</strong>g-class vigour of Do<strong>in</strong>g theLambeth Walk and (follow<strong>in</strong>g the discovery of Torremol<strong>in</strong>os) Viva España. In many cases,people make music alone or with others and do not def<strong>in</strong>e themselves as semi-detachedaudiences with noth<strong>in</strong>g to do except listen. Rhythm and melody are a familiar method ofresolv<strong>in</strong>g emotional conflicts and encourag<strong>in</strong>g social bond<strong>in</strong>g; a song sung togetherenables those tak<strong>in</strong>g part to feel that they are engag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a common experience and, forthe time be<strong>in</strong>g at least, the outcome is goodwill and solidarity. This is the endur<strong>in</strong>g secretof Scout Jamborees.4 In from the Marg<strong>in</strong>s,A contribution to thedebate on Culture andDevelopment <strong>in</strong> Europe,(Strasbourg, Council ofEurope, 1996).If we turn from social to personal responses, memory adds accretions of significance tofavourite tunes. Dur<strong>in</strong>g and after the war, the BBC understood very well that certa<strong>in</strong>tunes were a life-sav<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>e thrown across the airwaves to men <strong>in</strong> the armed forces whohad been torn from their homes and loved ones. This was the function of the BBC’s TwoWay Family Favourites. Desert Island Discs is an even longer-runn<strong>in</strong>g radio programmewhich allows celebrities to tell their autobiographies <strong>in</strong> musical terms; a melody can be asevocative as a photograph, perhaps more so, <strong>in</strong> summon<strong>in</strong>g up the past as a liv<strong>in</strong>gexperience. Long-dead events are preserved <strong>in</strong> melodic amber.


22 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONIt may be countered that none of this has anyth<strong>in</strong>g to do with music itself, for <strong>in</strong> suchcases it is rather like the bell Pavlov’s dogs learnt to identify with the arrival of their food.The bell can make any sound it likes without affect<strong>in</strong>g this process. But this hardlymatters, for the fact rema<strong>in</strong>s that for many people music is used as a storage depot ofemotion, for their feel<strong>in</strong>gs of <strong>in</strong>dividual or community identity. To push it to one side isto refuse to accept how human be<strong>in</strong>gs behave. It is on this primary perception that thecase for promot<strong>in</strong>g participation largely rests.Chang<strong>in</strong>g valuesAt this po<strong>in</strong>t we encounter a difficulty. The dizzy<strong>in</strong>g progress of social change <strong>in</strong> thiscentury means that we are obliged to discard at least some of our old ideas of communityand to adopt a new and different notion of participation. By this I mean that the relativelystable, geographically-def<strong>in</strong>ed communities of our grandparents’ day bulk less large <strong>in</strong>people’s m<strong>in</strong>ds and emotions than they did. Also, advances <strong>in</strong> communications technologyand retail production and market<strong>in</strong>g have created ways of engag<strong>in</strong>g creatively with one’senvironment and customis<strong>in</strong>g it to one’s needs.The s<strong>in</strong>gle most important social trend s<strong>in</strong>ce the Second World War has been a grow<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>dividualisation and a correspond<strong>in</strong>g weaken<strong>in</strong>g of social structures, controls and values.It has been echoed by the logic of market liberalism (succ<strong>in</strong>ctly expressed by MrsThatcher when she was quoted as claim<strong>in</strong>g: ‘There is no such th<strong>in</strong>g as society’). Relationsbetween the generations have been chang<strong>in</strong>g. Generational hierarchies have beenchallenged and youth culture has become an essential component of popular culture, itsdynamics governed by adaptability to cont<strong>in</strong>ually shift<strong>in</strong>g social and technological con<strong>text</strong>s(which young people learn as readily from the mass media as from the formal educationsystem). Sexual behaviour has been transformed as part of a general liberalisation of moralattitudes and the traditional nuclear family has become less common. More people livealone, marry or cohabit later <strong>in</strong> life, live <strong>in</strong> one-parent households, divorce or arevoluntarily childless couples.This general move towards <strong>in</strong>dividualisation is ubiquitous and it is hard to imag<strong>in</strong>e itgo<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to reverse. It is embodied <strong>in</strong> the grow<strong>in</strong>g range of consumer products, thecustomisation of various goods and the <strong>in</strong>creased personal use of the car for all k<strong>in</strong>ds ofspecialised leisure activities. In mass enterta<strong>in</strong>ment and communications, equipment isbecom<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dependent of fixed <strong>in</strong>frastructures (for <strong>in</strong>stance, the Walkman, the mobiletelephone and the portable computer). Popular culture is packaged so that it can beaccessed whenever it is wanted and for more or less any length of time. Consumerelectronics <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly feature <strong>in</strong>teractivity – a technical development expected to expand<strong>in</strong> future years. Not unnaturally, lifestyles are becom<strong>in</strong>g more and more diverse. As arecent European survey po<strong>in</strong>ts out: ‘People’s timetables are now an à la carte menu ratherthan the old, familial and collective table d’hôte.’ 55 Ibid, p.130.6 Roberts, Kenneth,Contemporary Society andthe Growth of Leisure,(London, Longman,1978).The growth of the leisure <strong>in</strong>dustries has reflected the new <strong>in</strong>dividualism. In the 1960sand 1970s sociologists announced that a post-<strong>in</strong>dustrial age of leisure was approach<strong>in</strong>g.The number of hours worked was decl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, as was the work ethic, def<strong>in</strong>ed as ‘asystem of values <strong>in</strong> which work is def<strong>in</strong>ed as <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sically virtuous ... and whichrequires that other spheres of life be subord<strong>in</strong>ated to its demands’. 6 Th<strong>in</strong>gs did notquite turn out as expected, with escalat<strong>in</strong>g unemployment and, for many of thoselucky enough to have jobs, <strong>in</strong>creased work<strong>in</strong>g hours. However, public policies for sportand recreation, parks, countryside, tourism, heritage, arts and enterta<strong>in</strong>ment were


JOINING IN 23established alongside a burgeon<strong>in</strong>g commercial leisure sector, much of it <strong>in</strong>ternational<strong>in</strong> its scope.These developments, comb<strong>in</strong>ed with ris<strong>in</strong>g affluence, job mobility and greater opportunitiesfor travel, have had a major impact on people’s lives. When at home, we are well equippedto amuse ourselves and our liv<strong>in</strong>g rooms, stocked with television, VCR and stereoequipment, have become electronic arts centres. While read<strong>in</strong>g rema<strong>in</strong>s popular, habits arechang<strong>in</strong>g, with younger age groups depend<strong>in</strong>g less on the written word. Emerg<strong>in</strong>g worldmusics and rock and pop are as fashionable as ever, underp<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g a boom <strong>in</strong> radio listen<strong>in</strong>g,music videos and attendance at live music events. While c<strong>in</strong>ema attendances have fluctuated<strong>in</strong> recent decades, go<strong>in</strong>g to the movies rema<strong>in</strong>s the most popular form of cultural activityoutside the home. User-friendly museums and galleries are enjoy<strong>in</strong>g a renaissance. Holidaysform a large part of people’s expenditure across most social classes, although the poorestmembers of the population still cannot afford extended breaks.The picture I am draw<strong>in</strong>g is of a society of <strong>in</strong>dividuals who def<strong>in</strong>e their lifestyles anddemonstrate their values by choos<strong>in</strong>g from a wide range of cultural goods and servicesand, <strong>in</strong> the arts, a kaleidoscope of images and sounds. The speculations of post-modernismare relevant <strong>in</strong> this con<strong>text</strong>. They propose a moral relativism to accompany thediscredit<strong>in</strong>g of old certa<strong>in</strong>ties and all-embrac<strong>in</strong>g rational explanations (‘grand narratives’).As the Council of Europe report on culture and development remarks, this goes hand <strong>in</strong>hand with a new (but often playful) prom<strong>in</strong>ence for the arts:‘Post-modernist commentators have po<strong>in</strong>ted to an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> culture <strong>in</strong>general (design and aesthetics, heritage culture) and urban culture <strong>in</strong> particular(prestigious architecture, local vernacular styles, cosmopolitan diversity, urbansociability). A remarkable example of this was the dom<strong>in</strong>ance of rock and pop <strong>in</strong>youth culture from the 1960s to the 1980s, not simply as art, but as a way of life. Allof this, it is plausibly argued, marks a move away from the Modernist past, with itsemphasis on universalis<strong>in</strong>g rationality, standardised functionality and <strong>in</strong>strumentalism;its notion of a planned society; its fixed aesthetic, ethnic and national hierarchies andits neglect of everyday life, tradition, morality and the particular. Instead, post-modernculture has embraced simulation, spectacle, pastiche and stylistic bricolage. The resulthas been a wider acceptance of, and aesthetic <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>, popular enterta<strong>in</strong>ments,advertis<strong>in</strong>g, electronic and commercial culture, ethnic cultural expressions andvernacular cultural forms. This has been taken to the po<strong>in</strong>t where the kitsch and thebanal have become the (sometimes ironic and playful) object of aesthetic display.Hierarchies of value, <strong>in</strong> sum, have become fluid and contested.’ 77 In from the Marg<strong>in</strong>s,op cit, p.135.In this con<strong>text</strong>, it is as well to note the chang<strong>in</strong>g nature of contemporary retailconsumption. A traditional view has been that this is a wasteful and passive process:consumers are the dupes of manufacturers and the mechanisms of advertis<strong>in</strong>g and market<strong>in</strong>g,and they accept without question the values which are implicit <strong>in</strong> the packag<strong>in</strong>g and sale ofproducts. In recent years researchers have shown that this is not actually how people behave<strong>in</strong> the marketplace. Countless retail outlets, sell<strong>in</strong>g cloth<strong>in</strong>g or furniture or food or <strong>in</strong>teriordesign, reflect vary<strong>in</strong>g lifestyles <strong>in</strong> what they sell. People understand the messages they arereceiv<strong>in</strong>g when they buy goods or services, but do not necessarily accept them. Rather,they put their ‘symbolic creativity’ to the service of their own wishes and <strong>in</strong> so do<strong>in</strong>g signaltheir membership of subcultures to which they may belong or their view of society andestablished values. Thus the old, autocratic seasonal hierarchies of the fashion <strong>in</strong>dustry havebeen subverted by the uses to which young consumers have made of the second-handclothes market and the way <strong>in</strong> which they alter and customise.


24 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONWhat is true of fashion can be applied to other forms of consumption. So, for example,the record<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustry has brought with<strong>in</strong> most people’s reach a library of classical andpop music of every period, enabl<strong>in</strong>g them to assert a personal eclecticism which conflictswith the commercial imperative of the fashion of the moment. Satellite television andvideo have made available the same opportunities <strong>in</strong> the case of feature films andtelevision programmes. Audiences for mass culture are not uniformly uncritical, but rather<strong>in</strong>teract with what they see and hear – judg<strong>in</strong>g, assess<strong>in</strong>g and rework<strong>in</strong>g products to suitthe construction of their own lives. Consumers are now <strong>in</strong> a position, by select<strong>in</strong>g from awide range of products, to devise their own cultures and to determ<strong>in</strong>e (<strong>in</strong> E M Forster’sphrase) their particular ‘angle to the universe’.As the communications technologies converge (broadcast<strong>in</strong>g, narrowcast<strong>in</strong>g, telephony,sound and video record<strong>in</strong>g and publication), the potential for <strong>in</strong>teraction andcustomisation is grow<strong>in</strong>g. The Internet, which enables millions of <strong>in</strong>dividual owners ofcomputers to communicate with one another (free for the first time <strong>in</strong> history from statesurveillance or <strong>in</strong>tervention), is the latest ref<strong>in</strong>ement of a completely new, non-social formof participation.The Japanese <strong>in</strong>vention of the karaoke bar, where customers s<strong>in</strong>g to recorded music, is notonly a remarkable <strong>in</strong>novation <strong>in</strong> itself, but can stand as an image of the new world I havebeen sketch<strong>in</strong>g. Individuals gather together as groups of like-m<strong>in</strong>ded people rather than asmembers of socially representative communities. They consume popular music not bylisten<strong>in</strong>g to it or by creat<strong>in</strong>g it, but by collaborat<strong>in</strong>g with and modify<strong>in</strong>g it.George Odam draws an <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g comparison between disco danc<strong>in</strong>g and countrydanc<strong>in</strong>g which illustrates the impact of the social changes I have been describ<strong>in</strong>g:‘The collective nature of modern disco danc<strong>in</strong>g is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g s<strong>in</strong>ce it is undoubtedlycollective, but the action for any one participant is entirely <strong>in</strong>dividual. In suchdanc<strong>in</strong>g we enact the problems we f<strong>in</strong>d of liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly dense worldpopulation as members of a society which becomes <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly <strong>in</strong>dividualistic as itgets more crowded.’ 8What conclusions can we draw from this analysis? The first th<strong>in</strong>g is to be clear why weshould argue for the importance of engagement <strong>in</strong> live activity. Many people still live <strong>in</strong>and are loyal to geographical communities – for example, the Highlands of Scotland orthe Welsh valleys; 98% of those liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the Rhondda Valley were born there.Nevertheless, it would seem that for most of us this is chang<strong>in</strong>g. When we ‘share’ or‘partake’ with others, it is often to meet those of our own age or tastes or type rather thanto place ourselves <strong>in</strong> a microcosm which mirrors a larger stable and ordered society anddef<strong>in</strong>es our place <strong>in</strong> it. We will see later <strong>in</strong> this book that this will entail a redef<strong>in</strong>ition ofterms such as ‘community arts’ and ‘community music’ and their replacement by the moreflexible notion of ‘participation’. Someth<strong>in</strong>g momentous has been lost from the way oursociety works and, unless we believe it is possible to retrieve it (a forlorn hope, surely), wemust come to terms with the situation as it is.Today’s market democracies are moderated by the imperatives of civil society and, <strong>in</strong> thisrespect, participation has a new, highly valuable role to play. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Salvador G<strong>in</strong>er:8 Odam, George, TheSound<strong>in</strong>g Symbol(Cheltenham, StanleyThornes [Publishers]Ltd, 1995) p.86.‘Civil society is an historically evolved sphere of <strong>in</strong>dividual rights, freedoms andvoluntary associations whose politically undisturbed competition with each other <strong>in</strong>the pursuit of their respective private concerns, <strong>in</strong>terests, preferences and <strong>in</strong>tentionsis guaranteed by a public <strong>in</strong>stitution, called the state. Any mature civil society


JOINING IN 25exhibits at least five prom<strong>in</strong>ent dimensions: <strong>in</strong>dividualism, privacy, the market,pluralism and class.’ 9Unfortunately experience tends to show that the state may guarantee, but can alsothreaten, the liberties of its members. Montesquieu considered social cohesion dependedon <strong>in</strong>termediary associations <strong>in</strong> civil society which guarded the <strong>in</strong>dividual from thepotential for states to exhibit despotic tendencies. Nowadays the risk is perhaps that<strong>in</strong>dividuals will withdraw from collective organisation, especially the popular <strong>in</strong>volvementthat is a prerequisite of democratic politics.Citizens who participate <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>termediary associations are help<strong>in</strong>g to create a network ofgroups that can offer a counterbalance to the overween<strong>in</strong>g authority of public <strong>in</strong>stitutions.Often distributors of mutual benefits to their members and sometimes designed to act aspressure groups, they are essential components of civil society precisely because they are<strong>in</strong>dependent. They are not state-<strong>in</strong>spired and are formed by <strong>in</strong>dividuals who share acommon concern and come together to express it. Some of them have charitableobjectives, but their primary purpose is not to serve the public <strong>in</strong>terest directly, but amultiplicity of private concerns. These so-called ‘Third Sector’ organisations range acrossthe full scope of human activity, but cultural and sports groups are among the mostpopular and widespread.So if participation was once understood to be a means by which communities of all k<strong>in</strong>ds(old and new) and their members asserted their shared identity, it is now better seen as amechanism which enables <strong>in</strong>dividuals not merely to pursue shared <strong>in</strong>terests but also toprotect their future freedom to do so. As well as a personal benefit, it br<strong>in</strong>gs anundoubted political advantage.The social uses of musicThat, then, is the case for participation <strong>in</strong> general. What is there to be said aboutparticipation <strong>in</strong> music? Two ma<strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>ts need to be made. The first is that theextraord<strong>in</strong>ary proliferation of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of every k<strong>in</strong>d, which I will be chart<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>future chapters, promises to transform our ideas about the value of music as an art.Further, it promises to challenge the predom<strong>in</strong>ance of Western classical music and of theview of the professional musician and composer as members of a priestly caste, whosetalents are held to transcend the clumsy creativities of ord<strong>in</strong>ary people. Hav<strong>in</strong>g arguedabove that people do <strong>in</strong>deed use music for social reasons, I want now to show that non-European cultures have philosophies of, or grounded attitudes to, music which aresocially – rather than aesthetically – based and that there is a good deal we can learnfrom them.9 G<strong>in</strong>er, Salvador,Civil Society and itsFuture, keynote address,European Round Tableof the CIRCLENetwork, Budapest,March 1994. Cited <strong>in</strong>Trial, Trust andTribulation, ed. AnthonyEveritt, CIRCLEPublication no. 8,Hels<strong>in</strong>ki, Arts Councilof F<strong>in</strong>land, 1996.Secondly, science is beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to justify the high (if somewhat mysterious) importancetraditionally given to music. Indeed, music may pre-date verbal language and its practiceseems to echo back to the prehistoric past of homo sapiens and is implicated <strong>in</strong> the deepwork<strong>in</strong>gs of the bra<strong>in</strong> and mental processes. Educational psychologists are able to showhow music conveys its mean<strong>in</strong>gs and how music-mak<strong>in</strong>g is an essential <strong>in</strong>gredient of selfdevelopment.Once poorly substantiated claims can now be shown to rest on a solidfoundation of observation.One of the endur<strong>in</strong>g features of modernism has been its dissociation of art from thecommunal practices of everyday life. This is not the place for a cultural history of theWest, so it is enough to say here that we stand at the culm<strong>in</strong>ation of a long process of


26 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONaesthetic development whose beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs can be detected <strong>in</strong> the Renaissance, but whichmatured after the French and Industrial Revolutions. They <strong>in</strong>itiated a breakdown of socialhierarchy as well as of secular scepticism, <strong>in</strong>dividualism and the specialisation of the meansof production. Artists began to see themselves as estranged from ord<strong>in</strong>ary values and bymeans of superhuman talent offered quasi-magical access to unexplored realms oftranscendent feel<strong>in</strong>g.Post-Baroque music, like the other perform<strong>in</strong>g arts, began to be appreciated for its ownsake and withdrew from the church, the marketplace and the banquet<strong>in</strong>g chamber <strong>in</strong>tospecially designed, extra-social spaces, the concert hall and the darkened theatre. AsChristopher Small po<strong>in</strong>ts out:‘The music of this tradition is essentially without function ... There is no feel<strong>in</strong>g that aparticular music belongs exclusively to a certa<strong>in</strong> time, season or sett<strong>in</strong>g: masses,coronation anthems and requiems are commonly presented <strong>in</strong>discrim<strong>in</strong>ately for ourappreciation <strong>in</strong> concert halls without any feel<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>in</strong>appropriateness. Thedevelopment of records and radio have enhanced this tendency, mak<strong>in</strong>g all musicavailable at all times and <strong>in</strong> all places (one wonders whether a culture which was asmuch concerned, as many are, with the fitness of a particular music to a specific timeor place would have developed record<strong>in</strong>g techniques at all). The listener’s experienceof music is essentially private: the structure and seat<strong>in</strong>g arrangement of a concert hallor opera house does not facilitate communal <strong>in</strong>teraction any more than does that ofthe conventional classroom.’ 10The evolution of an efficient means of notat<strong>in</strong>g pitch and rhythm (largely complete by theearly Renaissance) liberated musicians <strong>in</strong> two far-reach<strong>in</strong>g ways. One was to enable themto create ‘music’ away from any music-mak<strong>in</strong>g source – direct from bra<strong>in</strong> to paper – andhave it, like a pre-cooked frozen meal, reconstituted at any convenient time or place byplayers and s<strong>in</strong>gers suitably tra<strong>in</strong>ed to decode the signs. The second enabled the‘composer’ (for it was now possible to def<strong>in</strong>e the act of composition quite separately fromthe act of play<strong>in</strong>g or s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g) to plan and organise sonorities on paper <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>glycomplex patterns of harmony and orchestration. By the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century, the isolationof the composer had become not just a matter of convenience, but a crucial factor <strong>in</strong>def<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the status of a creator of music. And as composers produced ever moresophisticated and challeng<strong>in</strong>g written-out scores, players were obliged to address thesechallenges with more <strong>in</strong>tensive and effective tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. Others came to spectate,appreciat<strong>in</strong>g not just the subtleties of compositional ref<strong>in</strong>ement but the virtuosity ofperformers who had taken their skills well beyond the atta<strong>in</strong>ment of most ‘amateur’ players.Thus, the musical centre of gravity <strong>in</strong> Europe shifted from a largely improvisational,multi-skilled and multi-purpose activity to one based exclusively on a notion of literacyand <strong>in</strong>tellectual endeavour, rely<strong>in</strong>g not on sounds but on signs written on paper. (Eventoday we unconsciously speak of ‘music’ when referr<strong>in</strong>g to the pr<strong>in</strong>ted notation found <strong>in</strong>books and loose-leaf sheets <strong>in</strong> music shops.) Those who cannot read ‘music’ may well feelstigmatised, <strong>in</strong> the same way as those who cannot read language <strong>text</strong>. Music became aprofession, with all the <strong>in</strong>herent hierarchies of status and skill that professions encourage,and fostered a mixture of respect, awe and mystification among those not <strong>in</strong>ducted <strong>in</strong>to itsarcane ways.10 Small, Christopher,Music-Society-Education(London, John Calder,1977) p.28.While all this was go<strong>in</strong>g on, the everyday, traditional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of ord<strong>in</strong>ary peopledid not disappear – except from view. It cont<strong>in</strong>ued on its way unabated, but became lessand less visible to commentators, critics and historians. It was heard, but not seen.


JOINING IN 27Although, as the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century proceeded, composers found a rich source of musicalideas <strong>in</strong> folk music, it attracted little serious attention <strong>in</strong> and for itself for many years unlesstransformed <strong>in</strong>to high art.It is perhaps no accident that the splendid isolationism of ‘official’ music went hand <strong>in</strong>hand with a lack of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> that of other cultures. More than that, Europeans came toth<strong>in</strong>k that post-Renaissance music was <strong>in</strong>herently superior, be<strong>in</strong>g based on the Westerntonal system which was understood to be derived from nature and represented the truthof harmonics <strong>in</strong> their most remarkable form. A dist<strong>in</strong>guished musical commentator wrote<strong>in</strong> the 1920s that tonal harmony was the musical analogue of perspective, anotherEuropean <strong>in</strong>vention. More recently, the conductor and composer Leonard Bernste<strong>in</strong>argued that there ‘existed a phonology of music which evolves from the universal knownas the harmonic series. And ... there is an equally universal musical syntax.’It is true that the harmonic series is a universal based on <strong>in</strong>variant acoustic phenomena, asphilosophers <strong>in</strong> ancient Greece realised when they found that pitch <strong>in</strong>tervals conformed tomathematical pr<strong>in</strong>ciples. But this is not to claim, as some have, that the harmonic series isthe unconscious foundation of Western harmony and the tonal system. Assertions of thisk<strong>in</strong>d seem designed to justify the global spread of European and American musics,someth<strong>in</strong>g which has undeniably happened, but is perhaps more readily accounted for asthe unsurpris<strong>in</strong>g concomitant of n<strong>in</strong>eteenth-century imperialism.Jeremy Montagu wrote to Anthony Storr:‘What puzzles me, about the <strong>in</strong>fluence of Pythagoras etc. is how small a part of theworld’s population produces music which is recognisably related to the harmonicseries. We do <strong>in</strong> Europe today <strong>in</strong> our art music (a lot of folk music doesn’t), and sothey do <strong>in</strong> India, and that’s about it. Even the African areas which use the musicalbow (and therefore use harmonics <strong>in</strong> their music) use different <strong>in</strong>tervals when s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g.Even the ancient Greeks used some very odd <strong>in</strong>tervals <strong>in</strong>deed <strong>in</strong> their music.’ 11The view of Western superiority was important if the project to set music apart <strong>in</strong> anelevated sphere of its own was to be ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed. Despite its pretension to universality, it isno more than two or three centuries old and bears little relation to other musical genreswhich Europeans played and enjoyed throughout its history and, of course, still do.The paradox of empire is that although one of its purposes is to export one’s own cultureto prov<strong>in</strong>ces and colonies, the traffic is not all one-way. Towards the end of the lastcentury the sounds of other cultures made themselves heard <strong>in</strong> Europe. Composers beganto reth<strong>in</strong>k their positions. The gamelan arrived as early as 1889, at the Paris WorldExhibition, and made a considerable impression on Debussy who heard <strong>in</strong> it ‘the eternalrhythm of the sea, the w<strong>in</strong>d among the leaves and <strong>in</strong> the thousand sounds of nature whichthey understand without consult<strong>in</strong>g any arbitrary thesis’. 1211 Cited <strong>in</strong> Storr,Anthony, Music and theM<strong>in</strong>d (London,HarperColl<strong>in</strong>s, 1993)p.62.12 Cited <strong>in</strong>Lockspeiser, Edward,Debussy: His Life andM<strong>in</strong>d, vol 1 (London,Cassell, 1962) p.115.Post-war immigration <strong>in</strong>to Brita<strong>in</strong> has re<strong>in</strong>forced the impression that, for all the grandeurand beauty of the classical tradition, its successes have been purchased at a high price.Christopher Small remarks:‘We may be reluctant to th<strong>in</strong>k of our musical life, with its great symphony orchestras,its Bach, its Beethoven, its mighty concert halls and opera houses, as <strong>in</strong> any wayimpoverished, and yet we must admit that we have noth<strong>in</strong>g to compare with therhythmic sophistication of Indian, or what we are <strong>in</strong>cl<strong>in</strong>ed to dismiss as “primitive”African music, that our ears are deaf to the subtleties of pitch <strong>in</strong>flection of Indian ragaor Byzant<strong>in</strong>e church music, that the cultivation of bel canto as the ideal of the s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g


28 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONvoice has shut us off from all but a very small part of the human voice’s soundpossibilities or expressive potential, such as are part of the everyday resources of aBalkan folk s<strong>in</strong>ger or an Eskimo, and that the smooth mellifluous sound of theromantic symphony drowns out the fasc<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g buzzes and distortions cultivated alikeby African and medieval European musicians.’ 13Small was writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the 1970s and, although there are still those who take theEurocentric view he is attack<strong>in</strong>g, the phenomenal popularity of world musics is evidencethat <strong>in</strong> recent years British musical taste has become much more multiculturally catholicthan it used to be.Just as important as the sheer otherness of other musics is the way they lock <strong>in</strong>to theircultures like the match<strong>in</strong>g teeth of a zip. In Bali, a territory with a great music tradition, itis odd to f<strong>in</strong>d that the <strong>in</strong>habitants have no word for music. The closest they can get to itsmean<strong>in</strong>g is a concern to ‘do th<strong>in</strong>gs as well as possible’. It m<strong>in</strong>gles <strong>in</strong>extricably with villagerituals, <strong>in</strong>numerable temple festivals, night-long music-dramas featur<strong>in</strong>g shadow puppetsor live actors, all k<strong>in</strong>ds of ceremonial both public and private.Among the many cultures of Africa, as <strong>in</strong> Bali, music is <strong>in</strong>terfused with the patterns ofdaily life. While it is often presented as enterta<strong>in</strong>ment with expert and professionalperformers, their relation to their audiences is quite different from that <strong>in</strong> the West. Incontrast to the silent detachment to which we are used when attend<strong>in</strong>g a performance oforchestral music, where a cough is an anarchistic act, there are usually opportunities forparticipation; danc<strong>in</strong>g, clapp<strong>in</strong>g and choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g. People react loudly and actively towhat they are hear<strong>in</strong>g, for a performance is (among other th<strong>in</strong>gs) a means of social<strong>in</strong>teraction. There are work songs, cradle songs, songs which form part of royal rituals or<strong>in</strong>itiation ceremonies, even songs which are a medium for the exchange of gossip or news.Others address religious or philosophical themes, and various trades or occupations havetheir own forms of musical expression.To expla<strong>in</strong> the power of music we are no longer forced to rely exclusively on its formalstructural properties and its character (that is, whether it is active or passive, heavy orlight, happy or sad). We can add all the various mean<strong>in</strong>gs that flow from its manydifferent purposes and uses. One of the difficulties with classical music, set apart as it is <strong>in</strong>its transcendental ghetto, is that theorists are able to offer only a partial account and haveto ‘talk up’ the impact of musical events <strong>in</strong> ways that are rem<strong>in</strong>iscent rather of religiousfaith than of rational discourse.Nevertheless, one has to accept evidence from music-lovers that it is possible to beprofoundly moved by a Mozart symphony for what the sounds <strong>in</strong> themselves seem toconvey without the apparent <strong>in</strong>tervention of memory or communal togetherness. This isnot to contradict what I have just said about social con<strong>text</strong>, but to suggest that what maybe happen<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the bra<strong>in</strong> complements or runs alongside what is happen<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the world.The discoveries of science13 Small, Christopher,op cit, p.1.Scientific <strong>in</strong>vestigations <strong>in</strong>to the work<strong>in</strong>gs of the bra<strong>in</strong> show how deeply rooted music is<strong>in</strong> our genetic and neural make-up. Through a tragic irony, it was the bra<strong>in</strong> damagesuffered by the composer Maurice Ravel <strong>in</strong> a car accident that first led researchers tosuppose that different parts or systems of the bra<strong>in</strong> might be charged with differentfunctions and (so to speak) to re-<strong>in</strong>vent phrenology, this time on a scientific basis. Thebra<strong>in</strong> has developed <strong>in</strong> stages throughout evolution; the oldest layer is the bra<strong>in</strong> stem


JOINING IN 29which emerges from the top of the sp<strong>in</strong>e and orig<strong>in</strong>ally evolved from reptiles. It managesour basic functions. The bra<strong>in</strong> stem is surrounded by the limbic system which is the seatof emotions. Above this lies the cerebral cortex which handles higher cognitive and motorfunctions of a specifically human k<strong>in</strong>d – consciousness, morality, speech. It appears thatthe rhythms and formal behavioural patterns we associate with music can be traced backto the reptilian stem. As Paul Robertson puts it, ‘one substratum of musical languageworks at this primitive, structured, unconscious and unemotional level’. 14The cerebral cortex is divided <strong>in</strong>to two parts, the left and right hemispheres. The leftconcerns itself with rational analysis, sequential logic and verbal language. It is where weth<strong>in</strong>k. The right hemisphere is the seat of the emotions and of spatial awareness; it allowsus to endow our perceptions with mean<strong>in</strong>g. Also, it is here that music is registered andenjoyed.In a tell<strong>in</strong>g study, Professor Just<strong>in</strong>e Sergeant of McGill University <strong>in</strong> Toronto bra<strong>in</strong>scanned10 musicians while they engag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a series of keyboard and sight-read<strong>in</strong>g tests.The bra<strong>in</strong> areas responsible for skilled movement of the f<strong>in</strong>gers showed up dur<strong>in</strong>g thescan. But the scan also demonstrated the existence of a neural network concernedexclusively with the appreciation of musical sounds. This was stimulated when themusicians were listen<strong>in</strong>g to or play<strong>in</strong>g music (<strong>in</strong> this case, Bach’s Partita BWV 767), butnot when they were listen<strong>in</strong>g to or play<strong>in</strong>g scales. 15It would seem that we are programmed to appreciate harmonious sounds and to respondnegatively to discord. A recent experiment at Harvard tested the hypothesis of an <strong>in</strong>natebias favour<strong>in</strong>g consonance over dissonance: a sample of 32 <strong>in</strong>fants was presented with twoshort unfamiliar melodies <strong>in</strong> a consonant and a dissonant version. They lookedsignificantly longer at the music source and showed less motor activity when hear<strong>in</strong>g theformer than the latter. The researchers <strong>in</strong>terpreted their f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs as tend<strong>in</strong>g to show that‘the human <strong>in</strong>fant may possess a biological preparedness that makes consonanceperceptually more attractive than dissonance’. 1614 Robertson, Paul,Music and the M<strong>in</strong>d(London, Channel 4Television, 1996) p.17.15 See Wrathall, C,‘M<strong>in</strong>d over greymatter’, <strong>in</strong> BBC MusicMagaz<strong>in</strong>e, November1992.16 Zentner, Marcel R,and Kagan, Jerome,Department ofPsychology, HarvardUniversity, ‘Perceptionof music by <strong>in</strong>fants’,correspondence <strong>in</strong>Nature, 383,5 September 1996.17 Robertson, Paul,op cit, pp.9,10.Some psychologists, not<strong>in</strong>g that we can hear sound when <strong>in</strong> the womb and that it is, <strong>in</strong>fact, the foetus’s prime sensory stimulus, have argued that very young babies display asophisticated ability to recognise musical structures, which may be related to their sensitiveresponse to the tone of voices, especially that of their mother. At this very early stage,<strong>in</strong>tonations of voice and music appear to resemble each other. No wonder that it isbeg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to be recognised that musical experience <strong>in</strong> childhood has long-last<strong>in</strong>g effects; itis now recognised that the right temporal lobe of the bra<strong>in</strong> apparently conta<strong>in</strong>s a completerecord of all the music heard between the ages of about eight and 11 years.Paul Robertson reports on the work of Mireille Besson of the Cognitive NeuroscienceLaboratory at Marseille, who has been measur<strong>in</strong>g the electrical activity of the bra<strong>in</strong> whenit hears a wrong note. The bra<strong>in</strong> is a creature of habit and primes itself to anticipateevents; when meet<strong>in</strong>g a discrepancy, it reacts sharply. Besson shows that these reactionsare shared equally by tra<strong>in</strong>ed musicians and non-musicians:‘The real significance of these studies seems to be that we are all wired to be“musical”, <strong>in</strong> the sense that all of us implicitly understand the clichés of familiar tonalmelodies. Professional tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g does not create or <strong>in</strong>crease our musicality ... Music thenrelies on <strong>in</strong>herent neurological responses that we all have.’ 17Another extraord<strong>in</strong>ary cha<strong>in</strong> of research po<strong>in</strong>ts to a l<strong>in</strong>k between music and abstractthought, echo<strong>in</strong>g the Platonic view that all mathematical truths f<strong>in</strong>d expression <strong>in</strong> the


30 THE CASE FOR PARTICIPATIONphenomenal world. Look<strong>in</strong>g for an algorithm to describe how neurones triggerconnections <strong>in</strong> the bra<strong>in</strong>, a researcher produced a visual computer pr<strong>in</strong>t-out of neuronesfir<strong>in</strong>g; these patterns were then converted <strong>in</strong>to sound and, to the general surprise, soundeddist<strong>in</strong>ctly like tonal music. This suggested a further experiment to see if listen<strong>in</strong>g to musicimproved performance <strong>in</strong> solv<strong>in</strong>g abstract reason<strong>in</strong>g tasks. The results were positive. PaulRobertson aga<strong>in</strong>:‘The ability to recognise patterns requires both memory and access to manysubconscious neurological bra<strong>in</strong> pathways and biological systems. Our ability torecognise patterns and imag<strong>in</strong>e them modified by action is the essence of spatialimag<strong>in</strong>ation and the key to human ascendancy. Music calls on all these functions.’In short, ‘science is tell<strong>in</strong>g us that to be human is to be <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sically musical’. 18The worlds of medic<strong>in</strong>e and educational psychology have long argued that there is apowerful l<strong>in</strong>k between music and other forms of human behaviour or experience. Musichas been used as an aid to heal<strong>in</strong>g and the reduction of anxiety and pa<strong>in</strong>. It is closelyassociated with movement and forms of collective action. Movement learn<strong>in</strong>g isfundamentally important to humans and the development of sophisticated thoughtprocesses appears to emerge only through the mediation of movement. Movementlearn<strong>in</strong>g is an <strong>in</strong>gredient of the early years of school<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> most if not all cultures; aschildren develop, movement is a useful re<strong>in</strong>forcement of the learn<strong>in</strong>g process. The<strong>in</strong>terrelationship between the ear and bodily function is close and underp<strong>in</strong>s the claims forthe unique part which music education can play <strong>in</strong> schools.Dr Frank R Wilson of the University of California writes:‘A strong case can be made for the <strong>in</strong>clusion of music <strong>in</strong> any general curriculumbecause of some special features of the human bra<strong>in</strong> and the muscular system to whichit is bonded. Like all mov<strong>in</strong>g creatures, we have a central nervous system that regulatesthe body <strong>in</strong> its <strong>in</strong>teractions with the outside world. Because we are primates – that is,mammals who walk upright – our upper limbs are not used to support our bodyweight aga<strong>in</strong>st gravity ... we f<strong>in</strong>d an enormous elaboration <strong>in</strong> the bra<strong>in</strong> of a motorcontrol system that seems dedicated to permitt<strong>in</strong>g extraord<strong>in</strong>ary ref<strong>in</strong>ement ofmovement of our upper limbs. We also have the gift of exceptional control of themuscles of the face and oral cavity, and the bra<strong>in</strong> mechanisms for controll<strong>in</strong>g themuscles just as precisely as we control those of the upper limbs. What makes us special<strong>in</strong> the biological sense, <strong>in</strong> other words, is the unique control we have of our upperlimbs and vocal apparatus, and the l<strong>in</strong>kage of these capabilities to a strong urge tocommunicate to ourselves and to others around us.’ 1918 Ibid, p.19.19 Wilson, F R,‘Music as basicschool<strong>in</strong>g for the bra<strong>in</strong>’,cited <strong>in</strong> Odam, George,op cit, p.17.20 Frigyes, Sándor,Musical Education <strong>in</strong>Hungary (Budapest,Corv<strong>in</strong>a Press, 1996)p.145ff.These physiological and neural accounts, which have emerged <strong>in</strong> the last couple ofdecades, tend to confirm the well-established f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs of educationists. As long ago as the1960s, a ground-break<strong>in</strong>g study of musical education <strong>in</strong> Hungary demonstrated that theacademic record of children attend<strong>in</strong>g music primary schools was much better than that ofthose attend<strong>in</strong>g ord<strong>in</strong>ary primary schools. 20 Children tra<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g differed fromuntra<strong>in</strong>ed children of the same age <strong>in</strong> their physical development and breath<strong>in</strong>g andmental and physical co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation (that is, <strong>in</strong> activity of the cerebral cortex). Theyshowed an <strong>in</strong>creased capacity to memorise, to develop their reason<strong>in</strong>g capacity andemotional range and to engage <strong>in</strong> active social participation. If, as seems reasonable, weextrapolate from these f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs and apply them to the population at large, we can say withreasonable confidence that mak<strong>in</strong>g music is a way of exercis<strong>in</strong>g the complete personality.


JOINING IN 3121 See Edwards, Rob,New Scientist, 18 May1996.These f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs have been broadly confirmed by an important recent study. 21 A survey of1,200 children <strong>in</strong> Switzerland found that those who were given extra music lessonsperformed better than those who were not. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to one of the researchers, MariaSpychiger at the University of Fribourg, music can have a positive <strong>in</strong>fluence on theemotions and on co-operative behaviour. ‘When children play or s<strong>in</strong>g together, they haveto listen to one another. Compet<strong>in</strong>g behaviour is not compatible with mak<strong>in</strong>g music.’ Nodifferences were found <strong>in</strong> the <strong>in</strong>telligence of children <strong>in</strong> the two groups, but the childrengiven extra music lessons were better at languages and no worse at mathematics, althoughthey had received fewer lessons <strong>in</strong> those subjects. They showed improvements <strong>in</strong> theirability to retell <strong>in</strong> writ<strong>in</strong>g or pictures a story that had been read to them and also learnt toread more easily. There was much less social tension <strong>in</strong> the classes that had been taughtmore music.All this scientific research has yielded enough <strong>in</strong>formation about the psychology and theneurology of musical response to provide useful guidance for policy-makers. It is surelytime for the relevant government departments and the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system to opensystematic channels of communication with the scientific community. Also, scientistswould be well advised to seek ways of express<strong>in</strong>g research <strong>in</strong> non-technical terms for thebenefit of all those concerned <strong>in</strong> the development of participatory musics, both <strong>in</strong>education and <strong>in</strong> the music world. Interest<strong>in</strong>gly, follow<strong>in</strong>g the success of Paul Robertson’stelevision series Music and the M<strong>in</strong>d, first shown on Channel 4 <strong>in</strong> 1996, the MusicResearch Institute has been formed with just such an objective <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d: its aims are toserve as a focal po<strong>in</strong>t for research and to dissem<strong>in</strong>ate <strong>in</strong>formation on the subject.In summary, then, participation <strong>in</strong> music is rather more than simply the ‘right to have ago’. Some quite specific claims can be made. It is a means by which a social animal is ablenot simply to socialise at leisure, but to embody its sense of shared community <strong>in</strong> publicceremony. Furthermore, the <strong>in</strong>stitutional <strong>in</strong>frastructure which enables music-mak<strong>in</strong>g totake place – the clubs, societies and associations – makes a significant contribution to thecontemporary polity and is a valuable support for the ma<strong>in</strong>tenance of a thriv<strong>in</strong>g andbalanced civil society. This is of particular importance <strong>in</strong> an age of <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>dividualisation where the stable, geographical communities of the past are giv<strong>in</strong>g way toprovisional, multi-level and changeable group<strong>in</strong>gs.Individualisation has been accompanied by technological advance and old forms ofparticipation are now compet<strong>in</strong>g with new. Active engagement with the imagery andsounds of electronic communications no longer calls for the liv<strong>in</strong>g presence of otherpeople. Collectivity can be virtual. This state of affairs offers dazzl<strong>in</strong>g and universalopportunities for cultural <strong>in</strong>volvement and creative expression. But there is a downside.The widespread popularity of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the traditional manner among all sectors ofthe population suggests that many feel the need to balance the potentially solipsistic powerof the new media with real shar<strong>in</strong>g by real people <strong>in</strong> real space.Cultural participation of any k<strong>in</strong>d is acknowledged as a basic human right. Butparticipation <strong>in</strong> music stands <strong>in</strong> a class of its own: it should not be ranked alongside (say)horse-rac<strong>in</strong>g or b<strong>in</strong>go; scientific and educational research has made it clear that it speaks tohuman be<strong>in</strong>gs’ profoundest impulses; more than words, it is the very language of thebra<strong>in</strong>, the seat of <strong>in</strong>tellect, emotion and the control of physical behaviour. It is theaesthetic analogue of the electrochemical fir<strong>in</strong>gs of millions of neurones <strong>in</strong>side our skulls.


photo: Matthew Bentley-Walls


2 THE MUSIC-MAKERS


34 THE MUSIC-MAKERSThe English may not like music – but they absolutely love the noise it makes.SIR THOMAS BEECHAMThe hills are alive with the sound of musicWith the songs they have sungFor a thousand years.OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN, THE SOUND OF MUSIC1 This section is<strong>in</strong>debted to R Nettel’sfasc<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g Music <strong>in</strong> theFive Towns 1840-1914,A Study of the SocialInfluence of Music <strong>in</strong> anIndustrial District,(London, OxfordUniversity Press, 1944).Aland without music? Hardly. Whatever truth there may once have been <strong>in</strong> the oldslur, the reverse is the case today. The United K<strong>in</strong>gdom is shak<strong>in</strong>g with sound.The broadcast<strong>in</strong>g and record<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustries are cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g their long expansion.The last 50 years have seen a growth <strong>in</strong> orchestral music, ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed by a subsidy regimewhich, although ungenerous by some European comparisons, has super<strong>in</strong>tended a rise <strong>in</strong>both audiences and standards. Opera cont<strong>in</strong>ues to boom.But professional music is only the tip of an iceberg. What lies below the waves is evenmore extensive, if largely uncharted. Done for love rather than money, for sheer delight,amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of all k<strong>in</strong>ds is hugely popular and <strong>in</strong> recent years some genres havetaken on a new lease of life. Community music, ill-regarded and poorly funded, hasdeveloped its own dist<strong>in</strong>ctive modes of practice (<strong>in</strong>fluenced by, and <strong>in</strong>teract<strong>in</strong>g with,developments <strong>in</strong> music education theory). The recently <strong>in</strong>troduced music curriculum <strong>in</strong>schools has – at least <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple – broadened the scope of educational opportunity for all.This is a considerable success story, but much of what has been achieved has been pushed alongaga<strong>in</strong>st the odds. The fund<strong>in</strong>g system is unfairly skewed <strong>in</strong> favour of professional classical musicand aga<strong>in</strong>st amateur and community-based work. Failures <strong>in</strong> teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g are threaten<strong>in</strong>g thefuture of music <strong>in</strong> schools. There is evidence that community-based practice is hampered by lackof cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> its work and limp evaluation. Music development has grown like Topsy andmany observers believe there is trouble ahead if policy-makers do not abandon their thoroughlyBritish tendency to muddle through <strong>in</strong> favour of a comprehensive and <strong>in</strong>tegrated strategy.This strategy should have at its heart an acknowledgment of the mean<strong>in</strong>g that mak<strong>in</strong>g andlisten<strong>in</strong>g to music have <strong>in</strong> most people’s lives. It should be citizen-based rather than artistbased,not only for democratic reasons but also because the creative impulse stretches farbeyond the narrow scope of professional practice.In this chapter, I will be div<strong>in</strong>g below the surface of the water to survey the full extent ofthe iceberg. I will be look<strong>in</strong>g at general trends and national movements. But participatorymusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g is by its nature local and specific. It is what our friends and neighbours do,not the metropolitan talents whom we hear so much of <strong>in</strong> the media. We tend to callthem, a little patronis<strong>in</strong>gly, ord<strong>in</strong>ary people; but they are do<strong>in</strong>g extraord<strong>in</strong>ary th<strong>in</strong>gs.Statistics and facts do not do full justice to that extraord<strong>in</strong>ar<strong>in</strong>ess. So I will beg<strong>in</strong> by tell<strong>in</strong>g thestory of what has happened, and is still happen<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> one particular place. I have chosen thePottery Towns because the history of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g there has been recorded <strong>in</strong> two separate<strong>text</strong>s – the first an account of the emergence of choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century andthe second a survey of amateur practice at the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of the 1990s. It is a stirr<strong>in</strong>g tale.Music <strong>in</strong> the Pottery Towns – then and nowThe Pottery towns <strong>in</strong> the middle of the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century were a classic case of <strong>in</strong>dustrialdesolation. 1 They formed a work<strong>in</strong>g-class conurbation, where there were few


JOINING IN 35representatives of the middle or upper classes and few public build<strong>in</strong>gs apart fromchurches, nor many other facilities. There was little <strong>in</strong> the way of musical tradition, asthere was <strong>in</strong> a city such as Birm<strong>in</strong>gham with its choral festivals. The most importantcultural force was Methodism and this led to a strong desire to improve the quality ofcongregational s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g. This <strong>in</strong> turn called for tuition and a method of read<strong>in</strong>g music‘which could be understood by a community conta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, only too often, a largeproportion of members either semi- or wholly illiterate’. 2 The development <strong>in</strong> the middleof the century of the Tonic Sol-fa system of music notation made it possible for two localamateurs, Burslem’s Town Clerk and a pottery manufacturer, to organise s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g classes,junior and adult choirs and competitions. Choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g became extremely popular andthe Burslem Tonic Sol-fa Choir began to w<strong>in</strong> national prizes by the early 1860s. Twentyyears later, ‘the power to s<strong>in</strong>g at sight had become so common as to excite no remark.’ 3When the jubilee of Tonic Sol-fa was celebrated <strong>in</strong> 1891, the Potteries sent a cont<strong>in</strong>gentof 1,000 s<strong>in</strong>gers to a festival <strong>in</strong> London to mark the occasion.These artistic achievements had a considerable social impact:‘A cultural change <strong>in</strong> the social life of the district began to take place, with people atlast be<strong>in</strong>g able to enjoy music such as they had very rare opportunities of hear<strong>in</strong>gpreviously, and secondly, it was discovered by others that voices from this district hada dist<strong>in</strong>ctive natural beauty that came as a pleasant surprise to those who heard themup and down the country, <strong>in</strong> places where the potters soon went to engage <strong>in</strong> musicalcompetitions ... Even more important than the appreciation of music critics was thesocial change that had <strong>in</strong> a few years taken place <strong>in</strong> an obviously backward district.’ 4Arnold Bennett, whose Clayhanger novels are a fictional chronicle of the Pottery towns,noticed what was go<strong>in</strong>g on and wrote of choirs ‘which sang at d<strong>in</strong>ners, free-and-easies,concerts, and Mart<strong>in</strong>mas tea-meet<strong>in</strong>gs. They sang for the glory, and when there was nodemand for their services, they sang to themselves for the sake of s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g.’ 5By the 1880s a powerful personality had emerged, James Garner, who further developedchoral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and whose choir, the Hanley Glee and Madrigal Society, acquired anational reputation. When he died <strong>in</strong> 1905, 15,000 attended his funeral. He was evidentlyan <strong>in</strong>spired, if strict, teacher. Describ<strong>in</strong>g this early version of ‘workshop practice’, he said:‘In deal<strong>in</strong>g with masses of tra<strong>in</strong>ed and untra<strong>in</strong>ed voices I have found it of the utmostimportance to check <strong>in</strong>attention from the outset. I do everyth<strong>in</strong>g to make mychoralists earnest. When I face them I let them know that if the music is unfamiliar tothem it is not so to me; that I know what is wanted. Such preparation, I f<strong>in</strong>d, has areflex action. S<strong>in</strong>gers become anxious to reach my standard, however high it may be.’ 62 Nettel, R, op cit,p.9.3 Ibid, p9.4 Ibid, pp.9,10.5 Cited <strong>in</strong> ibid, p.10.6 Ibid, p.17.Choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g at this time reflected Nonconformist popular taste and was little <strong>in</strong>fluencedby educated op<strong>in</strong>ion or metropolitan musical fashion. It was a respectable alternative totheatre and music hall. Choirs tended to progress artistically <strong>in</strong> three stages;unaccompanied part-songs, cantatas and, f<strong>in</strong>ally, oratorios. Cut off from rural life, menlike Garner enjoyed the Elizabethan composers and religious or moral ballads, but hadlittle or no time for folk music.In the 1890s a new figure arrived on the scene – Charles Sw<strong>in</strong>nerton Heap, a composer,organist, pianist and festival organiser, who had studied at Leipzig and Cambridge and wasactive <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham and the Midlands. A concert hall was built <strong>in</strong> Hanley andSw<strong>in</strong>nerton Heap was charged with the establishment of a regular festival along the l<strong>in</strong>esof the Three Choirs Festival at Worcester, Hereford and Gloucester. N<strong>in</strong>e local choral


36 THE MUSIC-MAKERSsocieties were brought together to form the North Staffordshire Festival Choir. It was adecisive move away from the competitive festival, dependent on the exist<strong>in</strong>g repertoire,towards major musical events featur<strong>in</strong>g new compositions.In 1896 Elgar conducted at Hanley the first performance of his oratorio, K<strong>in</strong>g Olaf. ThePottery towns were now on the map. Other premieres followed (among them,Coleridge-Taylor’s The Death of M<strong>in</strong>nehaha). Great artists made their way to Hanley –Madame Patti, Clara Butt, Paderewski and Hans Richter with the Hallé Orchestra andmany others. Sw<strong>in</strong>nerton Heap died <strong>in</strong> 1900 and with him the triennial festivals, but thel<strong>in</strong>k with contemporary composers, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Havergal Brian, Delius and, <strong>in</strong> particular,Elgar, rema<strong>in</strong>ed.Elgar brought the North Staffordshire District Choir to London for the English premiereof The Dream of Gerontius and was a frequent visitor to the Potteries for performances ofhis choral works. His last appearance was <strong>in</strong> 1932. After the Great War much was alteredand, although the choirs cont<strong>in</strong>ued, the great days of national celebrity were over. Thefailure of the Potteries to create a professional orchestra was a limit<strong>in</strong>g factor, but musicaland popular cultural taste had shifted too, and few composers cont<strong>in</strong>ued to writeoratorios.But <strong>in</strong> its time the choral movement <strong>in</strong> the Potteries was a remarkable example of thecom<strong>in</strong>g together of social and artistic imperatives. It orig<strong>in</strong>ated <strong>in</strong> deprivation and was theautonomous cultural expression of a community’s sense of a new identity. As it grew <strong>in</strong>authority and reputation it made a direct contribution to the development ofcontemporary music. Its historian, R Nettel, summed up its contribution:‘Our n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century choirs arose out of a natural urge for some means ofexpression denied to men <strong>in</strong> the lives they were lead<strong>in</strong>g, and not because people ofsuperior learn<strong>in</strong>g fired the workers with enthusiasm for a new art-form. The madrigalwas a product of Tudor society, folk songs were a product of rural society, sea-songsof the comradeship of the fo’c’sle, and the modern choral society of the gregariousexistence of the victims of n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century <strong>in</strong>dustrialism.’ 7A hundred years have passed s<strong>in</strong>ce the musical heyday of the Potteries. What is thesituation today? To what extent have old traditions survived <strong>in</strong> one form or another, andto what extent have new ones been founded? In the Policy Studies Institute’s survey ofamateur arts and crafts <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom published <strong>in</strong> 1991, the results of a reviewof provision <strong>in</strong> Stoke-on-Trent and Newcastle-under-Lyme are described at some length.It gives an account of how matters stood at the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of the present decade. 87 Ibid, p.110.8 Hutch<strong>in</strong>son, Robert,and Feist, Andrew,Amateur Arts <strong>in</strong> the UK(London, Policy StudiesInstitute, 1991) pp.200-210.Throughout the twentieth century <strong>in</strong>dustrialisation has cont<strong>in</strong>ued to be the dom<strong>in</strong>antfeature, for both good and ill, of life <strong>in</strong> the Potteries, which still suffer from be<strong>in</strong>g roughlyequidistant between the great urban centres of Manchester and Birm<strong>in</strong>gham and havenever been able to rival their economic and cultural <strong>in</strong>fluence. They were hard hit by thepost-war decl<strong>in</strong>e of Brita<strong>in</strong>’s manufactur<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustries. The closure of the Shelton Barsteelworks, angrily mourned <strong>in</strong> a famous documentary drama devised by Peter Cheesemanfor the local Victoria Theatre, was a major blow. Although the 1986 National GardenFestival, on the site of the steelworks, attracted more than two million visitors and helpedto stimulate new developments <strong>in</strong> retail<strong>in</strong>g and other services, Stoke was not accordedassisted area status and, <strong>in</strong> consequence, the process of reclaim<strong>in</strong>g derelict <strong>in</strong>dustrial areashas taken longer to accomplish than <strong>in</strong> many other parts of the country.Unsurpris<strong>in</strong>gly, perhaps, the area has never been noted for its enthusiasm for the arts and,


JOINING IN 37apart from a new museum and a purpose-built home for the regional theatre company,the New Vic, there has not been the level of capital development seen <strong>in</strong> cities such asBirm<strong>in</strong>gham or Nott<strong>in</strong>gham.Nevertheless, musical life <strong>in</strong> Stoke and its environs is lively and substantial. Althoughmany perform<strong>in</strong>g and music groups were founded after 1970, organisations such as theNorth Staffs Operatic Society and the North Staffordshire Symphony Orchestra, whichwere founded <strong>in</strong> 1892 and 1904 respectively, ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> a l<strong>in</strong>k with the past and the worldof Elgar and Sw<strong>in</strong>nerton Heap. The operatic society ‘completely runs the theatre’ when itputs on productions at the Queen’s Theatre, Burslem. Although audiences had decl<strong>in</strong>edfrom an average of 15,000 to 20,000 per show on the 1970s, the Society’s performancesstill attracted between 10,000 and 12,000 fifteen years later. The orchestra’s aims are ‘togive local amateur <strong>in</strong>strumentalists the opportunity to perform orchestral music to thehighest possible standards’.At the time of the survey there were four amateur orchestras <strong>in</strong> all, and a w<strong>in</strong>d band.Eight choirs carried on the great tradition <strong>in</strong>itiated by James Garner. It is estimated that <strong>in</strong>Stoke and Newcastle choral and orchestral performances attracted about 30,000attendances a year and about 60,000 watched 60-odd operatic and light operaticperformances. Three brass bands are also recorded and four folk music and dance groups.There were eight festivals and carnivals.Two <strong>in</strong>stitutions exist today which make significant cultural <strong>in</strong>terventions and whosesupport would have made all the difference to the Victorian pioneers had they been onthe scene <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century. The Staffordshire County Music Department is avigorous part of the local education authority and, before the full impact of thegovernment’s education reforms was felt, 10,000 Staffordshire children were learn<strong>in</strong>g toplay a musical <strong>in</strong>strument (then a free service with<strong>in</strong> school hours). Outside hours, about3,000 schoolchildren were regularly <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> bands, choirs and orchestras. TheUniversity of Keele has its own Keele Philharmonic Society, whose aim is to ‘provide thebest amateur music available ... we do use professionals when the requirements andstandards of the works performed demand it.’The University also adds to the local stock of young people and the Potteries boast aconsiderable amount of popular musical activity – jazz, rock and so forth. The reportidentified 20 rock bands, 13 rhythm and blues bands, 20 <strong>in</strong>die/pop bands, 14 jazz bands,19 punk and thrash, two soul, one reggae, two dance and four folk bands <strong>in</strong> Stoke andNewcastle. Ensembles of this k<strong>in</strong>d come and go and musical fashions change, but somelocal enquiries leave me with the impression that, although the balance of genres haschanged <strong>in</strong> favour of rhythm and blues and <strong>in</strong>die, the overall level of activity has notsubstantially changed. The Potteries have even made a marg<strong>in</strong>al contribution to thenational pop scene, for one member of Take That and another from Guns and Roseshave Stoke associations.It is hard to be anyth<strong>in</strong>g but impressed by this portrait of busy creativity. Both for varietyand quantity, the present compares very well with the past, even if today’s Elgars andBeechams no longer beat their way to the Potteries. The forefathers of today’s localmusicians built well, but their successors have added their own extensions to the orig<strong>in</strong>aledifice and designed rooms and spaces of their own. This brief musical history of the FiveTowns suggests that participatory music <strong>in</strong> this country is as bustl<strong>in</strong>g and variegated as ithas ever been.


38 THE MUSIC-MAKERSParticipatory music todayNow it will be hard to make much sense of the world of participatory music unless were-exam<strong>in</strong>e the value we place on the terms ‘amateur’ and ‘professional’. On the face ofit, both of them are neutrally descriptive, whereas <strong>in</strong> truth they are value-loaded. An easyway of demonstrat<strong>in</strong>g this is to add ‘-ism’ to each of them. ‘Amateurism’ evokes dabbl<strong>in</strong>g,the cultivation of a pastime, shambolic go<strong>in</strong>gs-on <strong>in</strong> village halls. ‘Professionalism’ signifiesmembership of a tra<strong>in</strong>ed and exclusive elite of dedicated specialists who (as my dictionarysays) have raised their ‘trade to the dignity of a learned profession’.There is no doubt that the dist<strong>in</strong>ction is real. It is perhaps no accident that the terms werefirst recorded <strong>in</strong> the middle of the eighteenth century when the impact of <strong>in</strong>dustrialisationled to a growth of work specialisation and the <strong>in</strong>vention of the concept of unpaid leisure asan antithesis to paid labour. They are also associated with a cont<strong>in</strong>ual rise <strong>in</strong> the status of artand those who produce it; the Romantic idea of the genius with unique <strong>in</strong>sight <strong>in</strong>to thenature of th<strong>in</strong>gs underp<strong>in</strong>s the economics of professionalism. The genius had an equivalent<strong>in</strong> the <strong>in</strong>terpretative arts of the musician, dancer or actor; this was the prodigy, oftendiscovered <strong>in</strong> childhood, who might not be as creatively <strong>in</strong>ventive as the composer orplaywright, but whose technical virtuosity was so extraord<strong>in</strong>ary as to seem almost magical.Although artists have made a liv<strong>in</strong>g from their work throughout recorded history, thesewere novel attitudes. Until about 300 years ago, the difference between full-time andpart-time creative practice was one of circumstance and economic or social class ratherthan of seriousness of <strong>in</strong>tention or talent. The boundaries between art as art for its ownsake and art as craft either did not exist or, where they did, were blurred and ambiguous.But, at the same time and paradoxically, the dist<strong>in</strong>ction is also unreal. Throughout thetwentieth century composers worked with amateurs and drew much from folk musictraditions. In the last 20 years or so, the establishment of non-European communities has<strong>in</strong>troduced musics for which professionalism and amateurism are irrelevant and mislead<strong>in</strong>gconcepts. The resurgence of traditional musics has brought back to the fore a k<strong>in</strong>d ofmusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g where participation is as important as technical virtuosity, where there islittle dist<strong>in</strong>ction between composer and player and where mean<strong>in</strong>g emerges from socialcon<strong>text</strong> and use. Specialisation has also been challenged <strong>in</strong> the field of mass popular music,where the separated skills of composer, lyricist and player <strong>in</strong> T<strong>in</strong> Pan Alley music havegiven way to a comb<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of talents <strong>in</strong> much of the best rock and pop music. Thedevelopment of community music and new th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> formal education haveencouraged classical musicians and composers to work <strong>in</strong> more open and collaborativeways. All over the country there is an active class of local musician who straddles amateurand professional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g.At this po<strong>in</strong>t it may be useful to exam<strong>in</strong>e the relationship between community andamateur arts. This is more easily said than done. A few years ago an attempt at a def<strong>in</strong>itionwas made by the National Enquiry <strong>in</strong>to Arts and Community:9 Cited <strong>in</strong> A CreativeFuture: the way forwardfor the arts, crafts andmedia <strong>in</strong> England(London, Arts Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, 1991)p.84.‘Amateur arts is primarily the practice of the arts for its own sake. Communityorientedarts is arts with additional social purposes. These <strong>in</strong>clude personaldevelopment and social cohesion; express<strong>in</strong>g or re-<strong>in</strong>terpret<strong>in</strong>g cultural, religious orethnic affiliations; articulat<strong>in</strong>g feel<strong>in</strong>gs about social issues or local problems; andstimulat<strong>in</strong>g or contribut<strong>in</strong>g to local action, democracy and change.’ 9This formulation does not survive close scrut<strong>in</strong>y. Much amateur work (one th<strong>in</strong>ks of brassbands <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, or ex-m<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, villages) is evidently concerned with the expression of


JOINING IN 39<strong>in</strong>dividual creativity and social <strong>in</strong>volvement. Likewise many amateurs who are tak<strong>in</strong>g part<strong>in</strong> the remarkable revival of traditional Gaelic musics are do<strong>in</strong>g so at least <strong>in</strong> part becauseit enables them to express their feel<strong>in</strong>gs about social development and democratic change.The best that can be said is that most, but not all, amateur activity emerges spontaneouslyfrom local communities or groups of enthusiasts and that most, but not all, communityarts are the result of external <strong>in</strong>tervention by professional artists. In other words amateurmusic is usually demand-led, and community music supply-led.So while it is still legitimate to speak of amateurs and professionals (whether conventionalperformers or community musicians), they <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly occupy a broad <strong>in</strong>teractivespectrum of practice. It is important not to see this development as some k<strong>in</strong>d ofrevolutionary <strong>in</strong>novation. The habit of collaboration never died out completely. Theemergence of choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the Victorian age is just one <strong>in</strong>stance of the contributionwhich amateurs made to modern English classical music and, at the same time, illustratesthe part music can play <strong>in</strong> the recovery of community life. The story of the great choirs ofthe Pottery towns exemplifies a wider trend <strong>in</strong> the North of England and Wales amongan urban proletariat uprooted from their rural orig<strong>in</strong>s.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to the Policy Studies Institute 10 there are more than 5,400 amateur musicmak<strong>in</strong>ggroups <strong>in</strong> membership of n<strong>in</strong>e umbrella organisations, with a total <strong>in</strong>dividualmembership of 258,000. There are 240 youth choirs and orchestras with a membership ofmore than 28,000. There are more than 1,700 folk or traditional music and dance clubs orsocieties with a membership of 57,000. There are more than 260 music-promot<strong>in</strong>gsocieties with a membership of 36,000. It was estimated <strong>in</strong> 1991 that 11% of thepopulation took part <strong>in</strong> disco danc<strong>in</strong>g; 5% played a musical <strong>in</strong>strument; 4% were <strong>in</strong>volved<strong>in</strong> ballroom danc<strong>in</strong>g; 2% engaged <strong>in</strong> choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, 2% <strong>in</strong> pop music and 1% <strong>in</strong> orchestralmusic. 11 The National Music Council reports that at least 600,000 people activelyparticipate <strong>in</strong> amateur and voluntary music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. 1210 Op cit, passim.11 Research Surveysof Great Brita<strong>in</strong> Ltd,RSGB Omnibus ArtsSurvey: Report on aSurvey on Arts andCultural Activities <strong>in</strong> GB(London, Arts Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, 1991).12 The Value of Music,National MusicCouncil report <strong>in</strong>to thevalue of the UK music<strong>in</strong>dustry (London,University ofWestm<strong>in</strong>ster, 1996) p.2(summary version).13 Cited <strong>in</strong> a letter tothe author from RogerTaylor, President,InternationalAssociation of MusicLibraries, Archives andDocumentationCentres, 2 January1997.Ensembles, music societies and choirs are largely self-f<strong>in</strong>anc<strong>in</strong>g and depend on support fromtheir local communities. The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system helps with money towards newcommissions. Local authorities and educational establishments have been able to make theirown venues available at subsidised rates, although government pressure to maximisecommercial revenues means that this avenue of support is <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly be<strong>in</strong>g closed off. Theprovision of music materials from libraries is a significant hidden subvention. The value ofmusic supplied by one local authority music library to 12 choral societies for Christmasconcerts alone was calculated recently as over £20,000 (for purchase or hire of pr<strong>in</strong>tedchoral and orchestral music materials had they not been available from library sources). 13Umbrella bodies play a lead<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong> the governance of some, but not all, sectors ofamateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. Pop, rock and Country and Western are barely covered, except <strong>in</strong>Northern Ireland where pop and rock bands are represented by the Federation of MusicCollectives, a North-South venture based <strong>in</strong> Dubl<strong>in</strong>. Perhaps <strong>in</strong> these genres theamateur/professional divide is felt to have less relevance than elsewhere. Some bodies predatethe Second World War – the National Federation of Music Societies (NFMS), theNational Association of Choirs, the National Operatic and Dramatic Association and theBritish Federation of Music Festivals. The British Federation of Brass Bands (BFBB), witha UK remit but an English bias <strong>in</strong> its membership, and the Welsh Amateur MusicFederation (WAMF) were formed <strong>in</strong> the 1960s. In Northern Ireland the Association ofIrish Musical Societies and the Northern Ireland Bands Association represent the <strong>in</strong>terestsof amateur musical and operatic societies and various types of band (flute, silver, pipe,accordion, concert). In the past 20 years a range of new bodies have sprung up such as the


40 THE MUSIC-MAKERSBritish Bluegrass Music Association and the British Association of Barbershop S<strong>in</strong>gers. Theybear witness to <strong>in</strong>creased specialisation and a grow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> the <strong>in</strong>ternationalisation ofmusical forms. The British Association of Symphonic Bands and W<strong>in</strong>d Ensembles(BASBWE) is tangible evidence of the growth of peripatetic music teach<strong>in</strong>g s<strong>in</strong>ce the wartogether with the <strong>in</strong>creased popularity of certa<strong>in</strong> woodw<strong>in</strong>d <strong>in</strong>struments. Even <strong>in</strong>side theamateur world, we f<strong>in</strong>d the usual fund<strong>in</strong>g imbalances: of the pr<strong>in</strong>cipal music bodies, onlyNFMS, WAMF and BASBWE receive regular subsidy from central sources (although BFBBand the Brass Band Heritage Trust received small Arts Council of England (ACE) grants <strong>in</strong>1997 for the first time).Umbrella organisations offer a vary<strong>in</strong>g range of services, such as publications, <strong>in</strong>surance,tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, libraries and the promotion of national events. Three of them also distributegrants; NFMS, which has branches <strong>in</strong> Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Englishregions, WAMF, and the British Federation of Youth Choirs (BFYC). In addition,Enterprise Music Scotland, set up <strong>in</strong> 1992 from a Scottish Arts Council <strong>in</strong>itiative,supports, co-ord<strong>in</strong>ates and develops ‘voluntary music promoters’ through grants and othermeans. The question arises (to be discussed <strong>in</strong> a later chapter) whether this role could beusefully expanded with the arrival of the new National Lottery scheme <strong>in</strong> England,Arts4Everyone, and its counterparts <strong>in</strong> Scotland, New Directions, <strong>in</strong> Wales, Arts for All, and<strong>in</strong> Northern Ireland, Access to the Arts.In 1991 an umbrella association for amateur umbrella organisations, the Voluntary ArtsNetwork (VAN), was founded under the presidency of a former M<strong>in</strong>ister for the Arts, SirRichard Luce. Its orig<strong>in</strong>s lay <strong>in</strong> a letter to The Times <strong>in</strong> 1984 by Sir Ian Hunter,advocat<strong>in</strong>g the establishment of a separate Arts Council for the amateur arts. Tak<strong>in</strong>g theh<strong>in</strong>t, the Carnegie UK Trust convened a conference to discuss the amateur arts scene <strong>in</strong>Brita<strong>in</strong>; a further conference <strong>in</strong> York led to VAN’s creation. Its responsibilities cover allart-forms and it works with about 220 specialist umbrella bodies of which 54 areconcerned with music.The largest and, arguably, the most <strong>in</strong>fluential of the music umbrella bodies is NFMS,which represents the <strong>in</strong>terests of some 1,700 organisations, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g choirs, orchestras andmusic-promot<strong>in</strong>g clubs. Together they present or promote 7,500 concerts each year to anaggregate audience of one and a half million.Music has been someth<strong>in</strong>g of an exception among the amateur art-forms, most of whichstand <strong>in</strong> an uneasy relationship with professional practice.14 Cited <strong>in</strong>Hutch<strong>in</strong>son, Robert,and Feist, Andrew,op cit, p.106.15 F<strong>in</strong>negan, Ruth,The Hidden Musicians,Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> anEnglish Town(Cambridge,Cambridge UniversityPress, 1989).‘Voluntary promoters (music clubs, choirs, s<strong>in</strong>gers, orchestras and <strong>in</strong>strumentalists)provide a lot of employment for professionals; this is particularly valuable for youngcareer musicians ... Amateur musicians also commission and perform works byprofessional composers: without their contribution, it is unlikely that much large-scalechoral music would be written, much less heard. Amateur musicians also make up asignificant proportion of audiences for professionals, and are important consumers forthe music <strong>in</strong>dustry.’ 14In fact, NFMS was founded <strong>in</strong> 1935 because of a concern to further the <strong>in</strong>terests ofprofessional musicians (<strong>in</strong> 1994 its members spent some £5,700,000 on professionalengagements). Although the Musicians’ Union is anxious about the threat posed byamateur perform<strong>in</strong>g groups undercutt<strong>in</strong>g professionals, it is widely accepted that theamateur sector is an <strong>in</strong>formal tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g ground for aspirants to a musical career. RuthF<strong>in</strong>negan claims that ‘professional music feeds directly on local amateur activities andwould be impossible to susta<strong>in</strong> without them.’ 15


JOINING IN 41Music societies, choirs, brass bands and festivalsAmateur classical musicians have a somewhat conservative image and are supposed to havelittle <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> play<strong>in</strong>g contemporary works. This reputation is only partly deserved. Thestory of the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth-century Potteries choirs with their enthusiasm for premier<strong>in</strong>goratorios by composers such as Elgar demonstrates a long-stand<strong>in</strong>g commitment to thenew. Today arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies encourage music societies to develop commission<strong>in</strong>gpolicies. It is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g to note that more than 50% of commissions funded by the ArtsCouncil of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau Cymru (ACW/CCC) have been placed by, orwritten to <strong>in</strong>volve, amateur music groups. The NFMS and the brass band movement havebeen commission<strong>in</strong>g new compositions for a number of years.A remarkable new organisation has jo<strong>in</strong>ed them <strong>in</strong> this work. Its orig<strong>in</strong>s lie <strong>in</strong> the EastLondon Late Starters Orchestra (ELLSO) <strong>in</strong> Tower Hamlets, an amateur orchestra with adifference. Founded <strong>in</strong> 1982, it emerged from holiday music courses for Londonschoolchildren managed by Simon Foxley to which parents were also <strong>in</strong>vited. This led toan adult education class which, <strong>in</strong> its turn, led to ELLSO. Membership is open toeveryone who wants to learn to play a str<strong>in</strong>ged <strong>in</strong>strument, regardless of background,education or <strong>in</strong>come. Professional tuition is laid on (<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g an annual residentialweekend) and the music played is scored at different ability levels for each <strong>in</strong>strument.Committed to overcom<strong>in</strong>g the barriers to contemporary music and extend<strong>in</strong>g therepertoire for the amateur orchestra, ELLSO regularly commissions composers andencourages <strong>in</strong>dividuals and groups with<strong>in</strong> ELLSO to write for it. It also works withprofessional orchestral players and ensembles.An ambitious <strong>in</strong>itiative emerged from the orchestra’s 10th birthday celebrations, which, <strong>in</strong>essence, proposed to dissem<strong>in</strong>ate its philosophy of commission<strong>in</strong>g nation-wide. CalledContemporary Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g for Amateurs (with the less than apt acronym, COMA), itsfounder director, Chris Shurety, set out to establish a UK-wide organisation whose centralaim was to make up for a serious deficiency <strong>in</strong> much contemporary music – that it is toodifficult for amateurs to play – by commission<strong>in</strong>g technically accessible music. Its 1994annual report expla<strong>in</strong>s:‘Such works need to be suited to the forces generally available to amateur ensembles.This is not to say we are look<strong>in</strong>g for “easy” music. Rather, we are aim<strong>in</strong>g to generatea repertoire of artistically challeng<strong>in</strong>g music that is consistent with the composer’scurrent artistic aspirations.’ 1616 COMA, AnnualReport 1994, London,p.5.17 Runswick, Daryl,‘Compos<strong>in</strong>g foramateurs is compos<strong>in</strong>gfor musicians’, <strong>in</strong> NewNotes, Society for thePromotion of NewMusic (SPNM) January1997, p.1.COMA was an almost <strong>in</strong>stant success and has 10 regional branches <strong>in</strong> England and one each<strong>in</strong> Scotland, Wales and Ireland. A wide range of composers has become <strong>in</strong>volved. A flavourof COMA’s work can be suggested by two important events <strong>in</strong> 1996: Michael F<strong>in</strong>nissyconducted the COMA Ensemble <strong>in</strong> a performance of his piece, Pla<strong>in</strong> Harmony, at theHuddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, and a key feature of the 1996 annual residentialsummer school was a major project based on John Cage’s Music Circus, which <strong>in</strong>volvedparticipants compos<strong>in</strong>g much of their own material <strong>in</strong>side an overall structure devised byStephen Montague. Daryl Runswick’s reaction to work<strong>in</strong>g with COMA is typical of manycomposers who have had the same opportunity: ‘As a contemporary composer you’venever, ever, felt a buzz like the COMA summer course – 70 avid enthusiasts mak<strong>in</strong>g musicday and night, and not a note of Mozart or any other museum music to be heard.’ 17The situation <strong>in</strong> Wales is generally more favourable to the amateur than that <strong>in</strong> England.As Emyr Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, the Director of ACW/CCC, po<strong>in</strong>ted out <strong>in</strong> 1994:


42 THE MUSIC-MAKERS‘Due to the historical background, ... the emphasis has been far greater on the amateurtradition and the status given to the amateur has been far higher than that given to theamateur <strong>in</strong> other parts of the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom.’ 18WAMF serves over 350 affiliated societies throughout the pr<strong>in</strong>cipality, represent<strong>in</strong>g some25,000 performers. These <strong>in</strong>clude brass bands, choirs, orchestras, amateur operatic societiesand Welsh folk song and dance groups as well as community-based, multicultural andexperimental projects.It might be supposed that most of the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom’s many amateur music clubs andsocieties make or listen to music for the joy of it and have few other motives for theiractivity. There is some truth <strong>in</strong> this, but the situation is chang<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> large part thanks tothe persuasion of NFMS. The Federation understands very well that it is not enough forits members to make or promote good music and sit on their laurels. It observes <strong>in</strong> itsfive-year development plan:‘Perhaps ... the nature of the people we are <strong>in</strong> today’s complex society poses a threat[to the amateur tradition]? The tendency towards <strong>in</strong>dividualism; the sound-bite formof communication; low attention spans; the challenges to the traditional family unit;the chang<strong>in</strong>g nature of employment; careers; retirement – these are all challenges towhat music societies do <strong>in</strong> the community and for the community.’ 19There are two po<strong>in</strong>ts be<strong>in</strong>g made here: firstly, music societies are not simply to be seen asgroups of self-serv<strong>in</strong>g dilettantes but as community resources; and, secondly, to survive <strong>in</strong>today’s chang<strong>in</strong>g world they need to be proactive. The NFMS is encourag<strong>in</strong>g its membersto take their music <strong>in</strong>to the community and to prioritise the <strong>in</strong>volvement of youngpeople. Among the social trends <strong>in</strong>fluenc<strong>in</strong>g the traditional amateur sector, the mostimportant is an age<strong>in</strong>g membership.Research <strong>in</strong>to young people’s attitudes to the arts shows that a disappo<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gly smallpercentage are will<strong>in</strong>g and active participants. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to NFMS:18 Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, Emyr, TheArts <strong>in</strong> a Time ofChange, NationalEisteddfod of Wales,(Llandysul, Dyfed,Gomer Press, 1994)p.6.19 NFMS – Serv<strong>in</strong>gMusic, Five YearDevelopment Plan 1996-2000 (London,National Federation ofMusic Societies, 1996)p.9.20 NFMS, op cit, p.6.21 Harland, John,Hartley, Kate andK<strong>in</strong>der, Kay, Arts <strong>in</strong>their View: A study ofyouth participation <strong>in</strong> thearts (Slough, Berkshire,National <strong>Foundation</strong>for EducationalResearch, 1995).22 Ibid, p.114.‘amateur music, as practised by music societies, is often perceived by those under 30years of age to be a middle-class, middle-aged pastime ... Is it any wonder that youngpeople f<strong>in</strong>d classical music unappeal<strong>in</strong>g when the concept of presentation has notchanged fundamentally s<strong>in</strong>ce the eighteenth century – even professional musicians stillwear n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century concert dress.’ 20Accord<strong>in</strong>g to a study published by the National <strong>Foundation</strong> for Educational Research(NFER), slightly less than a third of young people (def<strong>in</strong>ed as those between the ages of14 and 24) participate <strong>in</strong> an arts activity which they deemed creative and imag<strong>in</strong>ative. Adisproportionately large number come from professional backgrounds and/or are students<strong>in</strong> higher or further education; more females <strong>in</strong>volve themselves <strong>in</strong> the arts than males andfewer members of ethnic m<strong>in</strong>orities. 21Interest<strong>in</strong>gly, of those young people able to offer a clear def<strong>in</strong>ition of the arts, a significantnumber see them <strong>in</strong> a somewhat narrow light:‘Many <strong>in</strong>terviewees rated the “traditional” arts as not important to them, yet expressedan <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> cultural activities which they did not class as “the arts” or even “music”,“drama”, “literature” and so on (eg “I don’t like the arts, but I like Bob Marley”).’ 22Actively engaged <strong>in</strong>, and sometimes even swamped by a ubiquitous ‘common culture’they often cast a cold eye on the high arts, which they feel are not for them.Last year, NFMS and one of its member societies, the Danesborough Chorus,


JOINING IN 43commissioned a small-scale, but suggestive, piece of research on the same theme. 23 Groupdiscussions were held with sixth-form students, young chamber orchestra players,members of an amateur funk/blues band and an amateur brass band. The study found thatfamily encouragement is important <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g musical <strong>in</strong>terest; as a child grows up,music teachers and friends are key motivators (<strong>in</strong> the case of friends, ‘not always becauseof shared musical <strong>in</strong>terests – often it is be<strong>in</strong>g different from peers that counts’).A number of f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs suggest the scale of the challenge confront<strong>in</strong>g music societies. Veryoften young people will attend a concert only if they ‘know one or more of the pieces be<strong>in</strong>gperformed; know somebody who was perform<strong>in</strong>g; accompany family members or friends’. 24Ticket prices can also be a factor, although usually a m<strong>in</strong>or one. A major deterrent for thosestill at school is their lack of <strong>in</strong>dependence, whether f<strong>in</strong>ancially or <strong>in</strong> terms of transport.There was widespread criticism of music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools where, it was felt, only certa<strong>in</strong>forms of music are considered legitimate and of value. Few of those <strong>in</strong>terviewed werefamiliar with choral music and fewer still were likely to attend choral events.Some of the most forward-look<strong>in</strong>g music societies are com<strong>in</strong>g to acknowledge a widerang<strong>in</strong>gcultural role and believe that they should go to considerable lengths to attract the<strong>in</strong>terest of young people. Luton Music Club is an <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g case <strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t. Although thecore of its programme is Western classical chamber and <strong>in</strong>strumental music, a few times ayear they move <strong>in</strong>to other fields, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g traditional and world musics, jazz, early musicand ‘songs from the shows’. The club is tentatively engag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> educational <strong>in</strong>itiatives.Chris Thomas, the secretary, writes:23 Kirkwood, Adrian,Young People and theirApproach to MusicalParticipation: A Study forthe Danesborough Chorusand the NationalFederation of MusicSocieties, funded by a1995 BT InnovationAward, 1996(unpublished).24 Ibid, p.14.25 Cited from a letterto the author fromChris Thomas,Secretary, Luton MusicClub, 30 August 1996.26 NFMS, op cit, p.6.27 Ibid.28 National Federationof Music Societies,Scotland: Four YearPlan, 1997/8, 1998/9,1999/2000, 2000/01(unpublished) p.3.‘We are now arrang<strong>in</strong>g five or six workshops each season, on the afternoon of anormal concert and <strong>in</strong> a selected school ... We have also had children take part <strong>in</strong> aneven<strong>in</strong>g concert by the ensemble Gem<strong>in</strong>i by prepar<strong>in</strong>g Maxwell Davies’ KirkwallShopp<strong>in</strong>g Songs ... The important th<strong>in</strong>g as far as we are concerned is to get the childrento the even<strong>in</strong>g concerts: many of them had never set foot <strong>in</strong> the theatre before letalone been to a live concert. We are not so altruistic that we are content to subsidisethe schools budgets without some sp<strong>in</strong>-off for ourselves – and of course, hopefully, thechildren. We are feel<strong>in</strong>g our way at the moment and build<strong>in</strong>g on experience, but it isan excit<strong>in</strong>g and very reward<strong>in</strong>g new development. It is important enough for us tohave appo<strong>in</strong>ted one of our committee to be Schools Liaison Officer!’ 25Luton’s mix of idealism and calculation is enabl<strong>in</strong>g them to address the uphill task ofrecruit<strong>in</strong>g new and younger members which faces many clubs and societies. Accord<strong>in</strong>g torecent research, 74% of members of societies belong<strong>in</strong>g to NFMS are more than 40 yearsold. 26 Chris Thomas aga<strong>in</strong>:‘The older generations who do patronise us renew themselves: if they didn’t, wewould have all died off years ago! Hav<strong>in</strong>g said all this, it is important to keep try<strong>in</strong>g toimprove the age ratio of one’s audience. We can do this by broaden<strong>in</strong>g the range ofmusic played and by schools liaisons ... but we should go further than that. Too manyclubs present such a fuddy-duddy image through their publicity and concertpresentation (although th<strong>in</strong>gs are improv<strong>in</strong>g slowly, I may say) that it is no wonderyounger people don’t want to attend.’ 27The Scottish branch of NFMS follows the same basic strategy as the headquarters body <strong>in</strong>London, but is less sure of the practicality of develop<strong>in</strong>g education and outreach.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to its five-year plan, the issue is under consideration. Its 1997 annualconference <strong>in</strong>tends to exam<strong>in</strong>e ‘traditional musics with the crossover between classical andtraditional and [the] possibilities it presents to member societies’. 28 Some societies are


44 THE MUSIC-MAKERSengag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> community work; for example, the Strathaven Choral Society set up l<strong>in</strong>kswith local schools and student composers. A presentation of Malcolm Arnold’s Tam o’Shanter was taken to local schools where the society gave some workshops andschoolchildren jo<strong>in</strong>ed the choir for its performance.A glance at the 1996 BT Innovation Award w<strong>in</strong>ners for music societies demonstrates thatthe number of these projects is grow<strong>in</strong>g. Unsurpris<strong>in</strong>gly, Strathaven appears on the list forits plans to <strong>in</strong>volve pupils from six local primary schools <strong>in</strong> a project, Lanarkshire Tapestry,which aims to <strong>in</strong>termix local history, art, creative writ<strong>in</strong>g and musical composition; otherawards went to the Studio Symphony Orchestra for a programme of concerts <strong>in</strong> deprivedurban and rural areas of Northern Ireland, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g two concerts <strong>in</strong> West Belfast oneither side of the religious divide – one on the Shankill Road and the other on the FallsRoad; and to the West Cumberland Choral Society for a proposal to encourage a wideage range of people <strong>in</strong> an isolated part of the country to become <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> the firstperformance of a new piece of music, a work by the Cumbrian composer, Roland Fudge,scored for chorus, children’s chorus and <strong>in</strong>strumentation, and orchestra.One might have thought that the enforced leisure brought about by ris<strong>in</strong>g unemployment<strong>in</strong> many strongly choral areas would have <strong>in</strong>creased participation <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. But,by a strange paradox, the reverse has often been the case. Choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g has beenparticularly badly affected by a lack of <strong>in</strong>terest among school leavers and young adults;participation seems to pick up only among the mid-30 year-olds. This appears to havesome connection with a decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools. A Church of England reportnotes that <strong>in</strong> music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools, as <strong>in</strong> other subjects, ‘the trend has been away fromregimentation towards an <strong>in</strong>dividual approach and small group work.’ 29 (It may be worthnot<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> pass<strong>in</strong>g that there is noth<strong>in</strong>g new under the sun: as long as ago as 1935, themusical establishment was worry<strong>in</strong>g about the predicted demise of choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g.) 30Wales offers a partial exception to the trend. In schools teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Welsh, the choraltradition is vigorous, if patchy. The Urdd Eisteddfod, for example, which <strong>in</strong>volvesthousands of young people <strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and other competitions, works closely with schools(especially Welsh-speak<strong>in</strong>g schools). In 1996 there have been nearly 250 applications tojo<strong>in</strong> the National Youth Choir of Wales – more than double any previous entry. Whileadult male voice choirs are look<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly elderly, there has been a rise <strong>in</strong> thenumber of ‘chamber choirs’ (<strong>in</strong> part, because of unwanted reductions <strong>in</strong> membership, butalso – and more significantly – out of f<strong>in</strong>ancial considerations).29 In Tune withHeaven, The Report ofthe Archbishop’sCommission on ChurchMusic (London, ChurchHouse Publish<strong>in</strong>g andHodder and Stoughton,1992) p.133.30 See Davies,Walford, Master of theK<strong>in</strong>g’s Music, NewsChronicle Book of PartSongs (London, 1935)<strong>in</strong>troduction andpreface.Music has long been an important aspect of organised religion and, despite a generaldecl<strong>in</strong>e of congregations, churches (especially of Nonconformist denom<strong>in</strong>ations) rema<strong>in</strong>centres for participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. So far as the Church of England is concerned, astudy <strong>in</strong> 1991 <strong>in</strong>dicated that nearly two-thirds of churches have a choir and of that numbermore than 70% are <strong>in</strong> urban areas. One-fifth also have their own musical ensembles. Theaverage church music budget is £350 a year. Cathedral choirs are on top form andstandards are very high. In the parishes, the situation is more diverse. They are emerg<strong>in</strong>gfrom a transitional phase where the large traditional choir, representative of the parish as awhole, is often giv<strong>in</strong>g way to ‘worship groups’ where s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g is accompanied by guitar,drum and some orchestral <strong>in</strong>struments and the musical style tends to be a variant on folk.One of the aims of this change was to attract young people to take part. There is nostatistical <strong>in</strong>formation about the Roman Catholic Church, but liturgical reforms whichplace a strong emphasis on the participatory role of the congregation have led to aweaken<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the importance of choirs. Much choral music is disappear<strong>in</strong>g from the‘repertoire’ because its <strong>text</strong>s were written <strong>in</strong> Lat<strong>in</strong> which, s<strong>in</strong>ce the reforms follow<strong>in</strong>g


JOINING IN 45Vatican II, is no longer used <strong>in</strong> church services. In the Free Churches the pattern of chorals<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g is stable and healthy, with an emphasis on congregational s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g with supportfrom <strong>in</strong>struments. It should be noted, of course, that <strong>in</strong> some revivalist congregations blackgospel s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g not only rema<strong>in</strong>s a powerful and essential component of worship, but is alsoan essential feature of the cultural life of the Afro-Caribbean community. Buck<strong>in</strong>g thegeneral rule, many black youngsters still follow the tradition of s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> choirs and laterbranch out <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>dividual musical careers. Gospel music is attract<strong>in</strong>g black audiences toma<strong>in</strong>stream venues, such as the Royal Albert Hall and the South Bank Centre.Another significant factor has been the <strong>in</strong>strumental ‘explosion’ and many young people seechoral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g as less glamorous and challeng<strong>in</strong>g than play<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an ensemble. No doubt thiswas one of the reasons for the Church of England’s encouragement of its worship groups.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to a BFYC survey <strong>in</strong> 1991, 83.9% of children over 12 had no curriculums<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, with fewer than one <strong>in</strong> five schools hav<strong>in</strong>g access to INSET (<strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g)courses <strong>in</strong> choral tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. In primary schools, only one <strong>in</strong> four had any part-s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, withthree-quarters of schools rely<strong>in</strong>g on non-specialist staff to teach music. 31The Church of England report adds:‘Not only do few children enter school with a wide repertoire of nursery and religioussongs learnt at their parents’ knees, but many primary schools lack a full-time specialist... Many teenagers feel embarrassed when asked to s<strong>in</strong>g ... Other than at footballmatches or on coach journeys, people s<strong>in</strong>g less spontaneously than <strong>in</strong> previousgenerations. Even the great tradition of Welsh male-voice s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g has decl<strong>in</strong>ed, withfewer choirs and age<strong>in</strong>g membership.’ 3231 S<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> SchoolsSurvey (Loughborough,British Federation ofYouth choirs, 1991)passim.32 In Tune withHeaven, op cit, p.135.33 Eckste<strong>in</strong>, Jeremy,and Feist, Andrew,Cultural Trends 1991:12,Policy Studies Institute,London, p.35.34 Review of Activities,Welsh Amateur MusicFederation, Cardiff,autumn 1996, p.7.35 NFMS Evidence tothe House ofCommons SelectCommittee for theNational Heritage,November 1995, p.4.(It should be noted thatthese figures excludeyouth choirs.)In 1987, 26% of Welsh choral society members were under the age of 30, 33 but by 1996 thispercentage had fallen to 18.5; 34 it should be added that the trend is most marked <strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>glesexchoirs and that mixed choirs are more successful at ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g a balance among the agegroups. The grey<strong>in</strong>g of choirs has unhelpfully co<strong>in</strong>cided with a decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> choral work withorchestras as a result of <strong>in</strong>adequate subsidies. The number of choral societies able to affordto employ a fully professional orchestra has decreased: a decade ago, for example, the Cityof Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Symphony Orchestra would undertake some 20 choral society engagementseach year, but now it plays for only two. 35 Choirs <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly exploit the availability ofgood amateur and pick up (freelance) orchestras.However, it doesn’t do to be too gloomy. While choirs are hav<strong>in</strong>g to cope with realdifficulties, NFMS reports a positive <strong>in</strong>dicator; its choral membership has risen from 700societies 10 years ago to more than 1,000 today. While this may <strong>in</strong> part be due to theemergence of chamber choirs, to which I referred earlier, and to already established choirsenroll<strong>in</strong>g for the first time, it is good evidence that, for all its difficulties, the choraltradition is more than hold<strong>in</strong>g its own. In Monmouth and Mold, for example, the choirshave recorded large <strong>in</strong>creases <strong>in</strong> membership over the last 10 years; this has been due tothe happy comb<strong>in</strong>ation of the arrival of new conductors and concerted efforts to make thesocieties more ‘user-friendly’. Under the auspices of the BT Innovation Awards, NFMShas sought to address the youth issue by publish<strong>in</strong>g a guide, How to Set up a Youth Choir,which is full of practical tips and advice. The Sa<strong>in</strong>sbury Youth Choir of the Year Awardhas also helped to give youth choirs a higher profile.Brass bands appear to be the one major exception to the age<strong>in</strong>g membership syndrome.Like choirs, their tradition goes back to the Victorian era and they have had to cope withthe challenges of the modern age. They have shown energy and flexibility. This, togetherwith a strong family basis <strong>in</strong> the composition of bands, has meant that most bands have a


46 THE MUSIC-MAKERSwide age range of membership. There is an active youth band presence <strong>in</strong> the UnitedK<strong>in</strong>gdom, with its own national championships and a National Youth Brass Band of GreatBrita<strong>in</strong> (NYBBGB), as well as National Youth Brass Bands <strong>in</strong> Scotland and Wales(NYBBW). A new charity, the Brass Band Heritage Trust, has been set up to advance the<strong>in</strong>terests of youth brass bands and the brass band movement as a whole. It should also berecalled that the Salvation Army, with its extensive music programme and <strong>in</strong>-house musicpublications, places brass band music at the service of religion, as does the Boys’ Brigadewith its bugle bands <strong>in</strong> England and and pipe bands <strong>in</strong> Scotland..As BFBB po<strong>in</strong>ts out:‘somewhere near you can be pretty sure to f<strong>in</strong>d a brass band. Practis<strong>in</strong>g two or threenights a week, giv<strong>in</strong>g occasional concerts and “spots” at local events, tak<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong>regional and even national contests with other bands, <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g teenagers andpensioners, fitters and f<strong>in</strong>ancial analysts, all shar<strong>in</strong>g the same enthusiasm andcommitment to make music.’ 36It is estimated that as many as 60,000 people take an active part <strong>in</strong> the movement.Competition is at the heart of brass band culture, with bands compet<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong>st each otherfor the best performances of ‘test pieces’. Rather like football divisions they belong todifferent sections that <strong>in</strong>dicate their play<strong>in</strong>g quality (and ambitions) and have to qualify forpromotion through the sections. National championships are held annually at the RoyalAlbert Hall and Wembley Conference Centres under the patronage of the musicpublisher, Boosey and Hawkes.The BFBB, represent<strong>in</strong>g over 900 bands, is their national voice (there are also separate brassband associations <strong>in</strong> Wales, Scotland and England); there is a strong competitive element <strong>in</strong>the movement and there are some 80 or more bands l<strong>in</strong>ked to companies or corporatesponsors, of which 20 are, <strong>in</strong> effect, <strong>in</strong> a premier division. There are more than 1,200 socalled‘community’ bands of whom about a third take part <strong>in</strong> competitions. Most of theseare self-f<strong>in</strong>anc<strong>in</strong>g and little or no central or local government fund<strong>in</strong>g f<strong>in</strong>ds its way to them.If one recalls that there were more than 1,700 brass bands <strong>in</strong> 1938, it is clear that themovement has not lost its century-old momentum.36 Blow<strong>in</strong>g (andStrik<strong>in</strong>g) a New Note:a submission by theBritish Federation ofBrass Bands and BrassBand Heritage Trust <strong>in</strong>response to theconsultative GreenPaper on publiclyfunded new music <strong>in</strong>England, May 1996,p.3.37 New LotteryProgrammes: the brassband response, asubmission by theBritish Federation ofBrass Bands <strong>in</strong>association with theBrass Band HeritageTrust to the ArtsCouncil of England’sconsultative document,June 1996, p.8.Just as choirs have suffered, so brass bands have benefited from the development of free<strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools. But with this service now be<strong>in</strong>g reorganised and reduced,BFBB acknowledges that ‘the need for bands to be providers of tuition has once aga<strong>in</strong> arisen ...new <strong>in</strong>itiatives urgently need develop<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g certification for “tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the tra<strong>in</strong>ers”.’ 37Commission<strong>in</strong>g new music has been a feature of brass band practice s<strong>in</strong>ce the 1930s,although this has not been without its critics <strong>in</strong> some quarters. Here there has been somefund<strong>in</strong>g, especially from Regional Arts Boards (RABs), although their Arts Council-<strong>in</strong>spiredpolicies <strong>in</strong> favour of ‘serious’ music have sometimes militated aga<strong>in</strong>st many bands’ demandfor high quality arrangements of popular standards and light music. The NYBBW hascommissioned 15 new works <strong>in</strong> its 15-year history, all with help from ACW/CCC andWAMF. It is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g to note that <strong>in</strong> 1996 the rigorous Society for the Promotion of NewMusic launched a series of brass band events featur<strong>in</strong>g new commissions. In 1995 the OpenBrass Band Championship commissioned Philip Wilby’s Symphony for Double Brass: thecomposer has noted the practical value of new music <strong>in</strong> the con<strong>text</strong> of competitions:‘Clearly the use of new music is both helpful and prestigious for the contest organiser;with unknown music every competitor starts from the same po<strong>in</strong>t. The eyes of themovement are <strong>in</strong>evitably drawn to a w<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g performance of a new work. There are


JOINING IN 47risks, of course, and the controversy which surrounds new scores is often a hard butvital cross to bear for composers and organisers alike.’ 38For all that, there are <strong>in</strong> the brass band movement opponents to commission<strong>in</strong>g. Theirhand is considerably strengthened by arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies’ <strong>in</strong>sistence on <strong>in</strong>novation. Bandsdo not see why music that is new, but not <strong>in</strong> the vanguard of contemporary practice,should often f<strong>in</strong>d itself excluded from subsidy. Not without reason, perhaps; what isaesthetically appropriate <strong>in</strong> the Purcell Room is not necessarily so <strong>in</strong> a Welsh town hall.Brass bands are used to be<strong>in</strong>g self-sufficient and, although many have received support fromthe Arts Councils and English RABs, feel that their work is not always understood and valued(although the picture is chang<strong>in</strong>g rapidly, with nearly 160 Lottery awards worth £6.5 millionhav<strong>in</strong>g gone towards equipment purchase <strong>in</strong> the last couple of years). They raise moneythrough the efforts of ladies’ committees, bus<strong>in</strong>ess sponsors and special fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g events.‘Cultural Services officers of Local Authorities are usually considered unapproachable; theRegional Arts Board mechanisms for commission<strong>in</strong>g might as well be on another planet!’ 39Many bands were associated with m<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and heavy <strong>in</strong>dustry. The closure of m<strong>in</strong>es andthe crisis <strong>in</strong> manufactur<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the 1980s was a serious blow, for local communities wereoften no longer <strong>in</strong> a position to support their bands. In the old days, members of topbands were subsidised by colliery managements, which paid their wages but did notexpect them to go down the pits. There has been an adjustment to new realities. Somebands died, but were soon revived. Local bus<strong>in</strong>ess now helps to fill the f<strong>in</strong>ancial gap andthe membership is not so exclusively work<strong>in</strong>g-class as it used to be. An <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g numberof white-collar workers are jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g up.The movement faces new challenges. Although standards vary, it rema<strong>in</strong>s artisticallyvigorous. However, some observers argue that, as <strong>in</strong> the case of rugby football, the longstand<strong>in</strong>gtradition of proud amateurism will have to give way to a more professionalapproach to management. Top section bands are run by paid adm<strong>in</strong>istrators and it is anopen secret that some of the best players are paid ‘chair fees’ <strong>in</strong> addition to expenses. A newgeneration of young players is emerg<strong>in</strong>g from specialist brass band university courses, butthere is no career structure for them to enter. As the close-knit communities of the<strong>in</strong>dustrial past disappear, brass bands may be able to thrive and develop only if they adoptthe techniques of the marketplace.Competitive festivals have been an important feature of amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g for more than100 years. Although the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of competition <strong>in</strong> the arts is more controversial than it usedto be, they cont<strong>in</strong>ue to thrive. The British Federation of Festivals for Music, Dance andSpeech is the umbrella body for 325 festivals across the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom and <strong>in</strong> Ireland. TheFederation also has overseas l<strong>in</strong>ks <strong>in</strong> Bermuda, Hong Kong, Australia, Canada and Africa. Thefirst records of competition festivals date from 1872, the same decade that saw the birth oforganisations concerned with competitive sports (the Football Association was founded <strong>in</strong>1873, Wimbledon <strong>in</strong> 1877 and Test Matches <strong>in</strong> 1878). The first known festival was theWork<strong>in</strong>gton Festival <strong>in</strong> Cumbria, which is still runn<strong>in</strong>g to this day. As <strong>in</strong> the case of chorals<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the Pottery towns, composers such as Elgar, Holst and Bantock supported thefestival movement and Vaughan Williams founded his own, the Leith Hill Musical Festival.The Federation sees competition not as be<strong>in</strong>g important <strong>in</strong> itself but as a means to theatta<strong>in</strong>ment of high standards:38 Ibid, p.7.39 Ibid, p.8.‘The adjudicator needs to <strong>in</strong>spire greater appreciation of the work be<strong>in</strong>g performedand remarks made <strong>in</strong> public and on the written sheet for each performer, with an


48 THE MUSIC-MAKERS40 The BritishFederation of Festivalsfor Music, Dance andSpeech, an undatedpromotional pamphlet.evaluation of each performance, encourage the development of <strong>in</strong>dividual taste andjudgment <strong>in</strong> the m<strong>in</strong>ds of the hearers. This is the real purpose of the FestivalMovement, and the <strong>in</strong>spiration ga<strong>in</strong>ed from the knowledge and help of skilledadjudicators raises standards <strong>in</strong> amateur work throughout the country.’ 40The Federation also liaises with schools and partnerships have been set up where musicand speech advisers use work performed at festivals as part of the music curriculum.Federation adjudicators have led teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g days and workshop sessions at localfestivals, br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g live performance, appraisal and listen<strong>in</strong>g to primary and junior schoolpupils. More and more festivals are show<strong>in</strong>g an <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> South Asian musics and therehas been a growth <strong>in</strong> facilities for disabled musicians.There are of course many non-competitive festivals – more than 520, accord<strong>in</strong>g toestimates. A remarkable organisation, Music for Youth, provides a framework fornon-competitive festivals and concerts; <strong>in</strong> 1996 more than 41,000 young people applied totake part and the year culm<strong>in</strong>ated with a concert <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g an ‘orchestra’ of2,740 people under Sir Simon Rattle’s baton. The number of festivals doubled <strong>in</strong> the 1980sand perhaps this represents a conscious reaction aga<strong>in</strong>st home-centred cultural consumption.They rely heavily on voluntary support with amateurs and professionals work<strong>in</strong>g together <strong>in</strong>close harmony, and range from those organised entirely by local people to those which areadm<strong>in</strong>istered by paid managements. Nearly 40% of festivals are run exclusively byvolunteers and decide their programmes democratically after extensive consultation.Irene McDonald, former Director of the K<strong>in</strong>g’s Lynn Festival, told me:‘Festivals should be a flower<strong>in</strong>g of what is happen<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an area. At their best, they arethe public appearance of a whole mass of activity that is already go<strong>in</strong>g on. If they don’treflect the aspirations and achievements of local people, the focus of the festival willhave failed.’Festivals are develop<strong>in</strong>g strategies to develop their audience profiles and are <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>glytarget<strong>in</strong>g groups <strong>in</strong> the community – young people, those from disadvantaged socioeconomicclasses and so forth – and often seek to widen their popular appeal throughparticipative programmes of activity. So, for example, the Sidmouth International FolkArts Festival <strong>in</strong>volves more than 4,000 <strong>in</strong> workshops of various k<strong>in</strong>ds.As is the case with music societies, festival organisers are operat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a tough marketplace.Many volunteers would benefit from tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the sett<strong>in</strong>g of effective aims andobjectives; good practice <strong>in</strong> management, fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g and market<strong>in</strong>g; and evaluation andmonitor<strong>in</strong>g skills.A recent attempt to encourage music festivals was the establishment of National Music Day.Inspired by the hugely popular annual Fête de la Musique on Midsummer’s Day <strong>in</strong> France, thethen M<strong>in</strong>ister for the Arts, Tim Renton, and the rock musician, Mick Jagger, launched aBritish equivalent <strong>in</strong> 1992. The concept was to persuade amateur and professional promotersto present musical events <strong>in</strong> a great simultaneous celebration dur<strong>in</strong>g the last weekend <strong>in</strong>June. Specially staged large-scale concerts were mounted to provide a high media profile.On paper the project has been a success; <strong>in</strong> 1996, National Music Day (supported by£140,000 worth of grants <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g £60,000 from the Department of National Heritageand £40,000 from ACE) listed 2,300 events which were attended by an estimated3,700,000 people. Three million copies of the official guide were distributed. However,much of this activity was merely a re-labell<strong>in</strong>g of performances which were go<strong>in</strong>g to takeplace <strong>in</strong> any event and, as the current Chief Executive of what is now called the NationalMusic Festival has observed:


JOINING IN 49‘Whilst f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g favour with a large number of event organisers, many of whom werenovices, the concept failed to capture the imag<strong>in</strong>ation of the professional music<strong>in</strong>dustry, sponsors and the media. The perceived image of the “ – Day” becamegenerally Middle England, Middle of the Road and Middle Aged.’ 41An attempt to create a l<strong>in</strong>k with the Euro 96 football competition failed to make muchheadway.However, despite these difficulties, there was a Festival <strong>in</strong> 1997 (<strong>in</strong> August and pegged to thecelebration of the 50th anniversary of Indian <strong>in</strong>dependence). It would appear that theorganisers have not yet accomplished the feat of transform<strong>in</strong>g a top-down governmental<strong>in</strong>itiative <strong>in</strong>to the genu<strong>in</strong>ely grass-roots jamboree it was planned to be. But, if this can beachieved, there could be a not un-useful role for a yearly celebration of the value of music,and especially one that features participation by amateurs as well as professionals.Non-European M<strong>in</strong>oritiesIt is quite wrong to th<strong>in</strong>k that people from non-European cultures made an appearanceon these shores only after the Second World War. Ever s<strong>in</strong>ce the British became worldtraders and set out on the long enterprise of build<strong>in</strong>g an empire, Africans, Asians andothers came (often <strong>in</strong>voluntarily) and settled here. In ports such as Bristol, Liverpool andLondon small communities established themselves.However, it is only s<strong>in</strong>ce the 1950s that large numbers have migrated to Brita<strong>in</strong>. Theywere an uncovenanted legacy of empire and they brought many cultural gifts with them,although this has only recently begun to be appreciated. The earliest and most spectacularwas the <strong>in</strong>troduction of carnival from the Caribbean islands – a musical holiday of misrule.The Nott<strong>in</strong>g Hill Carnival <strong>in</strong> London emerged spontaneously <strong>in</strong> the 1960s from a con<strong>text</strong>of ethnic discrim<strong>in</strong>ation and race riots as an expression of black consciousness andcelebration. Internally, it survived managerial failure and divisions and, externally, officialneglect and sometimes disapproval to become Europe’s largest street festival. The bands,elaborate floats and colourful costumes are a remarkable expression of collective, (usually)non-professional artistry and attract massive multiracial audiences, which are, <strong>in</strong> fact,almost as much participants as spectators. The example of Nott<strong>in</strong>g Hill has spawnedsmaller carnivals <strong>in</strong> a number of prov<strong>in</strong>cial cities and helped popularise steel pan bands.41 National MusicFestival 96, InterimReport as at 26 June1996, prepared by theChief Executive,Keith R D LowndeFCA (unpublishedreport) p.1.However, carnival aside, there is little evidence among black British citizens of analogues to<strong>in</strong>digenous amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. This is <strong>in</strong> good part a question of visibility rather than ofabsence. A number of musicians are <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> recover<strong>in</strong>g lost traditional or folk musics,but they often operate more by word of mouth than through formal <strong>in</strong>stitutions andestablished promoters. An example of commitment to the practice of black <strong>in</strong>digenousmusic is the Carriacou big drum dance group <strong>in</strong> Huddersfield which has been perform<strong>in</strong>gmusic formats go<strong>in</strong>g back more than 400 years s<strong>in</strong>ce the1950s. The ma<strong>in</strong> reason for this lies<strong>in</strong> the history of twentieth-century American and British popular and religious music. Jazz,pop and rock all owe a great deal to the music of Black Americans and new genres regularlyemerge <strong>in</strong> the United States, the Caribbean or Brita<strong>in</strong> – among them, reggae, rap, hip hopand jungle, whose impact sooner or later reaches beyond young black British people to thewider pop scene. So, <strong>in</strong> an important sense, black musical traditions and contemporary<strong>in</strong>novations are all around <strong>in</strong> ma<strong>in</strong>stream popular culture.One consequence is that much black music operates <strong>in</strong>side the commercial record<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustryand, when it does not, aspires to do so. It is not surpris<strong>in</strong>g, therefore, that public sector fund<strong>in</strong>g


50 THE MUSIC-MAKERShas been th<strong>in</strong> on the ground. The key challenge for young, up-and-com<strong>in</strong>g musicians is toobta<strong>in</strong> commercial recognition or at least to get a first foot on the ladder. It is hard for themto attract the attention of an <strong>in</strong>dustry <strong>in</strong> which black people are seriously under-represented(although there are signs of embarrassed change <strong>in</strong> this respect). Young blacks also suspectdiscrim<strong>in</strong>ation <strong>in</strong> the broadcast media; where white bands get <strong>in</strong>terviews on TV chat shows,black bands may simply be given a play<strong>in</strong>g spot. Unsurpris<strong>in</strong>gly black pirate radio stationsare an important means by which young Afro-Caribbeans can communicate with oneanother and listen to the music they appreciate (garage, drum and bass and the like).Although many millions of people listen to black music, <strong>in</strong>digenous newcomers often starttheir careers <strong>in</strong>side their own communities where the marketplace is, <strong>in</strong> the nature ofth<strong>in</strong>gs, small (the ethnic m<strong>in</strong>ority population <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom is less than 3million), and have a difficult time f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g a commercially substantial audience. KeithHarris, lecturer, former record<strong>in</strong>g company executive and chairman of the Arts CouncilfundedAfrican and Caribbean Music Circuit, told me:‘Many kids take to their bedrooms and make music with digital technology, whichthey play to their friends. The fastest-ris<strong>in</strong>g street music is jungle, but none of themajor record companies have taken it up.’To a certa<strong>in</strong> extent, the lack of a quick l<strong>in</strong>k <strong>in</strong>to commerce has an advantage, <strong>in</strong> that itallows time for musicians to develop their work before it is assimilated. This is because the<strong>in</strong>ternationalism of black popular music makes local or national authenticity problematic.British black music is sometimes seen as derivative of the American scene and success cancome on the other side of the Atlantic before it does <strong>in</strong> this country, even to the po<strong>in</strong>twhere many listeners may mistakenly believe British musicians to be American.However, more basic obstacles stand <strong>in</strong> the way of young black people (more often malethan female). Economic deprivation, poor school<strong>in</strong>g and unemployment mean that theirambitions to enter the music bus<strong>in</strong>ess are seriously hampered by lack of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and basicequipment and facilities. Drum kits, steel pans and guitars are costly enough, but access torecord<strong>in</strong>g studios and rehearsal space are completely beyond most teenagers’ pockets. Anumber of organisations up and down the country, which offer open-access record<strong>in</strong>gstudios targeted at community use, do their best to redress the situation, but they have tostruggle aga<strong>in</strong>st <strong>in</strong>adequate fund<strong>in</strong>g.One example is Raw Material, a community project beh<strong>in</strong>d K<strong>in</strong>gs Cross railway station <strong>in</strong>London, which <strong>in</strong>troduces young black people to new music technologies. It has set itselfsocial objectives to help alienated and unemployed youth <strong>in</strong> the locality, but its chiefattraction to users lies <strong>in</strong> the fact that it offers potential entry <strong>in</strong>to the commercial musicbus<strong>in</strong>ess for ambitious youngsters. Founded <strong>in</strong> 1991 by Tim Brown, who once workedfor the Inner London Education Authority at the Cockpit Theatre, it has no regularsubsidy and has to devote much of its energies to fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g for specific projects. Itprovides access to well equipped studios and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses. It works with, and offersservices to, professional film-makers, community organisations and the like and enablesparticipants to make a wide range of useful contacts.Raw Material is realistic about the difficulties its tra<strong>in</strong>ees will face <strong>in</strong> enter<strong>in</strong>g the musicprofession and mak<strong>in</strong>g it to stardom. It ensures that they have the skills not just to berecord<strong>in</strong>g artists, but to act as DJs, to stage events, run raves, become technicians andmanage sound systems. Emphasis is placed on develop<strong>in</strong>g bus<strong>in</strong>ess expertise.Local authorities and RABs <strong>in</strong> English conurbations support a range of music


JOINING IN 51organisations of various k<strong>in</strong>ds which, with vary<strong>in</strong>g degrees of success, seek to satisfy theneeds of their black communities. Examples <strong>in</strong>clude The Drum <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham; The Niaarts centre <strong>in</strong> Manchester; the Lewisham Music Academy, which, while not specifically ablack project, offers tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities for young non-European musicians; and StMatthew’s Church, the Brixton-based arts centre. St Matthew’s is also the base for an<strong>in</strong>novative project, Digital Diaspora, which produces, promotes, markets and distributesblack culture through the new technologies. It is pilot<strong>in</strong>g an Internet service dedicated toAfro-centric arts and promotes <strong>in</strong>teractive live arts events <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g digital technology.The African and Caribbean Music Circuit, founded by ACE, arranges regular tours.A rich variety of South Asian communities live <strong>in</strong> this country. 42 Whether they areBengali or Gujarati, H<strong>in</strong>di or Muslim, music – often l<strong>in</strong>ked to dance and drama – is animportant aspect of their social and religious lives. Economically more successful thanmany Afro-Caribbeans, they have a larger professional class of doctors, lawyers, teachersand bus<strong>in</strong>essmen. Conscious that their cultures are dist<strong>in</strong>ct from that of the West andcommitted to the extended family as a means of social development, South Asiancommunities tend to be economically self-sufficient and well organised.What has become known as Indian classical music forms the basis of much culturalactivity, although film music is also well-established; <strong>in</strong> recent years new hybrid genressuch as bhangra have emerged. A grow<strong>in</strong>g number of musicians live and work <strong>in</strong> theUnited K<strong>in</strong>gdom, but l<strong>in</strong>ks with the Indian subcont<strong>in</strong>ent rema<strong>in</strong> strong. Many lead<strong>in</strong>gartists tour this country or come over to offer tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to the recently published first edition of the Indian Subcont<strong>in</strong>ent Asian MusicDirectory, about 60 clubs or voluntary associations present or support a range of musics. 43The presence on this list of the Cleveland Society of Indian Doctors is an illustration ofthe organisational <strong>in</strong>put of members of the professional classes. There are more than 10agents, promoters or management companies. South Asian musics also benefit from theactivities of organisations with a broad multicultural remit, such as the School of Orientaland African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London, the Commonwealth Institute,WOMAD, World Circuit Arts and the Asian Music Circuit (founded by ACE).42 ‘South Asian’ canbe taken to refer, <strong>in</strong>geographical terms, toIndia, Pakistan,Bangladesh and SriLanka; however, manySouth Asian peopleliv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the UK didnot come directly fromthe subcont<strong>in</strong>ent, butmigrated from otherparts of Asia or fromAfrica.43 Muir, John, ed, TheIndian Subcont<strong>in</strong>ent AsianMusic Directory (56Longstone Road,Eastbourne, E Sussex,BN21 3JS, 1996).44 Promotional leaflet,The Bhavan Centre(London, Institute ofIndian Art and Culture,1996).A few higher education <strong>in</strong>stitutions offer educational opportunities <strong>in</strong> the field of SouthAsian musics, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Dart<strong>in</strong>gton Arts and International Summer School, GoldsmithsCollege at the University of London, the University of K<strong>in</strong>gston-upon-Thames, City ofLeeds College of Music and the West London Institute of Higher Education. There is alsoa handful of <strong>in</strong>dependent schools or academies, of which the most <strong>in</strong>fluential is theBhavan Centre <strong>in</strong> London.One of an <strong>in</strong>ternational network, it celebrates its 25th anniversary <strong>in</strong> 1998 (and the 60thof the foundation of the first centre <strong>in</strong> India). The Bhavan’s mission is to preserve andstudy the cultural heritage of India; it ‘tries to bridge the gap between the old and thenew as well as between the immigrant and host communities’. 44 When it first opened, itsma<strong>in</strong> emphasis was on yoga tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g with a few music classes on the side. Now it runsthree-year and five-year diploma classes <strong>in</strong> dance and music as well as <strong>in</strong>troductory openclasses. All the major music traditions are represented, together with the ma<strong>in</strong> dance styles<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Bharatanatyam and Kathak. The H<strong>in</strong>di, Gujarati, Tamil, Bengali and Sanskritlanguages are taught. About 800 students are enrolled, of whom 10% are non-Indian.Only a few go on to become professional musicians. Dr M Nandakumara, the Centre’sDirector, told me: ‘Some become teachers or critics. But all of them will have come tounderstand Indian art and will make a good audience for the future.’ The Bhavan attracts


52 THE MUSIC-MAKERS<strong>in</strong>terest and commitment from family groups as well as <strong>in</strong>dividuals and a grow<strong>in</strong>g numberof work<strong>in</strong>g-class South Asian people are becom<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>volved.The Bhavan Centre is an extraord<strong>in</strong>ary national resource, comparatively little knownoutside the communities it primarily serves, but it is less <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> the new <strong>in</strong>novatoryand hybrid musics which many young Asians are develop<strong>in</strong>g than (<strong>in</strong> Dr Nandakumara’swords) ensur<strong>in</strong>g that ‘modern generations, born here, do not lose a feel<strong>in</strong>g for their roots’.South Asian Music Performance and Dance (SAMPAD), a smaller, younger organisationbased at mac (the Midlands Arts Centre) <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham’s Cannon Hill Park, would go alongwith the need to recover one’s roots, but seeks actively to encourage new forms of musicmak<strong>in</strong>gas well. It is a development agency for South Asian arts <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham and the WestMidlands and aims to <strong>in</strong>crease opportunities for appreciation and participation at all levels, aswell as ‘creat<strong>in</strong>g greater cultural empathy locally, nationally and beyond’. Orig<strong>in</strong>allyconcentrat<strong>in</strong>g on music and dance, it has broadened its remit to cover the whole field ofSouth Asian arts – <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g mime, storytell<strong>in</strong>g, theatre, <strong>text</strong>iles, crafts and comb<strong>in</strong>ed artswork. As well as engag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> community projects, it works <strong>in</strong> the formal education sectorand helps schools to deliver the objectives of the national music curriculum.In addition to celebrat<strong>in</strong>g the great traditions of the past, SAMPAD supports arts practice asit changes and develops among communities where new generations of young South Asiansrespond to the experiences of life <strong>in</strong> contemporary Brita<strong>in</strong>. It is a philosophy which NaseemKhan, chair of ADITI (the National Development Agency for Asian Dance), articulated:‘The dist<strong>in</strong>ctive nature of South Asian arts should also be understood. They are<strong>in</strong>formed by a vital but under-regarded groundswell of community-based work,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the popular bhangra and commercial arts. This does not feature on theapproved cultural map.’ 45It ought to do so, because music-mak<strong>in</strong>g among young Asians is a strong and ris<strong>in</strong>g trendthat deserves acknowledgment. It is usually commercially-oriented and blends Western andAsian traditions. Groups play at wedd<strong>in</strong>gs and community occasions. Fusion bands such asFun-de-mental are extremely popular and British bhangra has been exported to India.Many other cultures from across the world, from Vietnam to Eritrea, are represented bysmall settled communities <strong>in</strong> different parts of the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom, but most notably <strong>in</strong>London. To vary<strong>in</strong>g degrees they ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> their sense of cultural identity through thepromotion of arts events, and local authorities give ad hoc support from time to time.45 Summary of Speakersand Discussions, SouthAsian Perform<strong>in</strong>g ArtsConference, promoted bySAMPAD and mac atthe Midlands ArtsCentre, Birm<strong>in</strong>gham(unpublished report,1994).Thus, there are substantial and long-established Ch<strong>in</strong>ese communities, some orig<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>gfrom Hong Kong, <strong>in</strong> London, Manchester and Liverpool, as well as families dispersedthroughout the country, ma<strong>in</strong>ly work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the restaurant and food retail trades. Ch<strong>in</strong>eseNew Year Festivals are familiar features <strong>in</strong> a number of British cities, but there iscomparatively little general awareness of Ch<strong>in</strong>ese culture and limited <strong>in</strong>teraction betweenthe Ch<strong>in</strong>ese and the rest of British society. It was with this <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d that the Ch<strong>in</strong>eseCultural Centre <strong>in</strong> London was established <strong>in</strong> 1986; it organises music and dance events,cultural exhibitions and an annual Ch<strong>in</strong>ese New Year Festival. One of its offshoots is theLondon Ch<strong>in</strong>ese orchestra, the first professional Ch<strong>in</strong>ese music ensemble <strong>in</strong> the UnitedK<strong>in</strong>gdom which seeks not only to popularise Ch<strong>in</strong>ese music but to experiment with newstyles and techniques. S<strong>in</strong>ce 1987 it has commissioned a number of new and arrangedworks and as well as present<strong>in</strong>g concerts, at a range of venues <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the Purcell Roomand the Queen Elizabeth Hall at the South Bank Centre, organises workshops andoutreach activities.


JOINING IN 53Jazz, rock and popJazz is a participatory musical form par excellence, because improvisation lies at its heart. Theterm encompasses a very wide range of practice and jazz techniques have <strong>in</strong>fluenced anumber of other genres, from folk to classical. They have extended the range of the trumpet,trombone and saxophone and composers or arrangers customarily write trumpet parts anoctave higher that would have been the norm for the <strong>in</strong>strument <strong>in</strong> the 1920s. Orig<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>gfrom – and still dom<strong>in</strong>ated by – American black musicians, jazz has had many black players<strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>ce the 1950s, although this was not always acknowledged by established jazzmusicians and promoters and <strong>in</strong>fluential bodies such as the Arts Council and the BBC.Recent years have seen the emergence of a new wave of authentically black jazz (forexample, the group Black Warriors). There are many jazz bands <strong>in</strong> schools and orchestralcomposers often make use of the jazz idiom. From be<strong>in</strong>g an oppositional and sociallysomewhat disreputable form it has become established and, <strong>in</strong> a certa<strong>in</strong> sense, ‘classical’.Jazz is played throughout the country and no major city is without a lively jazz scene.British musicians have atta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong>ternational reputations. Two specialist commercial radiostations, Jazz FM, for London listeners, and Jazz FM North West, have come <strong>in</strong>to be<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> recent years. There has been a marked <strong>in</strong>crease <strong>in</strong> jazz festivals <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdomfrom 10 <strong>in</strong> 1980 to 39 <strong>in</strong> 1992, rang<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> scope from the Eal<strong>in</strong>g Jazz Festival for localmusicians liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the area to major <strong>in</strong>ternational festivals <strong>in</strong> Brecon, Birm<strong>in</strong>gham andGlasgow. The annual audience for live jazz events is about 3 million. Market researchpo<strong>in</strong>ts to 8.6 million hav<strong>in</strong>g an <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> jazz without attend<strong>in</strong>g events; 4.1 millionwatched jazz on TV and did not attend and 4.5 million listened to jazz on radio, butneither attended events nor watched jazz on television. 46There is a National Jazz Archive, which safeguards recorded jazz music (although notpublications), a number of magaz<strong>in</strong>es deal<strong>in</strong>g specifically with jazz, together with morespecialised journals cover<strong>in</strong>g particular areas (eg Big Bands International).46 Arts and CulturalActivities <strong>in</strong> GreatBrita<strong>in</strong>, ResearchSurveys of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>(Arts Council of GreatBrita<strong>in</strong>, 1991) pp.7 and135.47 Strik<strong>in</strong>g a New Note,Jazz Services’ responseto the Arts Council ofEngland’s Green Paper,Strik<strong>in</strong>g a New Note,(London, Jazz ServicesLtd, undated) p.4.Only 7.4% of current attenders are aged between 15 and 34. This appears to be a betterrecord than for ballet, opera and classical music, but it does suggest a need to encourageyoung people to <strong>in</strong>terest themselves <strong>in</strong> jazz. Such local jazz <strong>in</strong>formation as there is is tiltedtowards ‘white’ youngsters and tends not to cater for the black community. Jazz Services,which was formed more than 10 years ago to promote the growth and development ofjazz, sees education and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g as key priorities <strong>in</strong> its work. Its educational strategy (<strong>in</strong>association with Access to Music, an <strong>in</strong>dependent music support service and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gorganisation) focuses on <strong>in</strong>formation provision and network<strong>in</strong>g; tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g; develop<strong>in</strong>gmaterials for the national music curriculum; and provid<strong>in</strong>g advocacy for jazz throughoutthe educational system. There is a National Youth Jazz Orchestra and a Young JazzCompetition, as well as a number of youth jazz orchestras <strong>in</strong> the regions, such as theDoncaster Youth Jazz Orchestra. There are also black youth jazz groups – among themQuite Sane and Tomorrow’s Warriors.Jazz L<strong>in</strong>k 96 toured showcase events to groups of schools. A tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programme formusicians to ga<strong>in</strong> diplomas (NVQ Level 4) to enable them to work <strong>in</strong> the classroom withteachers has been set up. A report on jazz education techniques <strong>in</strong> relation to thecurriculum and a materials pack is <strong>in</strong> preparation for dissem<strong>in</strong>ation to schools.Opportunities for young people to play jazz outside school are unsatisfactory and JazzServices argues: ‘What is needed is a network of rehearsal studios and record<strong>in</strong>g facilitiesthat are easily and economically accessed.’ 47


54 THE MUSIC-MAKERSJazz Services, supported by ACE, also organises tours and events, runs a comprehensivejazz database, offers market<strong>in</strong>g services and publishes a national magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Jazz UK. Thereare three regional jazz organisations <strong>in</strong> England (South West Jazz, Jazz Action and JazzNorth West), the Welsh Jazz Society and <strong>in</strong> Scotland Assembly Direct Ltd, all of themreceiv<strong>in</strong>g public subsidy. There are a number of specialist jazz societies throughout thecountry rely<strong>in</strong>g on voluntary help and self-fund<strong>in</strong>g.The dist<strong>in</strong>ction between professional and amateur is more than usually complicated <strong>in</strong> jazz. Afew top-class musicians are not full-time professionals; some amateurs have earned a liv<strong>in</strong>gfrom time to time from jazz and there are a substantial number of ‘pro-ams’. About athousand professionals and semi-professionals are members of the Musicians’ Union andperhaps a similar number <strong>in</strong> the same categories are not. The amateur sector (that is, thosewho play for pleasure and do not make a liv<strong>in</strong>g, or part of their liv<strong>in</strong>g, from music) isproportionately smaller than <strong>in</strong> (say) classical music. It is estimated that amateurs make upperhaps two-fifths of jazz musicians. Jazz is performed <strong>in</strong> a wide variety of sett<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gconcert halls, arts centres, village halls, ballrooms, restaurants, coffee houses and public houses.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Chris Hodgk<strong>in</strong>s, director of Jazz Services, jazz is to certa<strong>in</strong> extent a victimof its own success. Because its vocabulary has <strong>in</strong>filtrated other genres, there is a risk that itwill fail to be sufficiently differentiated from other k<strong>in</strong>ds of music. So, for example,orchestral musicians experiment<strong>in</strong>g with improvisation often use jazz techniques. There isa defensive feel<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the jazz movement that it is important, both for artistic and formarket<strong>in</strong>g reasons, to preserve the <strong>in</strong>tegrity and authenticity of jazz as a musical form.Participation <strong>in</strong> rock and pop is a largely uncharted field. Anecdotal evidence suggests that<strong>in</strong> every part of the country young people – especially young men – see listen<strong>in</strong>g to andplay<strong>in</strong>g music as a central feature of their lives. It is part of what constitutes youth culture.Young people see the arts <strong>in</strong> a rather different way from their elders. Together withfashion and various forms of mass enterta<strong>in</strong>ment they are a means of assert<strong>in</strong>g a particularlifestyle. As Paul Willis observes:48 Willis, Paul, Mov<strong>in</strong>gCulture, an enquiry <strong>in</strong>tothe cultural activities ofyoung people (London,<strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, 1990)p.14.49 Harland, John,Hartley, Kate andK<strong>in</strong>der, Kay, op cit,p.70.‘In amongst the plethora of expressions which help to constitute the different culturalfields of the young are some which are made to “come alive” to some degree: aparticular pop song suddenly evok<strong>in</strong>g and com<strong>in</strong>g to represent an <strong>in</strong>tense personalepisode or experience; a dramatic situation parallel<strong>in</strong>g and illum<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g dilemmas andproblems <strong>in</strong> the family, with friends, or at school or college; a look <strong>in</strong> a fashionmagaz<strong>in</strong>e spark<strong>in</strong>g new ideas for personal style or adornment. Such items can besymbolically appropriated to produce a cutt<strong>in</strong>g edge of mean<strong>in</strong>g which not onlyreflects or repeats what exists, but creatively transforms what exists – previous personalexperience and hopes for the future be<strong>in</strong>g reorganised, made more understandable orhandle-able; externally provided expressions changed by be<strong>in</strong>g made to signify <strong>in</strong> newand personally “significant” ways. Thus charged, both experience and representationcan further change, <strong>in</strong>teract and develop through the processes of creativeconsumption, creative perception and re-perception.’ 48It would be wrong to suppose that that there is a s<strong>in</strong>gle, universal youth culture. In fact,there are many and plenty of young people have less <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> music than <strong>in</strong> sport,which they enjoy as participants and spectators. Also, it is a little surpris<strong>in</strong>g to note that,accord<strong>in</strong>g to the National <strong>Foundation</strong> for Educational Research’s (NFER’s) recent survey<strong>in</strong>to youth participation <strong>in</strong> the arts, dance, draw<strong>in</strong>g and sketch<strong>in</strong>g, and photography aremore popular leisure time activities than music-mak<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> which just 23% of respondents<strong>in</strong>dicated ‘a great deal’ or ‘some’ <strong>in</strong>terest. 49


JOINING IN 55Nevertheless, a substantial number of teenagers and men and women <strong>in</strong> their earlytwenties actively engage <strong>in</strong> the musical process and a high proportion of them areattracted to rock and pop (if not exclusively). NFER reports: ‘Bands and groups of alltypes were a focus of enthusiasm for most young musicians and boys very commonlyformed rock and pop groups, often when still at school.’ 50 The study shows that thegeneral imbalance of <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> favour of those from higher socio-economic classesacross the art-forms applies <strong>in</strong> this area of musical activity as well.‘Even rock music, which was expected to be associated with work<strong>in</strong>g-class culturalcreativity, was often found to be more accessible to those who had benefited frommiddle-class upbr<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>gs which offered the resources and positive attitudes toencourage musical and artistic <strong>in</strong>volvement from an early age’. 51Despite this evidence of limited access for some sectors of the population, arts fund<strong>in</strong>gagencies f<strong>in</strong>d it difficult to know whether or not they should <strong>in</strong>tervene <strong>in</strong> what is forthem largely unknown territory – and, if so, what they should do. They fear that <strong>in</strong> whatis a ruthlessly competitive commercial field it would be only too easy to clog the marketwith unwanted bands and record<strong>in</strong>gs.The exception is Northern Ireland where rock and pop bands often jo<strong>in</strong> Music Collectiveswhich provide rehearsal space and studio equipment; three of them are directly funded bythe Arts Council of Northern Ireland (ACNI). It also supports two groups, Songwriters’Session and the Songwriters and Composers’ Guild, both of which are <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> rockand pop. As I mentioned above, the North-South organisation, the Federation of MusicCollectives, based <strong>in</strong> Dubl<strong>in</strong> and with fund<strong>in</strong>g from the Irish Arts Council, is an umbrellabody for the island as a whole and has a responsibility for encourag<strong>in</strong>g work <strong>in</strong> this field.In fact, although strictly speak<strong>in</strong>g this falls outside my remit, the Irish Arts Council has adist<strong>in</strong>guished track record <strong>in</strong> support<strong>in</strong>g popular musics and created a Popular MusicOfficer post <strong>in</strong> 1988 with the support of the group U2. Later the post was transferred <strong>in</strong>toa new, <strong>in</strong>dependent organisation, Music Base, funded by the Council.50 Ibid, p.90.51 Ibid, p.91.52 A Review of Music<strong>in</strong> the Northern ArtsRegion (cit<strong>in</strong>g a studyby the CulturalIndustries ResearchUnit of the Universityof Newcastle-upon-Tyne’s Centre forUrban and RegionalDevelopment Studies)(Northern Arts,Newcastle-upon-Tyne,October 1995) p.36.53 Guide to Rock andPop (Loughborough,East Midlands Arts,undated).In England, th<strong>in</strong>gs are not quite so far advanced. In the Northern region, a serious efforthas been undertaken to f<strong>in</strong>d out what is go<strong>in</strong>g on. A local University of Newcastle surveygives an estimate of the scale of rock and pop activity. About 500 people are employed <strong>in</strong>music <strong>in</strong>dustry services and there are about 500 full-time musicians with (it is guessed) atleast another 1,000 part-timers. Of the 150 live music venues, about 70 are major halls,pubs and arts centres and the rema<strong>in</strong>der social clubs, clubs or occasional pub venues.Twenty management and promotion companies and 34 record<strong>in</strong>g studios support therock and pop scene and there are 10 locally-based record<strong>in</strong>g companies. 52In the East Midlands the picture appears to be much the same, accord<strong>in</strong>g to an EastMidlands Arts handbook. 53 There are 75 different venues, 16 managers, agents andpromoters, 31 record<strong>in</strong>g and rehearsal studios and 14 locally-based record<strong>in</strong>g companies.The RABs <strong>in</strong> these two areas of the country have adopted different approaches. NorthernArts conducted a review of music <strong>in</strong> its region <strong>in</strong> 1995. The review team acknowledgedthat previously the RAB had had ‘little direct contact with the popular music <strong>in</strong>dustry’ onthe grounds that it was ‘commercial <strong>in</strong> nature’ and, where it was not, was more properlythe responsibility of local authorities or local arts development bodies. But it was nowtime to become more actively <strong>in</strong>volved. A proposal to establish a regional agency wasconsidered but rejected because it was feared that the rock and pop constituency would besuspicious of what they would see as undue centralisation.


56 THE MUSIC-MAKERSThe review took a cautious l<strong>in</strong>e on record<strong>in</strong>g:‘In the Contemporary Popular and Rock music area there is a cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g demand forassistance with the production of demo discs. However, markets for locally producedproducts are very limited and contrary to popular myth fame and fortune are notusually found by an A&R scout <strong>in</strong> London or New York f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g a locally producedrecord<strong>in</strong>g irresistible ... The Review Team recommends that Northern Arts shouldleave the record<strong>in</strong>g bus<strong>in</strong>ess to the commercial marketplace at the present time.’ 54Certa<strong>in</strong> (one senses) only of its uncerta<strong>in</strong>ty, the team very sensibly proposed the appo<strong>in</strong>tmentof a Venue Development Officer on a fixed-term contract, whose task would be to preparea venue development strategy. However, Northern Arts has not yet been able to muster theresources to put this recommendation <strong>in</strong>to effect. At present, it is restrict<strong>in</strong>g its efforts tomodest support for Generator, a not-for-profit arts organisation which provides tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g andother services for rock and pop musicians <strong>in</strong> the Newcastle-upon-Tyne area.By contrast, East Midlands Arts boldly determ<strong>in</strong>ed to make a direct <strong>in</strong>tervention. In 1994it identified a gap <strong>in</strong> its arts provision for young people and decided that an <strong>in</strong>vestment <strong>in</strong>rock and pop would not only be a good way of fill<strong>in</strong>g it, but would enable it to addressquestions aris<strong>in</strong>g from the rapid development of new technology. It appo<strong>in</strong>ted five rockand pop development workers to help musicians at the grassroots level. It has alsopublished a handbook with contacts list<strong>in</strong>gs and a section of practical guidance formusicians; a number of fund<strong>in</strong>g schemes have been put <strong>in</strong> place to encourage regionaltour<strong>in</strong>g, audience development and support for gig promotions and record<strong>in</strong>gs.Marcel Jenk<strong>in</strong>s of East Midlands Arts told me:‘What’s needed is not enthusiasm, but access to skills and career development. Regularshowcases are presented every three months or so which tour around the region. Thelack of good venues is a major problem and we are try<strong>in</strong>g to persuade brewers and soforth to provide them. We are try<strong>in</strong>g as hard as we can to make the system as nonbureaucraticas possible.’Unfortunately, although there is evidence that bands are call<strong>in</strong>g for the appo<strong>in</strong>tment ofmore development workers, the RAB has not yet fully evaluated the success of its newpolicy. This is an urgent task, for study of the handbook suggests that the Board is not asstreet-wise as it could be; both <strong>in</strong> its advice – which does not always seem consistent –and its list<strong>in</strong>gs, it seems <strong>in</strong>sufficiently aware that rock and pop is a field not always notedfor sound bus<strong>in</strong>ess practices and f<strong>in</strong>ancial probity.It is hard to avoid conclud<strong>in</strong>g that there is a case for a national study of the rock and popscene followed by a debate among the fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies, the <strong>in</strong>dustry and musicians. It maywell be that this is an area where public support is not needed, although if it is true thatthere are difficulties of access to skills and facilities for some young people, modestschemes like those <strong>in</strong> the East Midlands may well be timely and useful. At present,though, too little is known to make a judgment.54 A Review of Music <strong>in</strong>the Northern Arts Region,op cit, p.25There is rather more activity <strong>in</strong> the educational and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g field. A music service andtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g agency such as Access to Music (which was formed <strong>in</strong> 1992 by a former localeducation authority senior music adviser ‘to provide a range of services which wouldcont<strong>in</strong>ue some of the good work established by the Music Advisory Service’) specialises <strong>in</strong>the field of contemporary and popular musics and offers a two-year foundation course <strong>in</strong>Contemporary Popular Musics <strong>in</strong> association with the Colchester Institute. From this k<strong>in</strong>dof course it possible to progress to degree and diploma courses (for example, <strong>in</strong> Media and


JOINING IN 57Popular Music or Popular Music and record<strong>in</strong>g at University College, Salford; PopularMusic Studies at University College, Bretton Hall; or a BTEC Higher National Diploma<strong>in</strong> Musical Instrument Technology or a Postgraduate Diploma <strong>in</strong> Jazz, Contemporary andPopular Music at the City of Leeds College of Music).Folk and traditional musicsTowards the end of the 1800s, it was realised with dismay that the old musics of theBritish Isles were fac<strong>in</strong>g ext<strong>in</strong>ction. Folk and the traditional musics of the countrysidewere threatened by the movement of population <strong>in</strong>to the <strong>in</strong>dustrial cities and by thegrow<strong>in</strong>g mechanisation of agriculture. After the Great War suburbanisation, fuelled byris<strong>in</strong>g mobility and demands for higher-quality hous<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> more pleasant surround<strong>in</strong>gs,stimulated a reverse trend with city dwellers mov<strong>in</strong>g out <strong>in</strong>to rural areas and urbanis<strong>in</strong>gthe countryside. A folk movement, <strong>in</strong>stitutionalised <strong>in</strong> the Folk Song Society founded <strong>in</strong>1898 and the English Folk Dance Society (1911), followed by their amalgamation <strong>in</strong> 1932as the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS), sought to halt the decl<strong>in</strong>e of theold perform<strong>in</strong>g arts. Wales has its own National Folk Song Society, Cymdeithas AlawonGwer<strong>in</strong> Cymru, which was founded <strong>in</strong> 1908; the National Folk Dance Society of Wales;and, from 1996, the Society for the Traditional Instruments of Wales, CymdeithasOfferynnau Traddodiadol Cymru.Despite a major <strong>in</strong>ternal dispute <strong>in</strong> the 1980s, the EFDSS, with a small regular grant fromthe Sports Council, is still the largest of the folk dance and song societies, with nearly6,000 members <strong>in</strong> 1990. In essence, its mission is to rescue and record as much as possibleof what survives of the ma<strong>in</strong>ly oral folk tradition and to revive its practice. Morris danc<strong>in</strong>gis supported by a number of societies; the Morris R<strong>in</strong>g, the Morris Federation and OpenMorris. In Wales there is the National Folk Dance Society and <strong>in</strong> Scotland the TraditionalMusic and Song Association of Scotland, supported by the Scottish Arts Council (SAC),the Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association with a play<strong>in</strong>g membership of around 400bands <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom, and the Royal Scottish Country Dance Society with aworld-wide membership of nearly 30,000. There is a host of other amateur federationsand societies, some operat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>ternationally, which support different aspects of folk musicand song: they <strong>in</strong>clude The Bagpipe Society, The West Country Concert<strong>in</strong>as,Northumbrian Pipers’ Society, The West Gallery Music Association, Hands On Music,the Yorkshire Fiddle Club, the whole Irish music scene supported through the UKbranches of Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann (often l<strong>in</strong>ked to Irish Centres) and many more.More recent <strong>in</strong>itiatives have sought not just to preserve the past but to re-<strong>in</strong>vigorate folk sothat it could become an expression of contemporary concerns. At the BBC <strong>in</strong> Manchesterbefore the Second World War, Joan Littlewood learnt the dramatic value of popular musichall song and <strong>in</strong> the 1950s and 1960s Charles Parker’s radio ballads used folk and populartunes and songs to celebrate the achievements and suffer<strong>in</strong>gs of the <strong>in</strong>dustrial work<strong>in</strong>g class.Under the <strong>in</strong>spiration of musicians like Ewan McColl and others, a large number of folkmusic clubs mushroomed <strong>in</strong> the late 1950s; although some argue that the folk clubmovement began to decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the late 1980s, there are still more than 800 <strong>in</strong> Great Brita<strong>in</strong>which regularly book guest performers. Ros Rigby of Folkworks writes:‘At the heart of the clubs’ ethos was, and still is, the opportunity for local people toperform <strong>in</strong> an encourag<strong>in</strong>g atmosphere, often at the start of an even<strong>in</strong>g prior to an<strong>in</strong>vited guest. Although there are not the number of clubs <strong>in</strong> existence now, there arestill some very effective ones, and there is no doubt that this movement has provided a


58 THE MUSIC-MAKERSway <strong>in</strong>to folk music for tens of thousands of people over the last 40 years.’ 55Similarly folk festivals, sometimes organised by folk clubs, started to spr<strong>in</strong>g up from thelate 1950s onwards and also provided opportunities for <strong>in</strong>formal play<strong>in</strong>g and s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>galongside their concert programmes. Many now run programmes of workshops, notablySidmouth and Whitby.In the last 10 years the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system has recognised the contribution folk arts maketo the arts as a whole and has supported a range of ‘folk development agencies’ with oneor more staff. This has enabled musicians to do more educational work and has stimulatedthe development of <strong>in</strong>novative tour<strong>in</strong>g projects. Some of today’s activists believe that atradition is only really alive if it creates new work which adds to and enriches materialfrom the past. Roger Watson of Traditional Arts Projects told me:‘The musical material shows whether or not there is a dist<strong>in</strong>ctive tradition. But it is theeffects of process on that material that determ<strong>in</strong>es whether or not the material is alive.I’ll give you an example with a particular song. In 1814 you could have bought abroadsheet of The Dark-Eyed Sailor, which is part of that family of songs called the“broken token ballads” that date from the Crusades. A year later you could have founda song with the same storyl<strong>in</strong>e and even some of the same l<strong>in</strong>es, called The Pla<strong>in</strong>s ofWaterloo. That is what I mean by process. The first song didn’t cancel out the second,but now we had another option. The process of tradition is life, death, life. Once apiece of musical material loses its relevance, it is time to put it <strong>in</strong> a museum.’Folkworks is a f<strong>in</strong>e example of this attitude of m<strong>in</strong>d: founded eight years ago by AlistairAnderson, the Northumbrian pipe player and composer, and Ros Rigby, with the activesupport of Northern Arts, it set itself the aim of <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g as many people as possible <strong>in</strong>the folk arts. Based <strong>in</strong> the North of England, it has gradually become an <strong>in</strong>fluential forceon the national scene. It promotes tours, festivals and a variety of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and educationcourses. It places its emphasis on music <strong>in</strong> a traditional idiom, <strong>in</strong>terpreted broadly as‘people’s music’, and, although <strong>in</strong> its early years it focused on British traditions, it hass<strong>in</strong>ce widened its scope to embrace other parts of Europe and the world.Folkworks has always seen its role both as rais<strong>in</strong>g the profile of folk arts and offer<strong>in</strong>gopportunities for participation. Its educational work now <strong>in</strong>cludes <strong>in</strong>-service teachertra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g(INSET) projects and collaborations with schools, colleges and universities –among them a GCSE composition module for 10 year-olds at Gosforth High School, amodule <strong>in</strong> world musics for a BEd music degree course and a module <strong>in</strong> Northumbrianmusic at the University of Newcastle. It seeks to develop young audiences, especiallyoutside conventional venues, and sees a future as the holder of a specialist <strong>in</strong>strumentsbank. Ma<strong>in</strong>ly funded by Northern Arts, the Arts Council and northern local authorities, itis <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly attract<strong>in</strong>g sponsorship by local and national bus<strong>in</strong>esses.Folkworks’ motto or sub-title is ‘Tradition <strong>in</strong> the mak<strong>in</strong>g’ and they are concerned toencourage new music. A songwrit<strong>in</strong>g project and tour <strong>in</strong> autumn 1996 was characteristicof their approach: this was a series of workshops by lead<strong>in</strong>g songwriters who <strong>in</strong>troducedparticipants to the skills of song writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> 10 selected communities nation-wide. Theyculm<strong>in</strong>ated <strong>in</strong> a concert at which some of the songs were premiered.55 Letter from RosRigby to the author,27 March 1997.Folkworks is by no means unique <strong>in</strong> its work or policies. A number of other agencies upand down the country act as promoters and developers of traditional musics,collaborat<strong>in</strong>g with schools, present<strong>in</strong>g festivals and encourag<strong>in</strong>g local musicians. One ofthese is Folk South West, set up by South West Arts and based <strong>in</strong> Somerset. Another,


60 THE MUSIC-MAKERSdeal to the ideas of the Brazilian educator and Christian Marxist, Paolo Friere. Theprogramme concentrated on historical, political and cultural topics (such as land issues,adult literacy and women’s history). ALP is managed by its participants (unlike many adulteducation projects) and their debate-based <strong>in</strong>vestigations led to the formation of the ALPMusic Group six years ago which runs a large number of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g workshops andperformance events, grounded firmly <strong>in</strong> the perception of a national culture need<strong>in</strong>g tofree itself from its neo-colonial past.The Music Group set itself a radical agenda. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to its statement of aims:‘ ... <strong>in</strong> decid<strong>in</strong>g how to set up the music programme, [it] debated a number of issuesrelat<strong>in</strong>g to the ... state of Scots music: the question of [why] it had moved so much tothe social marg<strong>in</strong>s, be<strong>in</strong>g perceived as a hobby rather than (as <strong>in</strong> Ireland, for <strong>in</strong>stance) avital part of the national culture; historical factors such as the repression of music bythe church, the militarisation and privatisation of pipe music, the Victorian upper classcolonisation of the land and culture, the music’s transition from an <strong>in</strong>tegral part ofeveryday life and celebration <strong>in</strong> the community to a m<strong>in</strong>ority commodity foundlargely <strong>in</strong> a closed world of clubs and societies each impos<strong>in</strong>g its own orthodoxy.’A key question was how to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> ‘purity, respect and cont<strong>in</strong>uity with the past’ whileencourag<strong>in</strong>g accessibility, <strong>in</strong>novation and contemporary relevance. There is surely nos<strong>in</strong>gle answer, but what can be said is that, <strong>in</strong> the sett<strong>in</strong>g of a resurgent Scottish culture,the music scene is various and hybrid, traditional musics m<strong>in</strong>gl<strong>in</strong>g with rock andprofessionals with amateurs. Stan Reeves of ALP writes:‘It would seem a warm w<strong>in</strong>d of change is blow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to the stoorie neuks of the music.Scots bands like Runrig and Capercaillie dip <strong>in</strong>to the well of the music and br<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>huge audiences look<strong>in</strong>g for a new way of identify<strong>in</strong>g themselves as Scots.’ 58A study has been conducted <strong>in</strong>to the desirability of creat<strong>in</strong>g a Traditional MusicDevelopment Agency, and the SAC may establish an <strong>in</strong>-house function with a view tomak<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>in</strong>dependent once it is safely up and runn<strong>in</strong>g.Cultural nationalism is a vital force <strong>in</strong> Wales too, but takes different forms and placesspecial emphasis on the Welsh language (which unlike Gaelic is an officially recognisedlanguage <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom). A key element is the <strong>in</strong>stitution of the eisteddfod – acompetitive festival which encompasses all the arts – music, dance, drama, literature andthe f<strong>in</strong>e arts. Evolv<strong>in</strong>g from bardic tournaments <strong>in</strong> the remote past, today’s festival – withits Celtic apparatus of Druids and Archdruids, white robes and golden regalia – stemmed<strong>in</strong> large part from the eighteenth-century re-<strong>in</strong>vention of the antique Gorsedd of Bards.The first recognisably modern national eisteddfod took place <strong>in</strong> 1861.58 Reeves Stan,Scottish Traditional Musicand Song – Beat<strong>in</strong>g theCr<strong>in</strong>ge! Alpworks (<strong>in</strong>houseALP magaz<strong>in</strong>e),issue 2, May 1993,Ed<strong>in</strong>burgh, p.6.Today the Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales (RNEW) is one of Europe’s largestcompetitive festivals and attracts annually about 150,000 visitors. More than 200 competitionsare held, many of them musical, and about 50 to 60 choirs take part. An International MusicalEisteddfod takes place annually <strong>in</strong> Llangollen. RNEW sits at the top of a pyramid of countyand local eisteddfodau (some <strong>in</strong> better health than others, but all of them active) which can beseen <strong>in</strong> part as preparatory to the RNE. Amongst other th<strong>in</strong>gs, the eisteddfodau celebrate theWelsh tradition of amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g, br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together folk, hymns and other chorals<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and form a key focus for the assertion of Welsh identity.It will surprise few readers that the political divisions <strong>in</strong> Northern Ireland have left theirmark on traditional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the prov<strong>in</strong>ce. As <strong>in</strong> Scotland, the popularity of folktraditions is not only an artistic but also, <strong>in</strong> some eyes, a cultural and political project. This


photo: Anne Rogers


3 TRANSFORMINGTHE CURRICULUM


64 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMI believe that only actual participation constitutes socially valuable learn<strong>in</strong>g, a participation by thelearner <strong>in</strong> every stage of the learn<strong>in</strong>g process, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g not only a free choice of what is to belearned and how it is to be learned but also a free determ<strong>in</strong>ation by each learner of his own reasonfor liv<strong>in</strong>g and learn<strong>in</strong>g – the part that his knowledge is to play <strong>in</strong> his life.IVAN ILLICH, AFTER DESCHOOLING, WHAT?The purpose of music education, as Kodály frequently emphasised, should be to help <strong>in</strong>dividuals todevelop their aesthetic experience and understand<strong>in</strong>g by exercis<strong>in</strong>g their powers of discrim<strong>in</strong>ation.JOHN BLACKING, A COMMON-SENSE VIEW OF ALL MUSICMusic <strong>in</strong> public educationAcurious conclusion can be drawn from the preced<strong>in</strong>g chapter about youngpeople’s <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> music. A good number of them shy away from thedom<strong>in</strong>ant Western tradition if we can judge from the age<strong>in</strong>g memberships ofmusic clubs and choral societies. They seem to be to some degree disillusioned withhow they were <strong>in</strong>troduced to the subject <strong>in</strong> school. However, the omnipresence of rockand pop <strong>in</strong> their lives, the vigour of new, hybrid forms <strong>in</strong>vented by young blacks andSouth Asians, suggests that it is not music they are turn<strong>in</strong>g from, but particularapproaches to music.Families no longer s<strong>in</strong>g to the piano <strong>in</strong> their front parlours and, although some <strong>in</strong>fantsdoubtless learn the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples of rhythm and harmony at their mothers’ knee, for themost part the classroom and the assembly hall offer the first serious opportunity toengage with and make music. The educational reforms of recent years have stimulated anew approach to teach<strong>in</strong>g the subject <strong>in</strong> future.1 Rogers, Rick,Guarantee<strong>in</strong>g anentitlement to the arts <strong>in</strong>schools (London, RoyalSociety of Arts, 1995)p.12.2 Eric Forth MP,M<strong>in</strong>ister of State,Department forEducation, <strong>in</strong> the<strong>in</strong>troduction to theMusic for YouthConferenceProgramme, 1995, p.5.Cited <strong>in</strong> Shuker,Margaret Jill, LiveMusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> RuralAreas – A Dy<strong>in</strong>g or aFlourish<strong>in</strong>g Tradition?major project submittedas part of an MA <strong>in</strong>European CulturalPolicy andAdm<strong>in</strong>istration,University of Warwick,September 1995.The Education Reform Act of 1988 (followed <strong>in</strong> due course by the Education [Schools]Act of 1992 and the Education Act of 1993) has revolutionised teach<strong>in</strong>g and is hav<strong>in</strong>g aprofound effect on the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. Aim<strong>in</strong>g to provide a ‘broad but balanced education’,it established a National Curriculum for England and Wales for all pupils throughout theircompulsory school<strong>in</strong>g (five to 16 years), with three core subjects, English, mathematics andscience, and with seven foundation subjects <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g music and art. Scotland has its ownmore discretionary arrangements for education; the Scottish Office offers guidance to localauthorities, which <strong>in</strong>cludes advice that they <strong>in</strong>corporate music <strong>in</strong> the curriculum. A review<strong>in</strong> 1993 by Sir Ron Dear<strong>in</strong>g, Chairman of the Schools Curriculum and AssessmentAuthority (SCAA) (s<strong>in</strong>ce October 1997 the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority)sought to make the new curriculum more flexible and led to a slimm<strong>in</strong>g down of thefoundation subjects. Music is a compulsory subject for every ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed school <strong>in</strong> thecountry, but only up to Key Stage 4 (ie 14 years). A recent study suggests that only aquarter of schools require pupils to undertake at least one arts subject thereafter. 1The music curriculum is the culm<strong>in</strong>ation of a long period of reth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g by educationists andhas shifted the emphasis <strong>in</strong> schools decisively <strong>in</strong> the direction of participation. It issignificant that lead<strong>in</strong>g figures <strong>in</strong> the music profession, among them Pierre Boulez, SirSimon Rattle and Sir Charles Groves <strong>in</strong>tervened <strong>in</strong> public to make the case for a balancedapproach which should <strong>in</strong>corporate the musics of many cultures. This helped to improvethe curriculum and contributed to the widespread approval with which it was receivedwhen it eventually emerged. It is based on two atta<strong>in</strong>ment targets, Perform<strong>in</strong>g andCompos<strong>in</strong>g, and Listen<strong>in</strong>g and Apprais<strong>in</strong>g, and one of the ma<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>tentions is to give ‘ ...pupils the opportunity to participate <strong>in</strong> practical music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools’. 2


JOINING IN 65In a contradictory trend, affect<strong>in</strong>g students beyond 16 and outside compulsory school<strong>in</strong>g,the government has shown much less <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> courses which aim to encourage personaland creative development than those with a strong vocational content. A White Paper oneducation and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> 1991 made it clear that f<strong>in</strong>ancial support should be made availableonly for areas of study that lead directly to qualifications.‘The government expects that public expenditure on education for adults will beconcentrated on the courses that can help them <strong>in</strong> their careers and <strong>in</strong> daily life. It isnot <strong>in</strong>tended that colleges should receive explicit fund<strong>in</strong>g from the councils forcourses cater<strong>in</strong>g for adults’ leisure <strong>in</strong>terests.’ 3For as long as there has been a public education system, educationists and teachers havebeen worry<strong>in</strong>g about the state of music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools. In 1871 a member of theBoard of Education excused the neglect of music <strong>in</strong> schools and universities because ‘themusical education of the upper and middle classes had been neglected, and it wasdifficult to f<strong>in</strong>d gentlemen competent to exam<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the notation of music.’ 4The practice of music <strong>in</strong> schools, especially group s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, made rapid advances whenthe Tonic Sol-fa notation came <strong>in</strong>to general use <strong>in</strong> the classroom and revolutionisedsight-s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g. However, <strong>in</strong> the years that followed the Great War an important study,the Cambridgeshire Report on Music <strong>in</strong> Schools, reported that:‘music still gets grudg<strong>in</strong>g treatment <strong>in</strong> many schools, with curtailed time and “tired”periods <strong>in</strong> the timetable. The music class is sometimes used as a dump<strong>in</strong>g ground forchildren with <strong>in</strong>sufficient <strong>in</strong>tellect to learn more reputable subjects.’ 5The emphasis was less on the practice of music than on musical appreciation – a state ofaffairs for which the BBC was given a large share of the blame. Sir Henry Hadow wrote<strong>in</strong> The Times <strong>in</strong> 1932:‘It will be a national loss if we allow ourselves to be satisfied with listen<strong>in</strong>g [to thewireless] and let our practice fall <strong>in</strong>to desuetude.’ 63 Department ofEducation and ScienceWhite Paper, Educationand Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the 21stCentury (London,HMSO, 1991) p.60.4 Music and theCommunity, theCambridgeshire Report onthe Teach<strong>in</strong>g of Music(Cambridge UniversityPress, 1933).5 Ibid, p.178.6 Ibid, p.179.7 Ibid, p.14.8 Ibid, p.149.The report is a sharp rem<strong>in</strong>der of just how foreign a country the recent past can be.‘Good voice-production <strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g’, op<strong>in</strong>e its authors, ‘has far-reach<strong>in</strong>g effects onspeech, and pure speech helps to lower class barriers.’ They have little time for folk songor popular music; music education should be based on the classics (although ‘teachersshould not exclude modern music, even if they are not attracted to it’). Like Sir Henry,they have serious doubts about broadcast<strong>in</strong>g, which they discuss as if it were a form ofcultural self-abuse:‘The grow<strong>in</strong>g habit of turn<strong>in</strong>g on the wireless set or gramophone as anaccompaniment to conversation or on other sociable occasions seems wholly bad: itis bad for the social <strong>in</strong>tercourse, worse for the nervous constitution and worst of allfor the musical growth of those present.’ 7The document is a cautionary tale for writers – and readers – of books on music, for itis a demonstration of the speed with which taste and theory can change. However, itdoes identify a number of themes that are still current today, if <strong>in</strong> different terms. Thereis an acknowledgment, albeit expressed with distaste, that ‘children and adults arecont<strong>in</strong>uously battered by music on all sides.’ 8 The impact of the globalised culture, stillnew at that time, is duly registered:‘The <strong>in</strong>fluence of the picture palace is enormous ... Over 30 million people attendthe c<strong>in</strong>ema every week <strong>in</strong> the British Isles ... The cumulative effect of the music they


66 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMhear cannot be overestimated. Music is an essential part of the film show ... Atpresent the hear<strong>in</strong>g of much c<strong>in</strong>ema music cloys the musical palate because of thehigh proportion of emotional and highly coloured music.’ 9It is also worth not<strong>in</strong>g that advocacy of the classics was <strong>in</strong>fluential with Kenneth Clarke,when, as Education Secretary, he was tak<strong>in</strong>g the National Curriculum Order for Musicthrough the legislative and consultative processes. The notion of a ‘respectable canon’ isstrong aga<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> some circles <strong>in</strong> OFSTED, the schools <strong>in</strong>spectorate, and the SchoolsCurriculum and Assessment Authority, as well as <strong>in</strong> right-w<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>k-tanks.The ma<strong>in</strong> burden of the report was to change the balance between practice andappreciation. In the authors’ op<strong>in</strong>ion, the current unsatisfactory state of affairs was <strong>in</strong>good part due to a general <strong>in</strong>crease of leisure and the omnipresence of recorded orbroadcast music. While this reflected the grow<strong>in</strong>g importance of music <strong>in</strong> people’s lives,it placed at risk advances <strong>in</strong> the earlier part of the century <strong>in</strong> the growth of ‘ear-tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g,and sound aural foundation, <strong>in</strong> place of the old basis of “theory”’. 10 The report placedgreat weight on the importance of the study of notation, although it accepted that it isfar more difficult to <strong>in</strong>terest children <strong>in</strong> this than <strong>in</strong> music appreciation. The debatebetween the virtues of practice and of understand<strong>in</strong>g and the importance or otherwise ofnotation <strong>in</strong> school music teach<strong>in</strong>g rema<strong>in</strong>ed live issues <strong>in</strong> the years after the SecondWorld War.The great education legislation of 1944 set out a completely new approach to teach<strong>in</strong>gand how it was to be planned and managed. Public education was to be a nationalservice, locally adm<strong>in</strong>istered. Comparisons between Brita<strong>in</strong> and other countriessuggested that its education system had taken too narrow a view of success and failedtoo many people; it was accepted that there were many k<strong>in</strong>ds of success and thateveryone had talents. The Act established, for the first time <strong>in</strong> England and Wales,secondary education for all by means of the ‘meritocratic’ tripartite system of grammar,technical and secondary modern schools, together with the 11-plus selection exam at theend of primary school<strong>in</strong>g. The 11-plus had the effect of dictat<strong>in</strong>g a narrow primarycurriculum.In the early post-war years there was an excit<strong>in</strong>g, even heady, sense of enter<strong>in</strong>g a newage. The spirit of the Victorian poet and schools <strong>in</strong>spector, Matthew Arnold, wasabroad; his def<strong>in</strong>ition of culture as ‘the acqua<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g ourselves with the best that has beenknown and said <strong>in</strong> the world, and thus with the history of the human spirit’ 11 was seento have a special relevance to the work of schools.As the tripartite system gave way to comprehensive school<strong>in</strong>g through the 1960s and1970s, selection naturally disappeared. The result was that the primary curricular rangeexploded. The philosophy was child-centred and, <strong>in</strong> that con<strong>text</strong>, the experience of thearts would play a significant role; the discovery method of teach<strong>in</strong>g and learn<strong>in</strong>g wasepitomised by the primary education mantra: ‘We teach children, not subjects.’9 Ibid, p.147.10 Ibid, p.172.11 Arnold, Matthew,preface to the 1973edition, Literature andDogma.Local education authorities (LEAs) appo<strong>in</strong>ted powerful chief education officers withtheir own <strong>in</strong>spectorates and banks of specialist advisers. Some of them spearheaded arevolution <strong>in</strong> the arts, build<strong>in</strong>g up the teach<strong>in</strong>g of music and establish<strong>in</strong>g the system ofperipatetic music specialists – among them Peter Newsom <strong>in</strong> Hertfordshire, Alec Clegg<strong>in</strong> the West Rid<strong>in</strong>g of Yorkshire, Stewart Mason (followed by Andrew Fairbairn) <strong>in</strong>Leicestershire and Rob<strong>in</strong> Tanner <strong>in</strong> Oxfordshire. In some parts of the country schoolsprofited from a strong local tradition of music <strong>in</strong> the community – choirs, brass bandsand competitive festivals. An important consequence was the emergence of youth


JOINING IN 67orchestras and choirs across the country, often play<strong>in</strong>g to high standards and ultimatelyfeed<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to the membership of professional orchestras.The 1944 Education Act did not set out a national curriculum and while thisencouraged diversity it led to some uncerta<strong>in</strong>ty about standards of atta<strong>in</strong>ment.Although the 11-plus exam was a potentially constrict<strong>in</strong>g factor, its comparativelyrapid decl<strong>in</strong>e opened up the curriculum at the primary school level to allow manydifferent pedagogic methods. To br<strong>in</strong>g some order <strong>in</strong>to their work, LEAs set up theirown curriculum development centres and <strong>in</strong> the 1960s the Schools Council wasestablished to ask from a national standpo<strong>in</strong>t what needed to be taught <strong>in</strong> schools. Itstask was to review the curriculum and to oversee exam<strong>in</strong>ations such as GCE andCSE. It encouraged a move away from what was widely perceived as over-academicsyllabuses and teach<strong>in</strong>g methods <strong>in</strong> favour of a closer <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> process. Thearrival of the CSE <strong>in</strong> 1962, which catered for students who were not sitt<strong>in</strong>g GCEs,had a positive impact <strong>in</strong> this respect, <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g as it did course and classroomassessment as well as formal exam<strong>in</strong>ations.However, so far as music was concerned, it took time for the effects of thesedevelopments to be felt on a national scale. Until well <strong>in</strong>to the 1960s, music tended tobe a narrowly focused subject, with comparatively little <strong>in</strong> the way of <strong>in</strong>volvement andperformance, especially <strong>in</strong> secondary schools. For most children it figured among theacademic rather than the practical subjects. To illustrate the general po<strong>in</strong>t, Eric Bolton,former Senior Chief Inspector of Her Majesty’s Inspectorate (HMI), recalls a secondaryschool <strong>in</strong> Kenn<strong>in</strong>gton <strong>in</strong> the early 1970s where a typical music lesson entailed pupilsstudy<strong>in</strong>g on paper the notation of an Elizabethan song, The Knot Garden.This reflected a way of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g with which many of the LEAs were sympathetic –namely, that:‘pupils are <strong>in</strong>heritors of a set of cultural values and practices, need<strong>in</strong>g to masterrelevant skills and <strong>in</strong>formation <strong>in</strong> order to take part <strong>in</strong> music affairs. Schools andcolleges can be seen to be important agents <strong>in</strong> this process of transmission. Accord<strong>in</strong>gto this theory, the task of the music educator is primarily to <strong>in</strong>itiate students <strong>in</strong>torecognisable musical traditions ... children should at least come <strong>in</strong>to contact with“good” music, should have some idea of how staff notation functions, should acquiresome ability to aurally and visually recognise standard <strong>in</strong>struments and should knowsometh<strong>in</strong>g about important musicians and their work.’ 12Transmission was rigorously tested through competition and exam<strong>in</strong>ation. It was anapproach which went hand <strong>in</strong> hand with a general move <strong>in</strong> schools, colleges and highereducation to give the arts a higher degree of academic stand<strong>in</strong>g.12 Swanwick, Keith,Music, M<strong>in</strong>d andEducation, (London andNew York, Routledge,1988), p.10.The trouble with this was that, although thoroughly Arnoldian, it was not veryobviously ‘child-centred’. It offered only one aspect of what a modern liberal educationcould be and was unlikely to engage children who were far more <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> popularmusic. An alternative theory emerged which stressed creative expression and<strong>in</strong>volvement. Its musical progenitor was the composer Carl Orff, for whom theexperience of music should be <strong>in</strong>stantaneous and universal (many school cupboardsthroughout the land are full of Orffian percussion <strong>in</strong>struments, put aside as fashionschanged). Notation and the bus<strong>in</strong>ess of learn<strong>in</strong>g to play an <strong>in</strong>strument well were of farless importance than stimulat<strong>in</strong>g the musical imag<strong>in</strong>ation.From the late 1960s one of the most <strong>in</strong>fluential advocates of this po<strong>in</strong>t of view was John


68 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMPaynter. For him a liberal education was a ‘total education’. Discovery was as valuable asknowledge.‘It is as creative art that music is beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to play an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly important role <strong>in</strong>education. Like all the arts, music spr<strong>in</strong>gs from a profound response to life itself. It islanguage, and, as a vehicle for expression, it is available <strong>in</strong> some degree to everyone... Perhaps we should place slightly more emphasis on creative music <strong>in</strong> schools thanwe have been do<strong>in</strong>g. Music is a rich means of expression and we must not deny ourchildren the chance to use it.’ 13The contrast between these two philosophies of music education, one promoted by theLEAs and the other by music teachers engaged <strong>in</strong> curriculum development, is notdissimilar to the dialectical process that set the community arts movement <strong>in</strong> oppositionto the established state-funded arts. The arrival of the former as a significant forcefollowed the <strong>in</strong>ception of the child-centred expressive policy of arts teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schoolsand many community musicians were <strong>in</strong>fluenced by Paynter’s work. The key difference,at least <strong>in</strong> terms of emphasis, between the two approaches lay <strong>in</strong> the fact thatcommunity arts were not only concerned with personal creative development butoffered an explicit social analysis rooted <strong>in</strong> a perception of political and economicdisadvantage.A third view of music teach<strong>in</strong>g has emerged <strong>in</strong> which both the education andcommunity sectors take an equal <strong>in</strong>terest. This would offer students a range of worldmusics, not only as a response to the multiculturalism of British society, but also (forsome) <strong>in</strong> an attempt to depose the European classical music tradition from its pedestal.For Christopher Small, the battle aga<strong>in</strong>st Euro-centrism is not so much a matter ofcommon justice, but of renew<strong>in</strong>g Western culture:‘ ... both western classical music and western science speak to very deep-rooted statesof m<strong>in</strong>d <strong>in</strong> Europeans, states of m<strong>in</strong>d which have brought us to our presentuncomfortable, if not downright dangerous condition <strong>in</strong> our relations with oneanother and with nature ... In hold<strong>in</strong>g up some other musical culture ... I shall try toshow that different aesthetics of music are possible that can stand as metaphors forquite different world views, for different systems of relationships with<strong>in</strong> society andnature from our own.’ 14The example of non-European cultures has thrown light on the cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g debateabout musical notation. Many of them depend on a tradition of aural memory throughdevelopment of technique and through imitation. This tends to elim<strong>in</strong>ate any boundarybetween the performer and the composer. In Europe, though, music education has beendist<strong>in</strong>guished by a rationalist, ‘l<strong>in</strong>ear’ habit of m<strong>in</strong>d which has led to a over-reliance onthe written word and a weaken<strong>in</strong>g of the processes of memory. George Odam, a lead<strong>in</strong>gmusic educationist, writes:13 Paynter, John,Sound and Silence,Classroom Projects <strong>in</strong>Creative Music(Cambridge,Cambridge UniversityPress, 1970) p.3.14 Small, Christopher,op cit, p.3.15 Odam, George,op cit, p.17.‘The reason<strong>in</strong>g process is as follows: “I have to write down some music, well, let’smake some musical sounds and write them down as we make them. That way I willnot forget which sounds I have chosen.” Well-motivated children of five or six canspend a great deal of time play<strong>in</strong>g a chime-bar, not<strong>in</strong>g down its name, then play<strong>in</strong>gthe next one, produc<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the end a long str<strong>in</strong>g of letters. When the child comes toplay this back to the teacher it does so laboriously by read<strong>in</strong>g each letter <strong>in</strong> turnbefore locat<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>in</strong> a chime-bar and play<strong>in</strong>g it. Unfortunately the task has becomereversed <strong>in</strong> its learn<strong>in</strong>g pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, s<strong>in</strong>ce the need to notate has overtaken the impetusto create sounds.’ 15


JOINING IN 69As I have already argued, scientific research <strong>in</strong> the last 10 years has tended to supportclaims for the educational centrality of music <strong>in</strong> schools. George Odam aga<strong>in</strong>:‘Everyth<strong>in</strong>g we have learnt ... has re<strong>in</strong>forced [the] <strong>in</strong>terrelationship of bra<strong>in</strong> functionand the subsequent <strong>in</strong>teraction with bodily action. Alongside this we are becom<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly aware of the ability the bra<strong>in</strong> has to process th<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> different ways andhow we, as educators, may learn to help these processes to <strong>in</strong>teract more fully ... Ifthere are secrets to be learnt about good music teach<strong>in</strong>g they are <strong>in</strong> the identificationand enhancement of this area of <strong>in</strong>teraction of bra<strong>in</strong> functions. The complex<strong>in</strong>terrelationships between the left bra<strong>in</strong>, the right bra<strong>in</strong> and the psychomotor mustconcern music educators as much as, if not more than, most other educators.’ 16Although it was a controversial project at the time and felt to be yet another <strong>in</strong>stance ofThatcherite centralism, the decision to establish a National Curriculum was a rationalresponse to the confus<strong>in</strong>g variety of educational theory and of teach<strong>in</strong>g practice <strong>in</strong> theclassroom. Keith Swanwick was a crucial figure <strong>in</strong> the process of gestation, for hiswrit<strong>in</strong>gs represent a serious effort to offer a coherent synthesis of what has been thoughtand written about music education. The four strands <strong>in</strong> the music curriculum, (iePerformance, Composition, Listen<strong>in</strong>g and Appraisal) reflect his proposal for a tripartiteprogramme based on listen<strong>in</strong>g (his term is audition), compos<strong>in</strong>g and perform<strong>in</strong>g, aided byliterary knowledge and the development of musical skills.Between 1985 and 1987 Swanwick directed a research study, funded by the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> and the Institute of Education at the University of London, which surveyedthe resource con<strong>text</strong> and curriculum for music <strong>in</strong> 60 schools. He found a widedivergence of practice. In one school the teachers saw themselves as primarilyprofessional musicians; <strong>in</strong> another, staff saw their start<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t as the students’ <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>pop music; and <strong>in</strong> a third the major activity was compos<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> small groups. Some didnot expect children to s<strong>in</strong>g at sight and others did not ask their students to compose.There were schools which rarely used recorded music.Swanwick has <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs to say, of equal concern to community musicians andteachers. He rebuts those who argue that music cannot be taught <strong>in</strong> a l<strong>in</strong>ear progressionon the grounds that it is learnt through a ris<strong>in</strong>g ‘spiral’ of engagement, dur<strong>in</strong>g whichstudents return to given topics and each time deepen their understand<strong>in</strong>g. In his view itis possible to devise a music curriculum which is at once modular and sequential:‘ ... we might build up several musical features <strong>in</strong>to sequential order as a curriculumoutl<strong>in</strong>e with a degree of progression. Thus, it seems likely that work<strong>in</strong>g with apentatonic scale for the first time would usually precede composition with a moreextensive note-row: that drones would be handled earlier than blues <strong>in</strong> any otherchord sequence.’ 17And so forth; <strong>in</strong> other words, there is no necessary contradiction between the twoconcepts.16 Ibid, p.44.17 Music, M<strong>in</strong>d andEducation, op cit, p.14818 Music, M<strong>in</strong>d andEducation, op cit, p.116.He accepts the multicultural case, but worries about practicalities. There are limits to theextent of teachers’ familiarity with all the musics of the world, but he suggests that theyshould be ‘sensitive’ to at least one. A manageable way forward for a truly pluralistmusic curriculum would be to identify ‘sets of sounds’ <strong>in</strong> a progressive sequence, l<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gthese to ‘specific musical encounters drawn from across different musical cultures, alwayschosen for their sonorous, expressive and structural impact’. 18Swanwick rejects the widespread assumption that everyth<strong>in</strong>g is socially determ<strong>in</strong>ed and


70 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMculturally embedded, while acknowledg<strong>in</strong>g the mean<strong>in</strong>gs that flow from the social usesof music and accept<strong>in</strong>g that teachers, musicians and musicologists have wrongly soughtto assert the superiority of one culture to another. Music is sufficiently abstract to crosscultural boundaries. In this he agrees with the ethnomusicologist and anthropologistJohn Black<strong>in</strong>g, who wrote:‘Music can transcend time and culture. Music that was excit<strong>in</strong>g to the contemporaries ofMozart and Beethoven is still excit<strong>in</strong>g, although we do not share their culture andsociety. The early Beatles songs are still excit<strong>in</strong>g although the Beatles have unfortunatelybroken up. Similarly the Venda songs that must have been composed hundreds of yearsago still excite the Venda and they also excite me ... I am conv<strong>in</strong>ced that theexplanation for this is to be found <strong>in</strong> the fact that at the level of deep structures <strong>in</strong> musicthere are elements that are common to the human psyche.’ 19Swanwick also addresses the dichotomy between process and product and <strong>in</strong>dicates the ways<strong>in</strong> which it can <strong>in</strong>flect the educational debate. The notion of a deliverable core curriculumcan be set aga<strong>in</strong>st personal development; <strong>in</strong>struction aga<strong>in</strong>st discovery; <strong>in</strong>formation aga<strong>in</strong>stexploration; public performance aga<strong>in</strong>st private self-enhancement. But these are falseantitheses, he argues, a view shared by many of today’s community musicians.‘At any stage of a personal process a product exists, even if it is only a half formulatedidea, a group composition <strong>in</strong> the mak<strong>in</strong>g, or whatever. Processes essentially takeplace on products, not <strong>in</strong> the abstract. We have to be th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g about someth<strong>in</strong>g,imag<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g, mak<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g.’ 20The ideas of Swanwick and other educationists are embodied <strong>in</strong> the music curriculum.The National Curriculum Order for Music sets out a framework for pupils’ musicaldevelopment at Key Stages 1, 2 and 3 – that is, up the age of 14 and the matters, skillsand processes to be taught are formulated as Programmes of Study. The knowledge,skills and understand<strong>in</strong>g expected are described <strong>in</strong> End of Key Stage Statements. Twoatta<strong>in</strong>ment targets, one for perform<strong>in</strong>g and compos<strong>in</strong>g and one for listen<strong>in</strong>g andapprais<strong>in</strong>g, list what is to be learned dur<strong>in</strong>g every stage. However, the documentoutl<strong>in</strong>es ‘progression’ <strong>in</strong> general terms only, accept<strong>in</strong>g that it is achieved throughpractis<strong>in</strong>g and re-visit<strong>in</strong>g the Programmes of Study. Although many aspects ofprogression are, <strong>in</strong> the nature of th<strong>in</strong>gs, difficult to describe, an agreed structure isnecessary. The Curriculum Council for Wales <strong>in</strong> its Non-statutory Guidance for Musichelpfully classifies progression under two head<strong>in</strong>gs:19 Black<strong>in</strong>g, John,How musical is man?(London, Faber, 1976)p.108.20 Swanwick, Keith,A Basis for MusicEducation (W<strong>in</strong>dsor,NFER/NelsonPublish<strong>in</strong>g Company,1981).1 Progression <strong>in</strong> what pupils are able to do:i <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g proficiency with the use of exist<strong>in</strong>g skills and understand<strong>in</strong>gii the accumulation of more skills and understand<strong>in</strong>giii the development and application of skills and understand<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly wide range of con<strong>text</strong>siv <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g ability to <strong>in</strong>tegrate and apply skills and understand<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> variousareas.2 Progression <strong>in</strong> the nature of tasks which pupils should be able to tackle:i the familiarity of the con<strong>text</strong>ii the complexity of the taskiii the degree of <strong>in</strong>dividual responsibility required.It is a pity that, although teach<strong>in</strong>g processes are carefully articulated, music becomesoptional dur<strong>in</strong>g secondary school<strong>in</strong>g and is not universally available <strong>in</strong> practice as a


JOINING IN 71GCSE subject. A wish to avoid overcrowd<strong>in</strong>g the curriculum is understandable.However, if we accept the claims made by educational psychologists on behalf of music,both <strong>in</strong> its own right and as an aid to the learn<strong>in</strong>g of other skills (such as language andmathematics), it would seem that this is a missed opportunity. What is more, it is at leastarguable that the cont<strong>in</strong>uation of music studies for all could do someth<strong>in</strong>g to limit thepost-school decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g by young people. If a way could be found ofma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g universal provision up to and <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Key Stage 4, it ought to be pursued.Learn<strong>in</strong>g to live with the music curriculumThe curriculum is tak<strong>in</strong>g some time to bed down. Conception has not been matched bydelivery. What was good, <strong>in</strong>deed excellent, <strong>in</strong> theory has yet to prove itself <strong>in</strong> practice.There are two k<strong>in</strong>ds of difficulty, theoretical and practical. Some observers such as EricBolton, former HMI Senior Chief Inspector, worry that there may be an imbalance <strong>in</strong>the implementation of the curriculum. ‘It is possible that there is too much do<strong>in</strong>g andnot enough understand<strong>in</strong>g. Some teachers aren’t prepared to say anyth<strong>in</strong>g is better thananyth<strong>in</strong>g else.’ There has been a sharp debate recently on this theme <strong>in</strong> the magaz<strong>in</strong>eClassical Music: the journalist and teacher, Susan Elk<strong>in</strong>, took the view that ‘it is the jobof education – teachers – to <strong>in</strong>troduce pupils to f<strong>in</strong>e and great works which they areunlikely to discover without help ... Unashamedly I make ... “value judgments”.Beethoven (or Schubert) is better than Blur.’ 21Other correspondents were enraged by what they saw as an <strong>in</strong>accurate and monoculturalapproach. One wrote <strong>in</strong> suggest<strong>in</strong>g ‘that we should be giv<strong>in</strong>g all students the opportunitythe opportunity to make their own m<strong>in</strong>ds up’ on questions of quality. Jane Dancer,Education and Outreach Director of the Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia, commented: ‘Music is made upof many colours and traditions.’ It was important to offer ‘the complete musical palette toour pupils to help them to understand and con<strong>text</strong>ualise western classical music’. The olddebate about excellence which community music stimulated <strong>in</strong> the 1970s (and which Idiscuss <strong>in</strong> the next chapter) has reappeared <strong>in</strong> contemporary guise.21 Elk<strong>in</strong>, Susan,Classical Music (London,Rh<strong>in</strong>egold Pubish<strong>in</strong>g,23 November 1996)p.11.To some extent it masks an equally crucial but more concrete discussion about thenature of teach<strong>in</strong>g music <strong>in</strong> the classroom. How are teachers to stimulate creativepractice, usually <strong>in</strong> a s<strong>in</strong>gle classroom and with <strong>in</strong>sufficient equipment? They can breakdown the class <strong>in</strong>to small groups to work on projects among themselves; or they canoperate with the complete class. The first option would be designed to enable childrento develop their creativity and expressiveness through spontaneous co-operation.Experience suggests that this method, rather like that adopted <strong>in</strong> many communitymusic workshops, depends on collaborative skill and clarity of approach among thosetak<strong>in</strong>g part – someth<strong>in</strong>g difficult to expect <strong>in</strong> a crowded, noisy room with <strong>in</strong>expertstudents and overburdened teachers. The second option implies the k<strong>in</strong>d of groupteach<strong>in</strong>g to be found (say) <strong>in</strong> brass bands where one learns by example <strong>in</strong> an orderly,collective and discipl<strong>in</strong>ed atmosphere. However, this approach depends on skills fewteachers are likely to have acquired, hav<strong>in</strong>g emerged from a culture of one-to-one<strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g (although, at the primary level, class s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g does not put such astra<strong>in</strong> on teachers’ musical expertise). The fear among some educational observers is thatunless this issue is urgently addressed, the future of the music curriculum will beimperilled by poor educational outcomes.In addition to the National Curriculum, a central plank of the education reforms wasthe establishment of the local management of schools and a correspond<strong>in</strong>g decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the


72 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMpower of LEAs and <strong>in</strong> the size of their centrally held budgets. The responsibility for artseducation has <strong>in</strong> effect been devolved to schools and the day of the <strong>in</strong>fluential localauthority arts and music advisers has ended. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to the Royal Society of Arts(RSA), local authorities have abolished one-third of their advisory posts and just overhalf of their advisory teacher posts; only a quarter of authorities have a full complementof full-time advisers or <strong>in</strong>spectors for arts subjects. 22 By 1993 more than three-quarters ofLEAs had devolved, or were <strong>in</strong> the process of devolv<strong>in</strong>g, fund<strong>in</strong>g for their musicservices, often to a bus<strong>in</strong>ess unit, agency or trust. This has had potentially damag<strong>in</strong>gconsequences for the provision of <strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools. Schools f<strong>in</strong>d itdifficult to take up projects on offer from arts organisations because of their cost.Instrumental and music teach<strong>in</strong>g sometimes falls <strong>in</strong>to the hands of private companies,where the range of <strong>in</strong>struments on offer is frequently restricted to the cheapest and themost popular (result<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a surfeit of flutes and clar<strong>in</strong>ets and a dearth of bassoons,trombones and double basses), and there are widespread fears that quality as well ascoverage may be suffer<strong>in</strong>g. Furthermore, the 1988 and 1993 Acts allowed schools (orLEAs) to charge for <strong>in</strong>strumental provision if it is designed for <strong>in</strong>dividuals or smallgroups of up to four pupils and is not part of a public exam<strong>in</strong>ation syllabus.Evidence is mount<strong>in</strong>g that the number of students be<strong>in</strong>g charged for lessons is ris<strong>in</strong>g,that free access to <strong>in</strong>struments is fall<strong>in</strong>g, and that more and more parents are fill<strong>in</strong>g thegap with their own f<strong>in</strong>ancial contributions. If the cloud has a silver l<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, it is that, forthose who can afford it (schools or <strong>in</strong>dividuals), the range of peripatetic teach<strong>in</strong>g appearsto be as wide as ever – some argue, wider – and <strong>in</strong> certa<strong>in</strong> areas of the country moreaccountable than <strong>in</strong> the past.That part of the budget for <strong>in</strong>strumental music which comes from public funds, hav<strong>in</strong>gbeen passed down from LEAs to schools, has decl<strong>in</strong>ed from 70% to 63%, while theaverage hourly fee rate has doubled, accord<strong>in</strong>g to a recent RSA report. 23 Also, one-thirdof primary schools and one-third of secondary schools are not properly equipped withgood quality <strong>in</strong>struments for perform<strong>in</strong>g and compos<strong>in</strong>g. It is also claimed that there aretoo few music teachers, especially <strong>in</strong> the primary sector, to deliver the curriculum. Arecent MORI study suggests that fund<strong>in</strong>g changes have not had an adverse effect on thenumber of pupils receiv<strong>in</strong>g tuition across the country. However, others disagree:members of the National Association of Music Educators (NAME) <strong>in</strong> the Northernregion claim that so far as they are concerned the situation is far worse than has beendescribed; they are concerned by the <strong>in</strong>crease <strong>in</strong> the number of pupils whose parentshave to pay for tuition and confirm that cost is deterr<strong>in</strong>g children (especially those frompoorer families) from learn<strong>in</strong>g to play the larger and more expensive <strong>in</strong>struments.22 Rogers, Rick,op cit, (summaryversion) p.3.23 Ibid, p.12.The key po<strong>in</strong>t to be made is that those aspects of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g are suffer<strong>in</strong>g mostwhich, to be done well, need to be done at a level wider than that of the <strong>in</strong>dividualschool; for example, coherent teams of local <strong>in</strong>strumental tutors; music centres;<strong>in</strong>strument loan banks; youth orchestras, bands and other k<strong>in</strong>ds of ensemble. LEAs aref<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g they are no longer <strong>in</strong> a position to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> them. In this respect, the story ofthe London-based <strong>Foundation</strong> for Young Musicians is <strong>in</strong>structive. It was founded totake over the school and youth music arrangements of the Inner London EducationAuthority when this was abolished, and was <strong>in</strong>tended to be supported by all the newborough education departments which pay for students to attend the Centre for YoungMusicians, play <strong>in</strong> the London Schools Symphony Orchestra and so forth. The<strong>Foundation</strong> has also raised £3 million <strong>in</strong> sponsorship. None of these monies are givenfor core fund<strong>in</strong>g expenses, which are covered by the Department for Education and


JOINING IN 73Employment to the tune of £100,000 a year. Now this core fund<strong>in</strong>g subsidy is to bewithdrawn and, because no one else is likely to pick up the bill, the survival of theproject is now threatened.In the long run, the fall-out from the decl<strong>in</strong>e of the LEAs may, if uncorrected, have aknock-on effect on the general orchestral scene. It would not do to exaggerate this, for,<strong>in</strong> the absence of a public service, it is perfectly possible that parents would pay formusical tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and experience if it came to the crunch. Nevertheless, the Associationof British Orchestras estimates that 75% of the players <strong>in</strong> major orchestras benefited fromfree <strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g and from perform<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> youth orchestras run by LEAs. In SirPeter Maxwell Davies’s words:‘without the British youth orchestras, the tertiary music colleges and professionalsymphony orchestras around the country would not be able to recruit musicians.Without the county youth orchestras the national youth orchestras would not be ableto recruit players. Without the school orchestras the county youth orchestras wouldnot be able to recruit players. Without <strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the schools, schoolorchestras will disappear.’ 24Many teachers were not tra<strong>in</strong>ed across the full range of the music curriculum and aref<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g the delivery of some aspects to be difficult. In primary schools, 41% of newteachers feel ill-prepared to teach music, accord<strong>in</strong>g to the RSA. 25 They also argue withsome justification that music and the arts are given <strong>in</strong>sufficient timetable space. Teachertra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is also no longer centrally managed, hav<strong>in</strong>g been mostly devolved to <strong>in</strong>dividualschools. Not unnaturally priorities vary, although some large, better funded schools dohave substantial professional development budgets. Up to 80% of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g time is spent<strong>in</strong>side schools rather than elsewhere, mak<strong>in</strong>g it harder for teachers to acquire the rangeof musical and knowledge they need. The decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> fund<strong>in</strong>g for advisory and supportorganisations with expertise <strong>in</strong> arts education at national and regional levels, comb<strong>in</strong>edwith the wither<strong>in</strong>g away of the LEAs’ advisory structure, means that many teachers arelargely left to their own devices at a time of change and challenge. It may be noaccident that music has the highest teacher vacancy and teacher turnover rates of all theNational Curriculum foundation subjects.Facilities for the practice of music <strong>in</strong> schools, where they exist, are often <strong>in</strong>adequatetechnically and acoustically. Timetabl<strong>in</strong>g constra<strong>in</strong>ts <strong>in</strong>hibit their best use <strong>in</strong> school hoursand they tend not to be readily (or cheaply) available out of school hours. Lack off<strong>in</strong>ance and the need to levy ‘commercial’ lett<strong>in</strong>g charges mean that the ideal of thecommunity school which is open to local organisations as well as pupils is potentiallyunder threat.24 Spoken dur<strong>in</strong>g SirPeter Maxwell Davies’presidential addressgiven at the north ofEngland EducationConference, 2 January1985.25 Rogers, Rick,op cit, p.3.This is a serious matter for, although the delivery of the curriculum <strong>in</strong> the classroom isimportant, we should not undervalue extra-curricular music-mak<strong>in</strong>g out of schoolhours, such as school choirs and orchestras, end-of-term musicals and even nativityplays. Although unfortunately not always related to curriculum work, it gives thoseyoungsters <strong>in</strong>volved the chance to develop their talents. Without more resources thisk<strong>in</strong>d of activity is at risk and there is even less <strong>in</strong>centive than there was to build bridgesbetween music <strong>in</strong> and out of school.In this connection, we should not forget the substantial number of private orcommercial tutors. They offer a range of services, although clearly only for those whocan afford their fees. The code of practice drawn up by the Incorporated Society ofMusicians’ Private Teachers’ Section and its Music <strong>in</strong> Education Section Committees


74 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUMsuggests that relations between the public and private sectors are not all they might be:‘This code of practice acknowledges a need for more communication on all “sides”for it to become apparent that there are, <strong>in</strong> fact, no sides ... Communication andelementary courtesy provide the very simple key to a good professional relationshipbetween music teachers work<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> and outside schools ... Too often pupils arethe unfortunate go-betweens <strong>in</strong> a tussle of authority and will.’ 26This <strong>in</strong>itiative to reconcile disagreements, or at least differences <strong>in</strong> attitude, is surely theright course of action. Boundaries between the two camps are blurred <strong>in</strong> that a privateteacher may well play a part <strong>in</strong> publicly funded organisations (music groups as well aseducational establishments). Not only can such a teacher provide additional out-of-hourstuition for keen or talented students, but they also represent a valuable specialist resourcewhich hard-pressed schools can make use of to bolster sometimes generalist provision <strong>in</strong>the classroom.For all the difficulties, more young people are tak<strong>in</strong>g public exam<strong>in</strong>ations <strong>in</strong> arts subjectsand achiev<strong>in</strong>g high grades. In 1993, 70,000 young people took an A-level <strong>in</strong> art, design,media studies, music, the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts, photography or theatre studies. In 1994 therewere more than half a million secondary school entries for arts subjects at GCSE,although there is a low take-up <strong>in</strong> music. N<strong>in</strong>e out of ten 11 to 16 year-olds take part<strong>in</strong> at least one arts activity <strong>in</strong>side school and about as many participate outside school.N<strong>in</strong>eteen per cent play a musical <strong>in</strong>strument on their own <strong>in</strong>side school and 24%outside. However, for children from the lower socio-economic levels, charges for musictuition for groups of four or fewer pupils is a barrier to development. A quarter ofyoung people say they never engage <strong>in</strong> imag<strong>in</strong>ative or creative activities. Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> the daytime is fractionally higher among female teenagers than male, although <strong>in</strong>leisure time this picture is reversed, doubtless due <strong>in</strong> part to the male orientation ofmuch rock and pop.So far as further and higher education are concerned, art and design, the perform<strong>in</strong>g artsand media studies are the third biggest programme funded by the Further EducationFund<strong>in</strong>g Council. Almost 200,000 people have some form of artistic qualification andthe younger they are the more this is likely to be the case. An <strong>in</strong>dication of thepopularity of the arts <strong>in</strong> tertiary education is that applicants for drama tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g outstripthe places available by 14 to 1. One <strong>in</strong> five creative arts graduates goes on to furtherstudies – a third of them <strong>in</strong>to teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g who comprise 17% of all music graduates.26 Shared MusicTeach<strong>in</strong>g, A code ofpractice agreed by the ISMprivate teachers’ section,for school and privatemusic teachers who teachthe same pupils, ISMInformation, 01/2,London, 1995,unpag<strong>in</strong>ated.27 Rogers, Rick,op cit, p.19.Adult education has played an important part <strong>in</strong> arts development, but is itself fac<strong>in</strong>gconsiderable pressures from government reforms. The results are unquantifiable atpresent because it is a decentralised field and no comprehensive research on recentchanges has been conducted. Universities led the way <strong>in</strong> adult education from the earlyn<strong>in</strong>eteenth century, followed by local authorities, who became <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> the laten<strong>in</strong>eteenth century, and the Workers’ Educational Association, founded <strong>in</strong> 1903. In1985-6 a survey of local authority adult education classes showed that there were anestimated 600,000 enrolments for arts and crafts classes <strong>in</strong> England (exclud<strong>in</strong>g dance). 27In the decade that has followed the situation has deteriorated, although <strong>in</strong> the absence ofhard evidence we cannot say for sure to what extent. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to a national studycarried out by the National Institute for Adult and Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g Education for the ArtsCouncil of England (ACE), the arts are <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly a leisure <strong>in</strong>terest for many adultsalongside sports, read<strong>in</strong>g and garden<strong>in</strong>g. Almost a third say that they enjoy the arts andcrafts (9% play a musical <strong>in</strong>strument), but report grow<strong>in</strong>g difficulties <strong>in</strong> pursu<strong>in</strong>g such


JOINING IN 75<strong>in</strong>terests, 28 s<strong>in</strong>ce the general squeeze on local authority budgets has led to decreas<strong>in</strong>gprogrammes <strong>in</strong> many parts of the country. Those that rema<strong>in</strong> are shorter and chargehigher fees. This fall<strong>in</strong>g away has been especially damag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> rural areas where generalarts provision is, <strong>in</strong> the nature of th<strong>in</strong>gs, th<strong>in</strong>ner on the ground. University providers arealso short of cash. Government policy is focus<strong>in</strong>g public resources on vocational ratherthan recreational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.Despite these difficulties some observers claim that attendances at music courses haverisen <strong>in</strong> recent years. It is hard to be sure exactly why, but there are a number ofpossible reasons. Local authorities have <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly targeted their provision atdisadvantaged communities and the traditional student profile is chang<strong>in</strong>g. There isevidence that young Asians are enroll<strong>in</strong>g to ga<strong>in</strong> music qualifications which wouldenable them to work <strong>in</strong> their communities. Also more young Afro-Caribbeans aretak<strong>in</strong>g part. In general, there is greater <strong>in</strong>terest than previously <strong>in</strong> music <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g newtechnologies and <strong>in</strong> pop or rock. Another important factor has been the franchis<strong>in</strong>g ofcourses by established colleges and <strong>in</strong>stitutions to other organisations; this has enabledarts centres and community music projects to jo<strong>in</strong> the adult education world and theyhave brought a fresh approach to the work. Unfortunately because of various problems(managerial and f<strong>in</strong>ancial) with some franchisees, the Further Education Fund<strong>in</strong>gCouncil has replaced franchises with longer-term and more closely monitoredpartnerships: this is an understandable reaction, but it may make it more difficult <strong>in</strong>future for smaller music organisations to bid <strong>in</strong>to the system.An important feature of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education, although not necessarily part of thepublicly funded sector, is the wealth of summer schools and music courses which is onoffer <strong>in</strong> every corner of the country and makes a valuable and varied contribution to thedevelopment of participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. The magaz<strong>in</strong>e Classical Music does notoverstate the case when it observes:‘There are summer schools which cater to people with every musical taste andability. From professional opera s<strong>in</strong>gers to budd<strong>in</strong>g recorder players, from str<strong>in</strong>genthusiasts to brass band aficionados – there is a course to suit you.’ 29Although most of the courses focus on the Western classical tradition, a numberspecialise <strong>in</strong> other genres, Some adopt a catholic, <strong>in</strong>tercultural approach; perhaps thelead<strong>in</strong>g exemplar is the Dart<strong>in</strong>gton International Summer School which presents aprogramme of concerts, courses, masterclasses, workshops and lectures on more or lessevery k<strong>in</strong>d of music you can th<strong>in</strong>k of, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g African drumm<strong>in</strong>g as well as chambermusic, flamenco as well as choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, baroque dance as well as ‘The Rock Shop’.28 Tucket, Alan, andSargent, Naomi,Creat<strong>in</strong>g Two Nations? –headl<strong>in</strong>e f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs onlifelong learn<strong>in</strong>g from theNIACE/GALLUPsurvey (The NationalOrganisation for AdultLearn<strong>in</strong>g [NIACE],1996).29 The Classical MusicGuide to Summer Schoolsand Music Courses 1997(London, Rh<strong>in</strong>egoldPublish<strong>in</strong>g Ltd, 1997)p.3.The educational system has passed through a period of wholesale change, which has ledto a wan<strong>in</strong>g of the powers of those bodies that used to be charged with provid<strong>in</strong>gauthoritative plann<strong>in</strong>g, guidance and ‘dis<strong>in</strong>terested’ long-term fund<strong>in</strong>g (most notably, theLEAs). Bus<strong>in</strong>ess sponsors and the National Lottery are neither will<strong>in</strong>g nor able toprovide the basic adm<strong>in</strong>istrative and runn<strong>in</strong>g costs of youth orchestras and the like. It isnot at all clear how this f<strong>in</strong>ancial gap can be filled unless LEAs are given back theresources to do so.On the credit side of the ledger, there is a grow<strong>in</strong>g acknowledgment of the contributionwhich artists and arts organisations have made to education over the last 15 years. Thiscontribution was <strong>in</strong> large part a response to the Arts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>’s(ACGB’s) entry <strong>in</strong>to the field when its Secretary-General, Sir Roy Shaw, established aneducation department and policy <strong>in</strong> 1978. ACGB argued, and won, the case that artists


76 TRANSFORMING THE CURRICULUM(work<strong>in</strong>g as artists not as teachers) can make a valuable contribution to the teach<strong>in</strong>g ofarts <strong>in</strong> schools. Most theatres, dance and opera companies and orchestras have educationdepartments of their own which run extensive programmes. In f<strong>in</strong>ancial terms their<strong>in</strong>put is not <strong>in</strong>considerable; for example, <strong>in</strong> 1995-6 ACE and the English Regional ArtsBoards (RABs) spent £4.25 million on education and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. About £1.6 millionwent to artists, arts organisations, venues and promoters and £2.6 million towardseducation and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g projects.There are signs that the Arts Councils and the RABs are mov<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> to fill the gapopened by the educational reforms and to offer both practical support and a theoreticaloverview for which the LEAs used to have the monopoly. This is confirmed by ACE’sGreen Paper on education and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.‘Much <strong>in</strong>novative work <strong>in</strong> arts education has come – and still does come – from LEA<strong>in</strong>itiatives and policies, and there is an urgent need to rebuild or underp<strong>in</strong> the networkswhich can guarantee the cont<strong>in</strong>uation of resources for arts education <strong>in</strong> schools. Someof this work is already under way, particularly <strong>in</strong> the RABs which have strongpartnerships with LEAs ... Work is under way to develop standards of practice <strong>in</strong>tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, plann<strong>in</strong>g, management, and evaluation of projects. To address the currentpatchy provision, the [arts fund<strong>in</strong>g] system aims to develop a network of agencies acrossthe country which can play an effective role <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>ks between professionalartists and arts organisations <strong>in</strong> the education sector. The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g sector has acritical role to play here <strong>in</strong> complement<strong>in</strong>g and add<strong>in</strong>g to arts education.’ 30What is emerg<strong>in</strong>g is a confluence of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g between the arts and education sectorsthat is now <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly express<strong>in</strong>g itself <strong>in</strong> jo<strong>in</strong>t action. Despite many differences ofemphasis, the body of ideas which underp<strong>in</strong>s the education programmes of many artsorganisations has a great deal <strong>in</strong> common with the development of educational theorywhich led to the establishment of the arts components of the National Curriculum. Theworkshop-based practice of professional music groups and community musiciansfunctions along the same l<strong>in</strong>es as the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples underly<strong>in</strong>g classroom practice with ashared emphasis on elicit<strong>in</strong>g creativity as much as the impart<strong>in</strong>g of knowledge. There isa common understand<strong>in</strong>g of the need to promote cultural diversity and of the ways <strong>in</strong>which music can contribute both to social and personal awareness. Necessity, <strong>in</strong> theform of <strong>in</strong>adequate public fund<strong>in</strong>g across the board, is speed<strong>in</strong>g up this process ofcollaboration and <strong>in</strong>teraction.30 Consultative GreenPaper for Education andTra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the EnglishArts Fund<strong>in</strong>g System(London, Arts Councilof England, June 1996).31 It is good news thatthe Royal Society ofArts’ ‘The Arts Matter’programme is fund<strong>in</strong>gresearch by theNational <strong>Foundation</strong>for EducationalResearch <strong>in</strong>to l<strong>in</strong>ksbetween a healthy artsscene <strong>in</strong> schools andgood academicperformance generally.Although this book is not primarily concerned with schools, the future of participatorymusic is <strong>in</strong> large part dependent on what is taught <strong>in</strong> them and how it is taught. In thebrave new world of league tables and competition for students, ambitious schools regardmusic as an important component of their work, or at least as a useful adornment. Aschool orchestra, a choir and public concerts are attractive sell<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>ts. Most parentsand teachers are not familiar with recent research, such as the Swiss study I report <strong>in</strong>chapter 1, The case for participation (see page 31), but the canniest of them have a strongsuspicion that children who learn music are often good at other subjects and that there isa l<strong>in</strong>k between the study of music, mathematics and languages. 31 They value the selfdiscipl<strong>in</strong>erequired <strong>in</strong> learn<strong>in</strong>g to play an <strong>in</strong>strument – the ability to susta<strong>in</strong> practice andthe persistence to overcome difficulties.Unfortunately, it tends to be middle-class parents who place a value on music teach<strong>in</strong>g,s<strong>in</strong>ce they are able to offer the space and the encouragement to practise at home.Although some local authorities still provide free or cheap access to musical <strong>in</strong>struments


JOINING IN 77and lessons, coverage is patchy. In schools which are unable or unwill<strong>in</strong>g to make musica priority, the opportunity to take music as a GCSE subject is unavailable. Musicteachers can f<strong>in</strong>d themselves reduced to one class a week and what they offer pupils isoften scrappy and unchalleng<strong>in</strong>g, bitty and eclectic. There is a tendency to focus on themusically able (usually those whose families can afford out-of-school tuition) at theexpense of the rest.All the political parties have stressed the importance of education <strong>in</strong> children’s earlyyears. If progress is to be made on this front, policy-makers must understand that musicshould be a build<strong>in</strong>g block of the curriculum right from the outset. Teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>music should be improved, especially at primary school level, for both specialists andgeneralists. Music should be a substantial feature of nursery education. More time shouldbe given to music for all children <strong>in</strong> primary schools (with an emphasis on chorals<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and music at school assemblies). GCSE <strong>in</strong> music should always be on offer forthose who are <strong>in</strong>terested. Schools need to be furnished with freely available <strong>in</strong>struments,facilities and dedicated rehearsal and practice spaces so that every pupil who wants to hasan equal chance to develop musical skills. If resources of this k<strong>in</strong>d are also open to useby the local community (I discuss the role of community schools <strong>in</strong> chapter 4, There-creation of community), children will f<strong>in</strong>d it easier to make the imag<strong>in</strong>ative and practicall<strong>in</strong>k between school work and music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the world at large: this may help toensure that they ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> their musical <strong>in</strong>terests after leav<strong>in</strong>g school.Further discussion on classroom teach<strong>in</strong>g methods is required. Techniques <strong>in</strong>tended toencourage self-expression are not always practical <strong>in</strong> today’s conditions and shouldperhaps be complemented by more traditional approaches to the acquisition of particularskills. Group learn<strong>in</strong>g can be as constructive as <strong>in</strong>dividual learn<strong>in</strong>g. Good practice <strong>in</strong> theuse of new technologies would ensure that expensive electronic equipment is put to themost effective use.These are complex issues and, although education is hardly a discipl<strong>in</strong>e deficient <strong>in</strong>committees or work<strong>in</strong>g groups, there is a case for establish<strong>in</strong>g one more to look <strong>in</strong>to thepracticalities of deliver<strong>in</strong>g the music curriculum at early years, primary and secondarylevels, to explore the potential synergies between adult participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g andthe education sector, and to help schools to be resources not simply for the children <strong>in</strong>their care but for the community at large.


photo: Keith Saunders


4 THE RE-CREATION OFCOMMUNITY


80 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYOur descriptions of our experience come to compose a network of relationships, and all ourcommunications systems, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the arts, are literally parts of our social organisation. S<strong>in</strong>ce ourway of see<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs is literally our way of liv<strong>in</strong>g, the process of communication is <strong>in</strong> fact the processof community: the shar<strong>in</strong>g of common mean<strong>in</strong>gs, and hence common activities and purposes; theoffer<strong>in</strong>g, reception and comparison of new mean<strong>in</strong>gs, lead<strong>in</strong>g to the tensions and achievements ofgrowth and change.RAYMOND WILLIAMS(On the out-of-tune s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g of an old stonemason.) Watch him closely and reverently, look<strong>in</strong>to his eyes and hear the music of the ages. Don’t pay too much attention to the sounds – for if youdo you may miss the music. You won’t get a wild, heroic ride to heaven on pretty little sounds.CHARLES IVES, MEMOSThe orig<strong>in</strong>s of community artsThe story of choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the Potteries <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century is an illustrationof how a derac<strong>in</strong>ated community was able to rebuild itself through art and how‘ord<strong>in</strong>ary people’ were able to make a significant contribution to the onward marchof contemporary music. It also shows that, while there was certa<strong>in</strong>ly no communal GoldenAge, geographically def<strong>in</strong>ed social group<strong>in</strong>gs were <strong>in</strong> a position (almost with<strong>in</strong> liv<strong>in</strong>gmemory) to assert their own, authentic cultural values.They set someth<strong>in</strong>g off – an ethos, an energy – which spread and cont<strong>in</strong>ued across thecountry throughout the follow<strong>in</strong>g 100 years. Choirs, brass bands, music festivals and, later,music clubs of all k<strong>in</strong>ds sprang up, thrived, sometimes faded only to be reborn or renewed,<strong>in</strong> the Welsh valleys, the Northern mill towns, the churches and village halls of the shires.Little of this activity has been documented, but <strong>in</strong> the archives of every local newspaper <strong>in</strong>the land there will be records of concerts, operettas, march<strong>in</strong>g bands and the like. They arethe only rema<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g traces of a nation-wide cultural movement which touched the lives ofevery class and every human settlement.This movement was characterised by the fact that it was often led by <strong>in</strong>dividual musiciansor music-lovers with vision, drive, ambition or local pride and, above all, a delight <strong>in</strong>music-mak<strong>in</strong>g for its own sake. Such people still exist. They play the organ, teach theclar<strong>in</strong>et, run the local choir, organise and perform <strong>in</strong> festivals and performances and work<strong>in</strong> pubs and clubs. They are to be found at wedd<strong>in</strong>gs, barmitzvahs, discos, raves and streetfestivals. But this is only one side of their work. Many also encourage people to valuemusic through participation and other forms of engagement; they work with communitygroups <strong>in</strong> disadvantaged neighbourhoods as well as develop<strong>in</strong>g education-based activity <strong>in</strong>or out of schools.Paradoxically, at a time when real communities existed and embodied real community values,the term did not have the connotations it possesses today. Indeed as far as music is concerned,the ‘community musician’ is a dist<strong>in</strong>ct species which derived its name and ethos from aphilosophy which was rooted <strong>in</strong> a particular time and political stance – one that reflectedpolitical and social concerns throughout the Western world dur<strong>in</strong>g the 1960s and 1970s.For many <strong>in</strong> the early days of the community arts movement, an explanation of what hadhappened rested on a socialist critique of capitalism. The proposition was that art had beenappropriated by the rul<strong>in</strong>g classes and was deployed as a means of bolster<strong>in</strong>g their authority.The critic and writer John Berger, spoke of the ‘illusion’ that:


JOINING IN 81‘ ... art, with its unique, undim<strong>in</strong>ished authority, justifies most other forms of authority,that art makes <strong>in</strong>equality seem noble and hierarchies seem thrill<strong>in</strong>g. For example, thewhole concept of the National Cultural Heritage exploits the authority of art to glorifythe present social system and its priorities.’ 1This echoes the <strong>in</strong>fluential views of the German literary critic and theorist Walter Benjam<strong>in</strong>,who flourished <strong>in</strong> the 1930s, but whose work attracted the attention of community artistssome 30 years later. For him the vision of history as a progressive cont<strong>in</strong>uum, the gradual‘becom<strong>in</strong>g’ of truth and freedom belonged to the victors – ‘the cont<strong>in</strong>uum of history is thatof the oppressor.’ He developed the notion of ‘redemptive criticism’ which would <strong>in</strong>terruptthis cont<strong>in</strong>uum, unveil<strong>in</strong>g moments of discont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> history and mak<strong>in</strong>g it possible torestore what cont<strong>in</strong>uous, progressive history has dom<strong>in</strong>ated and suppressed.Su Braden was a community artist of note who co-founded ‘Pavilions <strong>in</strong> the Park’ <strong>in</strong> 1967,an attempt to persuade local authorities to use parks and open spaces to take the full rangeof arts to random audiences. She put together a conceptual approach by which it would bepossible to exam<strong>in</strong>e the role of artistic expression <strong>in</strong> everyday life. She wrote: ‘It is onlythrough actively engag<strong>in</strong>g with society that artists may acquire a perception of reality whichmatches that of ord<strong>in</strong>ary people <strong>in</strong> local con<strong>text</strong>s.’ 2She saw the history of social and economic development over the last two centuriesthrough a form of class analysis.‘S<strong>in</strong>ce the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of the Industrial Revolution, the middle and upper classes havebeen able to cont<strong>in</strong>ue their art-forms almost unchanged. But the vernacular culture ofrural populations – who were to become the future <strong>in</strong>dustrial work<strong>in</strong>g class – sufferedconsiderably <strong>in</strong> the course of the Industrial Revolution and has subsequently receivedeven more deadly blows at the hands of <strong>in</strong>dustrial and city planners. There is today alarge population of work<strong>in</strong>g people who had to be educated to fit themselves to the<strong>in</strong>dustrial life of the cities, while the middle classes have been able to reta<strong>in</strong> their culture– albeit with less and less direct participation.’ 3This account was complemented by a view of personal (as dist<strong>in</strong>ct from social and political)development which reflected the work of the psychiatrist R D La<strong>in</strong>g. He argued that whatwas understood as sanity and madness was ‘degrees of conjunction and disjunction betweentwo persons where one is sane by common consent’. The denom<strong>in</strong>ation of sanity he saw asa social construct and madness was best understood as an understandable reaction on thepart of those estranged or excluded from the outside, ‘real’ world. This neatly l<strong>in</strong>ked thenotion of <strong>in</strong>dividual creativity, or the lack of it, to external pressures very similar to those ofthe politico-cultural analysis of a Braden or a Berger.1 Berger, John, Waysof See<strong>in</strong>g (London, BBCand Pengu<strong>in</strong> Books)1972.2 Braden, Su, Artistsand People (London,Henley and Boston,Routledge and KeganPaul) 1978, p.133.3 Berger, John, Waysof See<strong>in</strong>g, op cit, p.8.4 Nettel, R, op cit,p.108.One may surmise that these ideas would not have had so vigorous an outcome <strong>in</strong> practicehad it not been for the <strong>in</strong>tervention of another factor. The birth of community artsco<strong>in</strong>cided with that of rock and pop. This was important for a number of reasons. Firstly, sofar as Brita<strong>in</strong> was concerned, pop music (although exploited for purely commercial ends bythe music <strong>in</strong>dustry) was of great cultural significance because it was led by a generation ofwork<strong>in</strong>g- or lower-middle-class musicians, many of them tra<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> art schools (<strong>in</strong>stitutionswhich offered unprivileged adolescents a unique ladder up <strong>in</strong>to professional creativity).They produced what seemed to be a new and orig<strong>in</strong>al form of urban <strong>in</strong>dustrial folk and ofthe ballad tradition. R Nettel’s description of the Potteries <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century as a‘commercial society <strong>in</strong> the throes of an artistic urge’ 4 could, it seemed, be applied withequal force to the Brita<strong>in</strong> of the Sw<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g Sixties.


82 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYSecondly, the arrival of rock and pop co<strong>in</strong>cided with the economic ‘com<strong>in</strong>g of age’ of youngpeople who for the first time <strong>in</strong> history had sufficient funds at their personal disposal tobecome an economic force <strong>in</strong> their own right. Music was at the heart of a new autonomousyouth culture and, with the co<strong>in</strong>cident <strong>in</strong>vention of more effective birth control and aloosen<strong>in</strong>g of family hierarchies, was closely l<strong>in</strong>ked to a revolution <strong>in</strong> sexual mores.Thirdly, these new forms of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g seemed to modify the conventional relationbetween active performer and passive audience. Rock concerts were (and still are)communal celebrations with quasi-religious, sexual and political overtones. In other words,they were digg<strong>in</strong>g up the lost roots of music long s<strong>in</strong>ce overlaid by the polite manners ofthe classical music experience.Jim Morrison, of the primal American group The Doors, summed up his contribution <strong>in</strong> away that characterised the general mood:‘When I s<strong>in</strong>g my songs <strong>in</strong> public, that’s a dramatic act, but not just act<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> theatre, buta social act, real action. A Doors concert is a public meet<strong>in</strong>g called by us for a specialk<strong>in</strong>d of dramatic discussion and enterta<strong>in</strong>ment. We make concerts sexual politics. Thesex starts with me, then moves out to <strong>in</strong>clude the charmed circle of musicians on stage.The music we make goes out to the audience and <strong>in</strong>teracts with them; they go homeand <strong>in</strong>teract with the rest of reality, then I get it all back by <strong>in</strong>teract<strong>in</strong>g with that reality.When we perform, we’re participat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the creation of a world, and we celebrate thatcreation with the audience.’ 5The language may seem hip-ly dated, but it is easy to see the resonance this k<strong>in</strong>d of claimhad <strong>in</strong> the ears of community artists and musicians.Bob Dylan’s songs were hugely <strong>in</strong>fluential too, for some of them comb<strong>in</strong>ed an up-to-them<strong>in</strong>utepolitical consciousness with wide popular appeal. Another witness from the time,although speak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> equally over-the-top terms, was not far wrong when she said:‘Dylan is a mass poet. People follow his work and wait for his latest releases with aneagerness no poet has received <strong>in</strong> this country [ie the USA] s<strong>in</strong>ce at least the IndustrialRevolution. People talk about his work and his changes as if they had participated <strong>in</strong>them. They see his poetry as process – a liv<strong>in</strong>g grow<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>g – not as a mysteriousproduct <strong>in</strong> an aesthetic universe apart from life.’ 65 Cited <strong>in</strong> Baxandall,Lee, ‘Spectacles andScenarios: aDramaturgy of RadicalActivity’ <strong>in</strong> Baxandall,Lee, ed, RadicalPerspectives <strong>in</strong> the Arts(Harmondsworth,Pengu<strong>in</strong> Books) 1972.6 Tax, Meredith,Introductory: Culture isnot Neutral, Whom Doesit Serve? <strong>in</strong> ibid, p.28.Fourthly, and more practically, rock and pop brought with them a huge surge of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>guitars and drums. Not only were these <strong>in</strong>struments relatively affordable by young people,but it was possible to achieve more than adequate musical results without years of formaltra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. This is not to make a comparative judgment of the ease or difficulty with whichthey can be played compared with other <strong>in</strong>struments, nor of the artistic quality of the bestrock and pop. I simply mean that they were readily available and usable expressive tools <strong>in</strong> away that the keyboard or the viol<strong>in</strong>, with the cultural expectations they arouse, were not(much the same po<strong>in</strong>t can be made of the brass band movement to expla<strong>in</strong> its endur<strong>in</strong>gpopularity among amateur musicians; the use of treble clefs throughout, except for basstrombone, and identical f<strong>in</strong>ger<strong>in</strong>g means that <strong>in</strong>struments are easily taught and play<strong>in</strong>g skillsreadily transferable).The 1960s also saw the rise of the arts centre movement. With their commitment to ‘empower’the disenfranchised, their <strong>in</strong>term<strong>in</strong>gl<strong>in</strong>g of art-forms, their will<strong>in</strong>gness to give house-room torock and pop, their sense of art as a search or a voyage of discovery and the simple fact ofaccessible facilities, arts centres were helpful to community artists. But Su Braden, writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> thelate 1970s, was probably right when she sensed their lack of a radical edge.


JOINING IN 83‘Beaford ... is not unique. Other arts centres where residencies have taken placerecently are the Brewery at Kendal, South Hill Park <strong>in</strong> Bracknell, and the Old TownHall <strong>in</strong> Battersea, London, and all of them suffer from many of the same problemsnoted <strong>in</strong> relation to the Maisons de la Culture <strong>in</strong> France, which were founded withthe idea of br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g the “arts” to the people. This proposition was based on verylittle analysis of either the arts themselves and the forms of expression which havedeveloped <strong>in</strong> more formal con<strong>text</strong>s, or the “people” and the reasons why thework<strong>in</strong>g class have become alienated from those forms of culture which the middleclass term “art”.’ 7Community music did not make such rapid advances as the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts and aspects ofthe visual arts (especially the pr<strong>in</strong>t media), although it often appeared <strong>in</strong> multi-art-formpresentations or activities. However, community-based workshop practice began to becomewidespread. ‘Workshop’ is a term that can mean many th<strong>in</strong>gs to many people. AndrewPeggie has provided a carefully crafted def<strong>in</strong>ition. In his words it is:‘ ... an activity, part of which would consist <strong>in</strong> the “audience” work<strong>in</strong>g with musicalmaterial presented by the group or session leader, and usually under the direction of agroup member or leader. While various degrees of preparation may have beenundertaken beforehand, the emphasis would tend to be on improvisation or on materialcreated at the time. Workshops are (by and large) predicated on the notion ofexploration and experimentation, the assumption be<strong>in</strong>g that the participants are therebecause they wish to broaden their horizons, expand their knowledge and experience(both self and musical) and learn new skills.’The object of this work was not that community artists should feel that their job was totake their art to the people, for that <strong>in</strong> essence is the relationship of professional to amateur;rather, believ<strong>in</strong>g that many people’s power of creative expression was stunted or suppressed,their task was to place their talent at the disposal of others and to collaborate with them ona basis of equality – even if this equality (at least at the outset) was one of <strong>in</strong>tention andcomradeship rather than of skills.John Stevens, a drummer, visual artist and co-founder of Community Music London wroteSearch and Reflect, which became a treasured handbook for practitioners. As I have alreadyobserved, some educational th<strong>in</strong>kers, among them John Paynter and Keith Swanwick, wereproceed<strong>in</strong>g down similar avenues and their work percolated through to the community musicsector. Other <strong>in</strong>fluential figures <strong>in</strong>cluded Peter Wiegold who ran Gem<strong>in</strong>i, a contemporarymusic perform<strong>in</strong>g group with a serious commitment to work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> community andeducational sett<strong>in</strong>gs; and Trevor Wishart, the composer. Disenchanted with the estrangementof contemporary classical music from its audience, he argues that ‘good art is both accessibleand profound.’ He told me <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>terview:‘My work spr<strong>in</strong>gs from a commitment that there’s no po<strong>in</strong>t do<strong>in</strong>g art if you don’t speakto people. It matters to me as an artist who deals <strong>in</strong> universals. I’m not purvey<strong>in</strong>gmaterial for a niche market which six professionals <strong>in</strong> Switzerland will enjoy.’7 Braden, Su, Artistsand People, op cit, p.111.Su Braden’s Artists and People is one of the few published <strong>text</strong>s which attempt a rigorousevaluation of community practice and it raises issues from the 1970s which are still currenttoday. Evaluation is, <strong>in</strong> fact, the first of them, together with the l<strong>in</strong>ked debate about ‘artisticquality’. The question of what was or was not good art (whatever that might mean) wasside-stepped by an emphasis on process rather than product. To offer a ‘product’ was toenter the capitalist world of production and to accept the very notion of professionalismwhich it was the community artist’s task to subvert. In those early days, it was an


84 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYunderstandable approach, for it was necessary to wean workshop leaders away from an overconcernwith their own work and from the implicit attitudes which their conventionaltra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g may have <strong>in</strong>culcated.Other themes emerged from Su Braden’s survey of a range of community projects andschools residencies: <strong>in</strong> particular, the need for community artists to settle on a clear aim, toestablish appropriate support systems and to discuss plans carefully and openly with all those<strong>in</strong>volved, whether directly or <strong>in</strong>directly.A question of particular relevance to music was raised <strong>in</strong> a couple of the residencies;namely, the literary character of British culture echoed <strong>in</strong> the academic bias of the schoolssystem which places an undue importance on ‘writ<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs down’. The notation of music,it was felt, can distance people from the experience of mak<strong>in</strong>g music.The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g establishment was uneasy about community arts. Their anxieties focusedon the unresolved question of artistic quality. Richard Hoggart, who was a member of theArts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> (ACGB) and chairman of its Drama Panel for a number ofyears, expressed typical reservations:‘ ... you have to believe that some works of art are better than others, that some music isbetter than other music, some novels are better than others and some pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs betterthan others. Even if such a view can never be <strong>in</strong>controvertibly proved, there is norefuge <strong>in</strong> the “good of its k<strong>in</strong>d” fog which <strong>in</strong>vites you to settle for say<strong>in</strong>g that a bestsell<strong>in</strong>gcrime novel is <strong>in</strong> its way as good as Middlemarch, and that the Beatles <strong>in</strong> their ownway are as good as Beethoven.’ 8In part, this is a persuasive argument. No doubt the Oresteia has someth<strong>in</strong>g over Eastenders.No doubt too, unfortunately, some community-based practice has been unsatisfactorywith<strong>in</strong> its own terms and for those tak<strong>in</strong>g part, let alone anyone look<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> from theoutside. Community artists at the time probably missed a trick because their neglect ofproduct made it difficult for them to deliver an effective riposte. But it does not follow thatth<strong>in</strong>gs cannot be good of their k<strong>in</strong>d, whatever one may th<strong>in</strong>k about the k<strong>in</strong>ds themselves.Human creativity and tastes are diverse, both generally and for <strong>in</strong>dividuals: that is, it ispossible for one and the same person to enjoy opera and soap opera.The trouble with Hoggart’s remarks is less their content than their tone. What someonewith a democratic perspective might recognise as a new egalitarianism where different typesof creative opportunity are becom<strong>in</strong>g available for all, he saw dismissively and pejoratively as‘levell<strong>in</strong>g-down’.In any event, it was this negative po<strong>in</strong>t of view which helped to turn ACGB away fromcommunity arts. Largely as a result, their full potential was smothered by lack of funds andof serious attention, although their basic tenets came to be taken up (if often <strong>in</strong> dilutedform) by local authorities, which were beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to pay <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g attention to artsprovision. Meanwhile, of course, the musician <strong>in</strong> and of the community, who waspractis<strong>in</strong>g music for music’s sake, was largely if not completely overlooked. Be<strong>in</strong>g a mere‘amateur’, he or she was neither a threat nor a serious competitor for such public f<strong>in</strong>ances aswere available for the arts.8 Hoggart, Richard,‘False Populisms, falseElitisms’, Arts Express,12, February 1985.At the end of the 1970s and <strong>in</strong> the early 1980s Roy Shaw was ACGB’s Secretary-Generaland super<strong>in</strong>tended the devolution of responsibility for support<strong>in</strong>g community arts to theregional arts associations. He regarded them as little concerned with artistic excellence andsuspected, darkly but not altogether <strong>in</strong>accurately, that some of them saw the arts as a way ofconduct<strong>in</strong>g politics by other means. But then, hav<strong>in</strong>g booted them out by the front door he


JOINING IN 85<strong>in</strong>advertently let them return through the back. With a background <strong>in</strong> the Workers’Educational Association and <strong>in</strong> adult education at the University of Keele, he believed thatthe fund<strong>in</strong>g system should develop explicit l<strong>in</strong>ks with the world of education. In 1978 hefounded a small education department at ACGB, an important and timely <strong>in</strong>novation withlong-last<strong>in</strong>g consequences. Over the years that have followed the application of discreetpressure has persuaded the ma<strong>in</strong> arts organisations which the Council regularly funded – theregional theatres, orchestras and so forth – to appo<strong>in</strong>t education officers and establisheducational and outreach policies. Unsure how to proceed, many adopted the methodologyof community arts practice.The participatory musician todayThe debate widened and moved on, although, as we shall see <strong>in</strong> contemporary debatesabout the nature of artistic quality, Hoggartian voices are still to be heard. The word‘community’ became <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly problematic. A loose work<strong>in</strong>g def<strong>in</strong>ition <strong>in</strong> the 1970s was:‘ ... a variety of social con<strong>text</strong>s <strong>in</strong> which groups of people recognise a relationshipbetween each other and a def<strong>in</strong>ed geographical area or adm<strong>in</strong>istrative structure. With<strong>in</strong>the mean<strong>in</strong>g of “community” used <strong>in</strong> this sense [are] the hierarchical communities ofschools and hospitals and the work<strong>in</strong>g teams that compose a new town developmentcorporation, as well as the communities who simply recognise the pervasiveness oflocal/environmental and economic conditions with<strong>in</strong> a geographical area.’ 9The complexity of today’s social realities have made this position difficult to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>. At asem<strong>in</strong>ar on community music <strong>in</strong> 1994, participants found themselves <strong>in</strong> difficulties:‘ ... despite much discussion, there was no consensus on the def<strong>in</strong>ition of “thecommunity”, or <strong>in</strong>deed, who should def<strong>in</strong>e it ... Boundaries are contestable and difficultto set: communities can be small, large, isolated, concentric or overlapp<strong>in</strong>g ... Generally,people thought it better to resist such def<strong>in</strong>itions as they could become straitjackets.’ 10Peter Renshaw of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, whose ma<strong>in</strong> concern is to relatecommunity practice to a reform of orchestral practice, takes a tougher l<strong>in</strong>e. ‘Communitymusic is too much rooted <strong>in</strong> locality, to place <strong>in</strong> a narrow sense,’ he told me. ‘This meansthat it doesn’t really “empower”, for it locks people <strong>in</strong>to their cultural relativity, even if itdoes politically empower. There is little sense of wider standards.’ In other words, if I take hismean<strong>in</strong>g correctly, he is argu<strong>in</strong>g for giv<strong>in</strong>g people access to a larger cultural ‘community’where aesthetic standards and critical understand<strong>in</strong>g are hammered out and exchanged ratherthan for a localist approach which will generate only local results.9 Braden, Su, Artistsand People, op cit, p.107.10 The Voice <strong>in</strong>Community MusicSem<strong>in</strong>ar, The Report,30 August-2 September1994 (Norwich,Community Music EastLtd, 1994) p.15.Now while of course it rema<strong>in</strong>s true that many projects are still geographically based <strong>in</strong>neighbourhoods, schools and the like, this is not always how people today regard theirsocial relations. A person’s loyalty to a neighbourhood can be strong, but may often bemuch less significant than that to other non-topographical networks – for example, thosewhich represent Black consciousness or disability culture or the environmental movementor <strong>in</strong>deed their friends. A follower of traditional Gaelic music may be celebrat<strong>in</strong>g a senseof locality, but could equally well be assert<strong>in</strong>g his or her national identity and politicalloyalties.Sound Sense, the community music umbrella body, accepts that def<strong>in</strong>itions have moved onover the years. In its view, ‘ ... community music ... <strong>in</strong>volves musicians from any musicaldiscipl<strong>in</strong>e work<strong>in</strong>g with groups of people to enable them to develop active and creativeparticipation <strong>in</strong> music[;] is concerned with putt<strong>in</strong>g equal opportunities <strong>in</strong>to practice[; and]


86 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYcan happen <strong>in</strong> all types of community, whether based on place, <strong>in</strong>stitution, <strong>in</strong>terest, age orgender group, and reflects the con<strong>text</strong> <strong>in</strong> which it takes place.’ 11For an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g number of us, place is simply where we happen to be for the time be<strong>in</strong>g,as traditional family structures weaken and social and job mobility grows. The growth of<strong>in</strong>dividualisation and ‘active consumption’ means that we tend to make opportunistic use ofmultiple communities to construct a confident, customised sense of ourselves, as dist<strong>in</strong>ctfrom def<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g ourselves <strong>in</strong> terms of a fixed community of which we are fully paid-upmembers. The all-pervasive globalised culture, transmitted through the mass media andother forms of modern communication, enables people to leapfrog traditional socialstructures to atta<strong>in</strong> a sense of togetherness, a sense so abstract and non-topographical that theprocess is perhaps best likened to an electronic bran tub <strong>in</strong>to which we dip for material thatsuits our tastes; or even as a protection from our local con<strong>text</strong> when it becomes oppressive.That many millions of other people around the globe may share these tastes is ‘cool’ andcreates a comfort<strong>in</strong>g feel<strong>in</strong>g that <strong>in</strong>dividuals are not alone and do not need to regardthemselves as antisocial or eccentric, but it does not usually create functional loyalties thatlead (as <strong>in</strong> the case of traditional communities) to common social or political action.Community music, def<strong>in</strong>ed as a discrete movement, today reflects these trends, sometimesspeak<strong>in</strong>g less to identifiable social groups than to ad hoc gather<strong>in</strong>gs of derac<strong>in</strong>ated <strong>in</strong>dividualsfor whom it may be a ladder to the atta<strong>in</strong>ment of a personal aspiration as well as a means ofpersonal empowerment <strong>in</strong> the con<strong>text</strong> of a wider social movement. So (to choose twoexamples more or less at random), although Raw Material, the community project <strong>in</strong> K<strong>in</strong>gsCross, London, which <strong>in</strong>troduces young black people to new music technologies, has socialobjectives to help alienated and unemployed youth, its ‘sell<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t’ lies <strong>in</strong> the fact that itoffers potential entry <strong>in</strong>to the commercial music bus<strong>in</strong>ess for ambitious youngsters.Overtones, a London project specialis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> new technology, has gradually softened itsorig<strong>in</strong>ally rigorous fem<strong>in</strong>ist agenda <strong>in</strong> favour of the more pragmatic aim of provid<strong>in</strong>gtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities for women who want to enter the record<strong>in</strong>g or music presentationbus<strong>in</strong>ess. Orig<strong>in</strong>ally named Ovatones, it was founded <strong>in</strong> 1983 as a separatist collective toproduce music made by women and, thanks to the Greater London Council, was able toestablish an eight-track record<strong>in</strong>g studio. Insurance from a robbery enabled an <strong>in</strong>vestment <strong>in</strong>16-track and, under pressure from fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies, it became a constitutionally moreconventional arts charity. The organisation operates as an <strong>in</strong>terface between the worlds ofcommunity and commercial music. Lesley Willis, who adm<strong>in</strong>isters Overtones, told me:‘Our essential task is to enable women to have a higher musical profile as techniciansand eng<strong>in</strong>eers. We made a fundamental decision to teach them how to use technology<strong>in</strong> their particular musical areas; we don’t teach people how to compose. A third of ourtime is spent on teach<strong>in</strong>g women; another third on produc<strong>in</strong>g top quality record<strong>in</strong>gs ofwomen’s music (whatever the gender make-up of their bands) and for the f<strong>in</strong>al third weare “out there” runn<strong>in</strong>g events.’11 See Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board,Sound Sense, Bury StEdmunds, spr<strong>in</strong>g 1995,p.29.The issue of quality has been directly addressed <strong>in</strong> recent years. Community musicians arelay<strong>in</strong>g greater stress on projects lead<strong>in</strong>g to specific artistic outcomes. Other sectors of themusic world, for example, amateur music societies, folk musicians and orchestras, haveadopted community-based practice the primary concern of which is with the developmentof the art-form rather than with socio-politico-cultural aims where music may be more theservant than the master. It is beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to be accepted that when professionals and nonprofessionalsmeet <strong>in</strong> jo<strong>in</strong>t endeavour, the results can atta<strong>in</strong> high artistic standards. A tell<strong>in</strong>gcase <strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t is the educational work of the Glyndebourne Opera Company, an elite


JOINING IN 87establishment if ever there was one, whose community operas have both embodied socialobjectives and produced work remarkable <strong>in</strong> its own right, as most of those who attendedIn Search of Angels, a ‘community opera written and composed with the people ofPeterborough’, would attest.As I will describe <strong>in</strong> the follow<strong>in</strong>g chapter, follow<strong>in</strong>g the pioneer<strong>in</strong>g example of Sir PeterMaxwell Davies over two decades at the St Magnus Festival <strong>in</strong> the Orkneys, more andmore contemporary classical composers are f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g that community work is not merely away of pay<strong>in</strong>g one’s social debts but a reward<strong>in</strong>g method of creat<strong>in</strong>g new music. The olddebate between ‘good <strong>in</strong> itself’ and ‘good of its k<strong>in</strong>d’ is look<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly out-of-date andirrelevant to contemporary practice.The ideology of community music has opened out with the years. Community Music, a‘tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, education and performance centre’ <strong>in</strong> central London, for example, is one of the keyagencies work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the field. Founded by John Stevens and David O’Donnell 15 years ago, itsth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g has grown and developed over time. It has positioned itself, with considerable skilland flair, at an <strong>in</strong>tersection where ‘traditional’ neighbourhood-based community practice,commercial popular music and the formal education sector meet. Stevens, who diedprematurely <strong>in</strong> 1994, was one of the progenitors of community-based music, but he and hiscolleagues have always been able to reth<strong>in</strong>k their practice. The project expanded massively <strong>in</strong>the days of the Manpower Services Commission, but found <strong>in</strong> its disappearance a welcomeopportunity to consolidate and focus their activities. Community Music runs a range ofcourses, performances and outreach projects across the capital. Its annual turnover is between£350,000 and £400,000, of which about £100,000 comes from grants.Its staff are missionaries, hav<strong>in</strong>g helped to establish other important projects elsewhere <strong>in</strong> thecountry, such as Community Music East <strong>in</strong> Norwich, Community Music Wales andMusicworks. Aware that lack of cont<strong>in</strong>uity and poor national coverage are two of thegreatest threats to community-based practice, they have made their Music Tutor Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gCourse the cornerstone of their work and established structural relationships with the OpenUniversity and K<strong>in</strong>gsway College. In association with the London Arts Board and Solotec(the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g council for South London), they are currently adm<strong>in</strong>ister<strong>in</strong>g The ArtsApprentice Initiative, a government-funded job-creation scheme offer<strong>in</strong>g an Arts NationalVocational Qualification (NVQ).Community Music also offers a direct address to various forms of pop and rock and enters<strong>in</strong>to partnerships with commercial music organisations. It runs workshops <strong>in</strong> funk and rockas well as the Brouhaha Multi-Music Club where jazz, techno, classical, dub, jungle andbhangra <strong>in</strong>term<strong>in</strong>gle and seasoned professionals play opposite teenagers from youth clubs.Last year a group of composers <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g members of Asian Dub <strong>Foundation</strong>, the LondonMusicians’ Collective and the Bhangra band ALAAP were commissioned by the LondonArts Board to write a suite of pieces entitled The Journey. This was performed atCommunity Music and other venues.The Lewisham Academy of Music <strong>in</strong> South London is another community project thatfocuses on popular musics, ma<strong>in</strong>ly for young people. Founded <strong>in</strong> 1981 as a music w<strong>in</strong>g ofthe Albany Empire, it became <strong>in</strong>dependent five years later. Occupy<strong>in</strong>g a former mortuary,it is managed by a seven-member collective and offers a wide variety of courses rang<strong>in</strong>gfrom Lat<strong>in</strong> American to death metal. It targets beg<strong>in</strong>ners and about 25 tutors offer courses<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g, improvisation workshops and music technology.The fact that new ideas or modes of activity are be<strong>in</strong>g explored is not to say that the pasthas been superseded or that community music has always abandoned its moral and political


88 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYground<strong>in</strong>g. When I visited Community Music East, based <strong>in</strong> Norwich, Ben Higham, oneof its founders, told me: ‘Writ<strong>in</strong>g a community opera? It’s a contradiction <strong>in</strong> terms.’ So faras he is concerned:‘I work through music on a larger project of understand<strong>in</strong>g. Community Music East is amedium for people to develop a high level of critical understand<strong>in</strong>g, unify<strong>in</strong>gcommunities <strong>in</strong> themselves and so contribut<strong>in</strong>g to diversity. We stem from the oldcommunity arts idea of “giv<strong>in</strong>g people a voice”.’In the last resort, the arts cannot exist <strong>in</strong> isolation, but must function <strong>in</strong> the world. AlisonTickell of Community Music <strong>in</strong> London commented:‘If you’re a community musician, you can’t avoid br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g your own sense of valueswith you, for they are what gives you a passion and a language. You have to come cleanabout these th<strong>in</strong>gs; community music is explicitly anti-racist and committed to equalopportunities. These k<strong>in</strong>ds of policy are not simply just, but also value-laden; they comewith an idea of the society one’s work<strong>in</strong>g towards.’In other words, because music is part of broad social processes and is both universal andubiquitous, it can be a metaphor and a mechanism for a comprehensive social and politicalenterprise.InterculturalismA time-traveller from the 1960s to the present day would probably say that the s<strong>in</strong>gle mostobvious difference between community music then and now has been the <strong>in</strong>troduction ofnon-European musics. There are a number of reasons for this. By the mid-1980s ageneration of British-born Afro-Caribbean and South Asian people were com<strong>in</strong>g of age andwere eager to develop their own forms of creative expression. Angered by exclusion, theybrought pressure to bear on local authorities and the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system for both moneyand esteem. At about the same time, public <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> what came to be called World Musicbegan to grow; the WOMAD festival and Anne Hunt’s World Circuit Arts came <strong>in</strong>to be<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> 1982 and a handful of record<strong>in</strong>g companies began to feature world musicians, especiallyfrom Africa. The British public was <strong>in</strong>troduced to choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g from Armenia, the Silkand Bamboo ensemble from Ch<strong>in</strong>a, religious song and dance from Ethiopia, mask dancersfrom Indonesia and much else besides. Indigenous musicians began to see rich opportunitiesfor mak<strong>in</strong>g multicultural l<strong>in</strong>ks. Cultural Co-operation, founded by the late Robert Atk<strong>in</strong>sand Prakash Daswani, is another important promoter; its Music Village series of festivalsbegan <strong>in</strong> 1987 and paid special attention to participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g among many worldcultures. As I have already noted (see page 54 and follow<strong>in</strong>g), much pop music has its roots<strong>in</strong> Black American culture, and new forms have cont<strong>in</strong>ued to emerge from the Caribbean,such as reggae and rap; meanwhile, young British Asian musicians experimented withdifferent types of ‘fusion’. At the same time, black jazz musicians (on both sides of theAtlantic) and others look to Africa for <strong>in</strong>spiration, visit<strong>in</strong>g the cont<strong>in</strong>ent to relearn Africanrhythms, melodic structures and techniques of improvisation.We should pause to consider the significance of these developments. In the long struggle toatta<strong>in</strong> equal opportunities for members of all the diverse cultures <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom,and especially those of the non-European communities, ‘multiculturalism’ has been acommonly used term, with an apparently beneficent connotation. As a pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, it has theadvantage of imply<strong>in</strong>g the rights of cultural m<strong>in</strong>orities to express themselves. This is all rightso far as it goes, but it does not go very far. As the Council of Europe’s report on European


JOINING IN 89culture and development po<strong>in</strong>ts out:‘Perhaps diversity policies should do more than guarantee due respect for m<strong>in</strong>orities.Would it not be logical for them to be available to every k<strong>in</strong>d of cultural group<strong>in</strong>g, largeor small, each of which has a legitimate <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> promot<strong>in</strong>g subsidiarity andcounteract<strong>in</strong>g centralisation? In fact, it is worth question<strong>in</strong>g the relevance of the terms“majority” and “m<strong>in</strong>ority”: belong<strong>in</strong>g to a m<strong>in</strong>ority implies be<strong>in</strong>g marg<strong>in</strong>al, be<strong>in</strong>g exiled<strong>in</strong> an enclave, whereas all cultures are, <strong>in</strong> a sense, central and deserve to be seen as such,whatever the political consequences. ... The defence of cultural pluralism goes hand <strong>in</strong>hand with cultural exchange, or “<strong>in</strong>terculturalism”. By <strong>in</strong>terculturalism, we mean thatthe co-existence of different cultures entails dialogue, not confrontation. It is not amatter of de-limit<strong>in</strong>g, but of open<strong>in</strong>g up. The circulation of people, ideas and projectsallows cultures to “breathe”.’ 12What is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g about the British musical scene is that it is acquir<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terculturalcharacteristics <strong>in</strong> the course of spontaneous development and not under the pressure ofpublic policy. Musicians, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g many <strong>in</strong> the participatory field, are, like jackdaws,appropriat<strong>in</strong>g material and ideas from the gamut of available musics. The habit of<strong>in</strong>teraction and exchange is also <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly becom<strong>in</strong>g a feature of music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>schools. Traditional musics are m<strong>in</strong>gl<strong>in</strong>g with jazz, rock and pop; white pop musicians, suchas Peter Gabriel, St<strong>in</strong>g and Paul Simon have learned a great deal from the musics of Africa,Asia, Lat<strong>in</strong> America and the Caribbean. The classical styles of India, whether directly orthrough <strong>in</strong>termediary forms such as Asian film music, are contribut<strong>in</strong>g to new, hybridforms. Much the same can be said of Western classicism. There is a grow<strong>in</strong>g amount oftwo-way musical traffic.There is much to be said for this new tolerant and <strong>in</strong>ventive spirit of shar<strong>in</strong>g, but we shouldacknowledge that ga<strong>in</strong>s can be accompanied by losses. When music is transplanted from oneculture to another, there is always the risk of rootlessness: that is, it can be torn from itsorig<strong>in</strong>al social con<strong>text</strong> and, <strong>in</strong> the process, we f<strong>in</strong>d that its mean<strong>in</strong>g has been weakened, lostor transformed. Does that matter? Op<strong>in</strong>ions vary. Purists simply wish to conserve whileprogressives argue that everyth<strong>in</strong>g changes and that we should welcome the new riches of<strong>in</strong>terculturalism. Many opt for a via media where excitement at <strong>in</strong>novation is moderated byrespect for orig<strong>in</strong>s, a dislike of cultural loot<strong>in</strong>g and a concern to reta<strong>in</strong> a l<strong>in</strong>k, howeverattenuated, with authentic roots.Community musicians are <strong>in</strong> the forefront of events. Traditional Arts Projects (TAPS),founded <strong>in</strong> 1989 to develop traditional British musics and based at the South Hill Park ArtsCentre, is an <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g example of what is be<strong>in</strong>g done. At Sound Sense’s 1996 Cut andBlend conference, I attended a remarkable multicultural workshop which was part of aproject described <strong>in</strong> TAPS’ latest annual report:12 In From the Marg<strong>in</strong>s,op. cit. p.44.13 TAPS AnnualReport, 1 April 1995-31 March 1996,(unpag<strong>in</strong>ated).‘ ... develop<strong>in</strong>g the theme of common ground between two cultures, an exploratorymeet<strong>in</strong>g between Kiranpal S<strong>in</strong>gh and Roger Watson ... led to the launch of a newproject Millan. Millan is a H<strong>in</strong>di/Punjabi word which translates as meet<strong>in</strong>g or reunion,<strong>in</strong> this case a meet<strong>in</strong>g between the east and the west, a coalition of two dist<strong>in</strong>ct musicaltraditions. It emerged that many of the earlier English and Celtic tunes <strong>in</strong> Roger’srepertoire fitted very nicely with the structures of the older folk ragas – not just thescales but even the predom<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g notes and phrases ... Build<strong>in</strong>g on this discovery Millanwas formed with Kiranpal S<strong>in</strong>gh and Roger Watson jo<strong>in</strong>ed by Dav<strong>in</strong>der S<strong>in</strong>gh on tabla,supply<strong>in</strong>g the Indian rhythmic development and Andy Baker [of the BournemouthS<strong>in</strong>fonietta] on double bass, giv<strong>in</strong>g a western harmonic structure to the whole.’ 13


90 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYSouth Wales Intercultural Community Arts (SWICA) offers another illustration of whatcan be done. Founded <strong>in</strong> 1990 as a breakaway organisation from Theatre Talies<strong>in</strong> Wales,it sees its task as essentially developmental. Work<strong>in</strong>g with people of all races, it runsworkshops <strong>in</strong> carnival arts (and an annual Mas Camp), as well as <strong>in</strong> steel pan, tabla andsamba. Samba is ris<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> popularity, although it attracts little public attention or supportfrom the funders: SWICA runs the largest samba band <strong>in</strong> Wales, with a substantial annualgig list. It also presents ambitious theatrical spectacles (eg an outdoor multimedia<strong>in</strong>terpretation of a Celtic myth).The musics of exclusionThe notion that arts practice is not only valuable <strong>in</strong> itself but can contribute positively topersonal and social development has been <strong>in</strong>fluential far beyond what one might call the artscommunity. All k<strong>in</strong>ds of public and voluntary agencies have taken it on board and <strong>in</strong>cludedthe arts among their programmes of activity. Music is one of the most commonly providedart-forms, either alone or <strong>in</strong> association with other perform<strong>in</strong>g arts. For those who havemade use of the arts for a long time, the community arts philosophy has helped them ref<strong>in</strong>etheir th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g. This beneficent plagiarism has been so widespread that it is almost beyondmonitor<strong>in</strong>g and assessment. As we have found <strong>in</strong> other areas, we simply do not know what,or how much, is go<strong>in</strong>g on.The youth sector is a case <strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t. Whether it be <strong>in</strong> the field of the treatment of youngoffenders, or the general provision of social services, or urban regeneration, the arts have beena useful way of work<strong>in</strong>g with young people. Probation services have found the arts a handyaddition to their armoury of rehabilitation; thus, the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Probation Service has<strong>in</strong>vested <strong>in</strong> The Cave, an arts centre for young black people, and a senior probation officer <strong>in</strong>Surrey established the Surrey Music Initiative as an exercise <strong>in</strong> crime prevention.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Nick Randall of the Youth Arts Network, most local authority youth serviceshave designated one of more of their centres as hav<strong>in</strong>g a special arts function. Music, becauseof its significance <strong>in</strong> youth culture, often has pride of place <strong>in</strong> provision (this, of course, hasalways been the case <strong>in</strong> the ‘uniformed’ sector – eg the Scouts and Guides, and the Boys’Brigade). In order to get a grasp of the extent and range of activity, the Pr<strong>in</strong>ce’s Trust and theNational Youth Agency have commissioned Randall to produce a survey of youth music andhis report, to be entitled Mapp<strong>in</strong>g Hidden Talent, is to be published dur<strong>in</strong>g 1997.At the other end of the human lifespan, public authorities and welfare agencies are uneasilyaware of the demographic ‘time bomb’ which is set to go off when the post-war ‘babyboomers’reach pensionable age. The chances are that health, welfare and economic serviceswill be under even greater pressure than they are today, but with earlier retirement, whethervoluntary or enforced, and longer lives, a large proportion of the grow<strong>in</strong>g number of oldpeople will have the potential to enjoy a more active life if they have sufficient resources.There is a grow<strong>in</strong>g recognition that, while not everyone aspires to be an artist, people needcreative experience at all ages and <strong>in</strong> all circumstances. Psychologically, the arts assist people todeal with the age<strong>in</strong>g process. They can help them to f<strong>in</strong>d purpose and understand<strong>in</strong>g aboutthe past, about the loss of youth, and show the way to new, life-enhanc<strong>in</strong>g perspectives.14 Cited <strong>in</strong> In From theMarg<strong>in</strong>s, op cit, p.125.ActiveAge, a European network of organisations, arts bodies and policy-makers, issued anumber of recommendations for action to promote the contribution of older people to thearts at its second European meet<strong>in</strong>g on Older People and the Arts, held <strong>in</strong> Dubl<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> 1995. 14They <strong>in</strong>cluded the need: to explore and exploit the capacity for self-expression through the


JOINING IN 91arts to give older people a voice and help def<strong>in</strong>e their role <strong>in</strong> society; to promote andacknowledge the value of older people’s economic contribution to the arts; to build on thesocial, enjoyable side of the arts to help to re-establish l<strong>in</strong>ks between different sections ofsociety; and to prepare for an active and stimulat<strong>in</strong>g later life by provid<strong>in</strong>g opportunities todevelop creative <strong>in</strong>terests, before retirement.Music, because of its powerful l<strong>in</strong>ks with memory and its encouragement of socialisation, ispopular among older people, as a number of voluntary sector bodies have acknowledged.There is a good deal of musical activity on offer, much of it traditional <strong>in</strong> nature andreflect<strong>in</strong>g the tastes of former times. More challeng<strong>in</strong>g projects which promoteempowerment are fewer <strong>in</strong> number. Examples of good practice on recent years <strong>in</strong>clude thework of Heyday across the art-forms at the West Yorkshire Playhouse <strong>in</strong> Leeds and DavidSulk<strong>in</strong>’s extraord<strong>in</strong>ary composition project, promoted by English National Opera’s BaylisProgramme, for a group of old people suffer<strong>in</strong>g from dementia. In 1987, the South BankCentre launched a Senior Centre which enabled old people to work with the LondonS<strong>in</strong>fonietta and symphony orchestras and be <strong>in</strong>troduced to play<strong>in</strong>g the gamelan.Unfortunately, despite all this good work, progress is slow; Age Concern, on of the lead<strong>in</strong>gagencies <strong>in</strong> its field, is only now beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to address the need to develop an arts policy.Once aga<strong>in</strong>, a key problem is that an unco-ord<strong>in</strong>ated mass of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g needs to bemapped: a survey, commissioned by Age Concern, has been completed and will hopefullygo a long way towards fill<strong>in</strong>g the gap. It will probably be published later <strong>in</strong> 1997.Artists of all k<strong>in</strong>ds have been concerned to <strong>in</strong>troduce an experience of the arts <strong>in</strong>to ‘closed’<strong>in</strong>stitutions, chief among them hospitals and prisons. There is now a substantial record ofarts activity <strong>in</strong> the healthcare field. The value of such work was well described by the artcritic, Richard Cork, writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> The Listener, <strong>in</strong> 1985:‘The medical profession is at last beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to realise that a hospital should care for thewhole person, not just the specific illness. To try cur<strong>in</strong>g people <strong>in</strong> surround<strong>in</strong>gs whichdemonstrate an appall<strong>in</strong>g lack of sensitivity is to betray the whole basis <strong>in</strong> whichhospitals should rest. How can anyone possibly justify treat<strong>in</strong>g patients’ ailments <strong>in</strong> abuild<strong>in</strong>g shabby and dehumanised enough to depress them still further? Incarcerat<strong>in</strong>gthem <strong>in</strong> such places is bound to alienate people who are already depressed anddesperately need assurance. Artists can help to provide this consolation.’ 1515 Cork, Richard,‘The Art of Heal<strong>in</strong>g’,The Listener, 11 July1985.16 I am <strong>in</strong>debted forthe follow<strong>in</strong>gparagraphs to Senior,Peter, and Croall,Jonathan, Help<strong>in</strong>g toHeal: the Arts <strong>in</strong> HealthCare (London, <strong>Calouste</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, 1993)passim.Of all the art-forms, music is often said to be the one that has the most profound power toaffect patients. Medical science has long believed <strong>in</strong> music’s therapeutic powers and recentscientific advances have tended to confirm its power to reach the deepest recesses of ourbe<strong>in</strong>g (see page 28 and follow<strong>in</strong>g). It was also the first of the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts to be used <strong>in</strong>any systematic way <strong>in</strong> British hospitals. 16 As long ago as 1948 a group of concerned peopletook a w<strong>in</strong>d-up gramophone and some 78 rpm records <strong>in</strong>to a psychiatric hospital. Thesuccess of this experiment led directly to the establishment of the Council for Music <strong>in</strong>Hospitals. It was soon recognised that live music, with its potential for patient participation,would be preferable to record<strong>in</strong>gs and soon concerts by professional musicians were be<strong>in</strong>gorganised. The rise <strong>in</strong> the number of hospital concerts has been phenomenal, reach<strong>in</strong>gnearly 3,000 performances <strong>in</strong> 1991.Peter Senior, director of the lead<strong>in</strong>g national body Arts for Health, is an experiencedpioneer <strong>in</strong> the field. In 1973 he founded the Manchester Hospitals’ Arts project. Its earlyemphasis lay <strong>in</strong> the visual arts, but by the end of the decade a strong performanceprogramme was set <strong>in</strong> motion. Gradually, the work began to attract national attention andhospitals around the country began to experiment with arts activities of various k<strong>in</strong>ds.


92 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYMeanwhile <strong>in</strong> 1976, the dancer G<strong>in</strong>a Levete founded SHAPE with the aim of br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>gprofessional artists <strong>in</strong>to contact with groups isolated from the rest of the community,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g elderly and mentally ill people and those <strong>in</strong> hospitals, day centres and residentialhomes, and established a network of regional agencies throughout the country. Someyears later the Attenborough Committee of Inquiry <strong>in</strong>to the Arts and Disabled People,which reported <strong>in</strong> 1985, took the view that the arts <strong>in</strong> healthcare was one of the largestareas of activity to be considered. It recommended that the government should requirehealth authorities to develop the use of the arts; with<strong>in</strong> a couple of years the Departmentof Health and Social Security formally acknowledged the importance of the arts with<strong>in</strong> itssphere of responsibility. By 1992 it was possible to identify at least 300 hospital projectsaround the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom, with new ones start<strong>in</strong>g all the time. The NHS reforms donot appear to have had a negative effect on the development of arts <strong>in</strong> healthcare; <strong>in</strong> fact,accord<strong>in</strong>g to Peter Senior, ‘the loosen<strong>in</strong>g of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g which the changes has broughtabout has <strong>in</strong>troduced a climate of positive th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and openness to new ideas. This hasbenefited the arts.’Many musical ensembles encourage patient participation, which can vary from request<strong>in</strong>g apiece of music to s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g a favourite song. The Council for Music <strong>in</strong> Hospitals cont<strong>in</strong>ues tobe a lead<strong>in</strong>g promoter and has been jo<strong>in</strong>ed by Live Music Now (which also organisesperformances <strong>in</strong> schools, prisons, offices, factories, churches and other community venues).Where general arts programmes have become a settled part of hospital life, many patientsare given the opportunity to make music themselves either <strong>in</strong> groups or on a one-to-onebasis. The opportunities for real participation <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g as dist<strong>in</strong>ct from thepresentation of concerts are greatest <strong>in</strong> mental health and some specialist fields, such assp<strong>in</strong>al <strong>in</strong>juries. They depend on the availability of cont<strong>in</strong>uous arts expertise and an estimated150 hospitals now employ arts co-ord<strong>in</strong>ators on a full- or part-time basis.A dist<strong>in</strong>ction should be drawn between the contribution artists can make as artists <strong>in</strong>healthcare and the work of arts or music therapists. Their skills are complementary and theircommon <strong>in</strong>terest is communication with the patient, but musicians do not make music toheal, even if it does heal, but for a variety of other less direct reasons. Creative therapy is aparticular skill with a specialised, medical purpose, whereas what an artist has <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d is thecreation of a work of art.Participation <strong>in</strong> the arts can be a powerful confidence-build<strong>in</strong>g measure and it is surpris<strong>in</strong>gthat it is not used more as an <strong>in</strong>strument to help those <strong>in</strong> prisons or correctional <strong>in</strong>stitutionsto make creative use of <strong>in</strong>mates’ time <strong>in</strong> custody and to equip them to rejo<strong>in</strong> society oncetheir custodial sentence is over. Prison rout<strong>in</strong>es are usually stultify<strong>in</strong>g; they repress<strong>in</strong>dividuality and this can lead to pent-up frustration and anger, which may well affectsecurity. The arts can provide a creative and fulfill<strong>in</strong>g channel for prisoners to express theirfeel<strong>in</strong>gs and, if sensitively handled, can reduce social tensions <strong>in</strong> prisons. Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g canbe a valuable tool <strong>in</strong> enabl<strong>in</strong>g them to discover paths to personal change and rehabilitation.A strik<strong>in</strong>g example of this is the work of Pimlico Opera, a small-scale tour<strong>in</strong>g companywhich began work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> prisons <strong>in</strong> 1990. Start<strong>in</strong>g out with a brought-<strong>in</strong> production ofThe Marriage of Figaro at Wormwood Scrubs, the company graduated to jo<strong>in</strong>t productionswith <strong>in</strong>mates and a few prison staff at the Scrubs and Wandsworth of Sweeney Todd, WestSide Story and Guys and Dolls. These were received with enthusiasm <strong>in</strong> all quarters. Aprisoner commented: ‘Given me a high which I have never had before. Not from drugsor anyth<strong>in</strong>g.’ For a prison governor Pimlico Opera had ‘brought forward the prison 10years’. Of the larger opera companies, Glyndebourne Opera has run highly valuedprojects <strong>in</strong> prisons.


JOINING IN 93The London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta/Opera Factory was one of the earliest music groups to undertakeserious work <strong>in</strong> prisons, present<strong>in</strong>g an opera by Brecht and H<strong>in</strong>demith at Holloway <strong>in</strong>1988. Gillian Moore recalls that, when dur<strong>in</strong>g a courtroom scene a judge s<strong>in</strong>gs: ‘All rise’,the prisoners stood up en masse. The <strong>in</strong>cident revealed the ambiguities and difficulties ofmak<strong>in</strong>g art <strong>in</strong> such a con<strong>text</strong>, the confusion between reality and fiction and the highlycharged atmosphere of creative activity <strong>in</strong> a closed <strong>in</strong>stitution.The Hallé Orchestra’s education department is <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> prison work and ran a popularone-week residency at Risley where 10 prisoners (who had already shown <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>music-mak<strong>in</strong>g) worked with some of orchestra’s musicians to devise and record the soundtrack for a silent film.The essential challenge concerns the honesty and the clarity of motive among thoseundertak<strong>in</strong>g creative activity <strong>in</strong> prisons. What exactly is it that the artist or arts group has <strong>in</strong>m<strong>in</strong>d to achieve? And how is it possible to make a useful contribution when prison projectsare almost <strong>in</strong>evitably one-off? The most conv<strong>in</strong>c<strong>in</strong>g answer to these questions is to producea work of art which can have some k<strong>in</strong>d of external ‘life’ outside prison and so will add tothe self-esteem and confidence of those tak<strong>in</strong>g part. In the m<strong>in</strong>ority of prisons whichemploy arts co-ord<strong>in</strong>ators <strong>in</strong> the education departments, cont<strong>in</strong>uity is possible and visits bymusicians and musical groups are designed to complement ongo<strong>in</strong>g artistic activity.Artists and writers <strong>in</strong> residence, music performances and short courses <strong>in</strong> the developmentof creative skills have been <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly employed <strong>in</strong> prison sett<strong>in</strong>gs. One professionalwriter, comment<strong>in</strong>g on his experience, observed that his early fears about patronis<strong>in</strong>g andexploit<strong>in</strong>g prisoners proved groundless: ‘They ignore you if you patronise them and theydiscuss openly the ways <strong>in</strong> which we exploit each other.’ 17 Although arts <strong>in</strong> prisons appearto lack systematic resourc<strong>in</strong>g, specialist tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and adequate research to enable evaluation,there is goodwill on the part of the Prison Service, <strong>in</strong> token of which it established aStand<strong>in</strong>g Committee for the Arts <strong>in</strong> Prisons <strong>in</strong> 1995. However, the need to make sav<strong>in</strong>gs,the huge rise <strong>in</strong> the number of <strong>in</strong>mates, problems of security and political pressure for moreaustere regimes is lead<strong>in</strong>g to a reduction <strong>in</strong> arts provision.17 Peaker, Anne, andV<strong>in</strong>cent, Jill, Arts <strong>in</strong>Prisons: towards a sense ofachievement, a report forthe Home Office andthe Arts Council ofGreat Brita<strong>in</strong> (London,1991).18 Verrent, Jo, andMcG<strong>in</strong>ty, Terry, ofEast Midlands Shape,Music and DisabilityAudit for the MusicDepartment of the ArtsCouncil of England, firstdraft (unpublished,31 July 1995) p.2.It is <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly accepted that participation <strong>in</strong> creative activity is an essential right ofdisabled people. This does not necessarily mean ‘special’ provision, but ‘ord<strong>in</strong>ary’ provisionmade truly accessible. Employers and the general public need to be encouraged to acceptdisabled people on an equal basis whether as artists, adm<strong>in</strong>istrators or audiences. Untilpolicy-makers fully accept this po<strong>in</strong>t, disabled people are caught <strong>in</strong> a double-b<strong>in</strong>d. That is tosay, they are unable to attend arts events or take part <strong>in</strong> them as professional or amateurpractitioners because of <strong>in</strong>accessible build<strong>in</strong>gs or the absence of such aids as <strong>in</strong>duction loopsfor partially-hear<strong>in</strong>g people, sign<strong>in</strong>g for deaf people or tactile signs and large clear pr<strong>in</strong>t signsfor sight-impaired or bl<strong>in</strong>d people.I was given access to an early draft of a Music and Disability Audit which is be<strong>in</strong>gconducted for the music department of the Arts Council of England. 18 It commented:‘Conservative estimates put the number of disabled people <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> today <strong>in</strong> the regionof 6.4 million. Many of those people are still denied access to arts experiences – asaudience, as participants, as creators, as performers. Those who have physical access –because of their specific disability or because of access hav<strong>in</strong>g been provided – still rarelyhave the opportunity to fully enter arts experiences as disabled people.’The survey showed that disabled musicians come from every age group, that as a groupthey cover the full range of musical <strong>in</strong>terest and that most k<strong>in</strong>ds of disability are represented


94 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYamong their number. Thirty-two per cent of the disabled musicians surveyed were earn<strong>in</strong>gless than 10% of their <strong>in</strong>come from music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and only 10% were earn<strong>in</strong>g more than90%. Most of them are very poorly paid.Groups of disabled people <strong>in</strong> Nott<strong>in</strong>ghamshire and Northamptonshire were surveyed to f<strong>in</strong>dout what contact they had with music. Many respondents reported that they hadopportunities to listen to music. So far as participation was concerned, a majority had hadopportunities ‘<strong>in</strong>-house’ but a far lower proportion externally. We can deduce from thisthat many disabled people are ghetto-ised <strong>in</strong>side the disability community.Facilities are one th<strong>in</strong>g, but tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and the arts is another. Music is oftena component of many disability projects, but the number of those which ‘lead’ on music isfar smaller. The issue is not therapy or opportunities for diversion; like anyone else, disabledpeople want the chance to play a full part <strong>in</strong> the musical life of the country. In the case ofphysical disability, new technologies are offer<strong>in</strong>g solutions to once <strong>in</strong>tractable difficulties. AsI report <strong>in</strong> chapter 6, The electronic soundscape, on the impact of the digital revolution,organisations such as the Drake Music Project and the Soundbeam project are mak<strong>in</strong>g goodheadway on this front.Opportunities are open<strong>in</strong>g up at the <strong>in</strong>stigation both of specialist organisations and ofgeneral community music projects. The Association for the Development of OpenOpportunity <strong>in</strong> Recreation (ADOOR), for example, which has worked extensively <strong>in</strong> theleisure field, has been runn<strong>in</strong>g a series of arts tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programmes. In 1996 one of these wasa music and disability tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g day. Chris Rod<strong>in</strong>, who leads most of ADOOR’s arts-relatedprojects, stressed the importance of empowerment. The sem<strong>in</strong>ar was not just a matter ofhow to run music activities for disabled people. ‘That sounds a bit passive on the part ofdisabled people. The tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g will explore how people with disabilities are sometimesexcluded with<strong>in</strong> a musical activity, and how it can be more <strong>in</strong>clusive.’ 19In the same year there was a festival of disability work at London’s Albany Theatre,featur<strong>in</strong>g performances and workshops by some national and <strong>in</strong>ternational disability artscompanies, a disability Arts Mart <strong>in</strong> Leeds with stalls, videos and exhibitions on artsactivities from local and national disabled people’s groups, and a variety of coursesconcerned with a variety of disabilities.The related field of special needs has also attracted the attention of community musicians,with animateurs work<strong>in</strong>g on adult tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses and <strong>in</strong> special schools. It has also been animportant strand of some orchestras’ and opera companies’ outreach activities. For example,<strong>in</strong> the late 1980s the social services department of Strathclyde Regional Council engagedthe Scottish Chamber Orchestra to provide special needs projects <strong>in</strong> adult tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g centres <strong>in</strong>each division of their region. The aim was to br<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> musicians with good communicationsskills to act as catalysts for creative activities over a period of months,Heart ’n’ Soul at the Albany Empire celebrated its 10th birthday last year and focuses onpeople with learn<strong>in</strong>g disabilities. At its core is a 10-strong perform<strong>in</strong>g company of performerswith learn<strong>in</strong>g disabilities. The project runs tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses and two years ago launched abi-monthly nightclub/cabaret where people with learn<strong>in</strong>g disabilities are the performers, theDJs and the musicians. It provides a much-valued social focus and helps to counteract theisolation <strong>in</strong>to which the NHS’s Care <strong>in</strong> the Community policies have plunged many people.19 Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board,Sound Sense, Bury StEdmunds, November1996, p.12.The 13 year-old Ark, based at the South Hill Arts Centre <strong>in</strong> Bracknell, offers programmesof creative performance work for people with severe learn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties, and physical ormental disabilities. Its founder, Penny Sanderson, works with a team of three musicians,


JOINING IN 95three dancers and an actor, all of them non-disabled. The two key features of their work areimprovisation <strong>in</strong> a pre-constructed ‘set’ and the l<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g of music with movement. ‘Wedance our musical <strong>in</strong>struments.’ Projects do not culm<strong>in</strong>ate <strong>in</strong> public performance(‘voyeurism and hang-ups with<strong>in</strong> public perceptions are problems we avoid’), although onoccasion there are public rehearsed workshops. The Ark collaborates with social securityand education services <strong>in</strong> Berkshire. It is not run by disabled people, on the grounds thatthe level of disability among those they work with would make it <strong>in</strong>appropriate and ‘unfair’.The contrast between the philosophies of Heart ’n’ Soul and the Ark is <strong>in</strong>structive. Bothcare deeply about the problems faced by people with learn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties, but (to put itsimply) one seeks to empower and the other to provide. It is hard to make a judgmentbetween them – although critics of the latter would argue that, even if particular groups ofdisabled people are unable to take part <strong>in</strong> the governance of the projects they work with,there are others with experience of the field and with less severe disabilities who would beable to represent their <strong>in</strong>terests.Sounds of Progress, an ensemble of disabled musicians <strong>in</strong> Glasgow, is an illustration of theexcellence that is atta<strong>in</strong>able by disabled musicians. Orig<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g dur<strong>in</strong>g the city’s year asEuropean City of Culture, the project now receives support from the Orpheus Trust. Led byGordon Dougall, it has set its sights not only on tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g disabled musicians, but also onteach<strong>in</strong>g non-disabled professionals ‘that it is easier than they th<strong>in</strong>k to work with disabledpeople. We are not <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> therapy – but <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>tegration and the creation of good music.We see ourselves quite simply as a music production company.’ Sounds of Progress runs awide range of workshops and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses as well as develop<strong>in</strong>g the skills of the ensemble.The diversity of these projects gives a taste of the variousness of practice <strong>in</strong> music bydisabled people. As <strong>in</strong> other areas of participatory musics, a great deal of excellent work isbe<strong>in</strong>g done. What is less clear is the precise extent of practice. This has not been measuredor quantified, much less evaluated. In fact, there seems not to be a well-debated consensusabout aims and standards. There are some knotty questions that need answer<strong>in</strong>g: forexample, is there a necessary correlation between disabled control of projects andorganisations and the development of disability culture? Is public performance <strong>in</strong>variably anappropriate <strong>in</strong>gredient of music and disability work? Is there always a clear understand<strong>in</strong>gamong providers of the difference between music therapy and music-mak<strong>in</strong>g?Arts and disability is a field (cynics might say a m<strong>in</strong>efield) where ‘good <strong>in</strong>tentions’ are notenough. In Sheffield plans are well advanced for the creation of an arts centre equippedwith state-of-the art facilities for disabled people, Genesis – Arts for All. It has an allembrac<strong>in</strong>gphilosophy and is not <strong>in</strong> sympathy with the separatism of many disability artsactivists. As a result it has aroused a degree of local opposition which threatens its future.To sum up: we f<strong>in</strong>d <strong>in</strong> this field two broad strands of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g. The one supports the provisionof a cultural service to disabled people by non-disabled artists and organisers, while the other(<strong>in</strong> my view more authentically) supports the idea that disabled people can and should runtheir own cultural events by and for themselves. It would be desirable to have an <strong>in</strong>-depthdiscussion of this issue, but at present no mechanism exists for such an exchange to take place.Music resource centresThe picture I have drawn of the world of participatory musics is of highly active <strong>in</strong>dividualsand small groups com<strong>in</strong>g together spontaneously <strong>in</strong> creative combustion. This is <strong>in</strong>deed thecase, but two reservations need to be entered. Firstly, it is not so easy as might appear for


96 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITY<strong>in</strong>dividuals who want to become <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g to f<strong>in</strong>d the adviceand connections they need. Secondly, music project leaders and <strong>in</strong>dependent musicians tendto be lone operators who have little time to engage with other people’s work. Many areyoung, idealistic, but comparatively new to the field, for, over the years, <strong>in</strong>adequateresources have led to a cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g dra<strong>in</strong> of talent and experience.At the national level, there is a clear role for bodies such as Sound Sense, the communitymusic movement’s umbrella organisation; founded <strong>in</strong> 1989, it has 250 members <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>ganimateurs, both freelance and attached to projects and arts organisations; communitymusic projects; and the community and education departments of orchestras and operacompanies; together with other bodies and <strong>in</strong>dividuals which support its work. Itpublishes a bi-monthly magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board. It is work<strong>in</strong>g on a professionaldevelopment programme and hopes to establish an <strong>in</strong>teractive archive. A review has beenconducted of the desirability of establish<strong>in</strong>g a Scottish Sound Sense. At the time of writ<strong>in</strong>g(February 1997) it is possible that a Sound Sense support group will be established, withfund<strong>in</strong>g from the Scottish Arts Council towards the costs of an office and a worker. Asthe concept of community music gives way to the broader idea of participatory music,perhaps the time is approach<strong>in</strong>g when Sound Sense will be able to br<strong>in</strong>g all k<strong>in</strong>ds ofmusician and music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>side its catchment. Work<strong>in</strong>g alongside other more specialistagencies (eg the National Federation of Music Societies and Jazz Services), it would be an<strong>in</strong>valuable clear<strong>in</strong>g house for <strong>in</strong>formation, the exchange of ideas and the dissem<strong>in</strong>ation ofgood practice.Another practical means of mak<strong>in</strong>g life easier both for experienced practitioners andabsolute beg<strong>in</strong>ners is through established music <strong>in</strong>stitutions <strong>in</strong> the field offer<strong>in</strong>g themselvesas a resource, provid<strong>in</strong>g advice, facilities and opportunities for network<strong>in</strong>g. There isevidence <strong>in</strong> different parts of country that this need has been identified, and it is worthpo<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g to some examples of good practice.In Scotland, the Skye and Lochalsh Young Music Makers has been created to encourage thedevelopment of musical skills and enjoyment among young people <strong>in</strong> Skye and Lochalsh.The project will <strong>in</strong>volve the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of a Music Development Officer for a three-yearperiod. A range of ambitious tasks has been set, among them that of <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g the numberof young music participants from 300 to 600. These goals will be realised through suchactivities as network<strong>in</strong>g with other areas and <strong>in</strong>itiatives, a regular newsletter, improvedaccess to venues and <strong>in</strong>struments, workshops, musical weekends and so forth. In short, theaim is to be a contact po<strong>in</strong>t and support for whoever wants to make use of it.To move from a rural to an urban sett<strong>in</strong>g, the Hackney Music Development Trust(HMDT) was formed <strong>in</strong> 1995 to create new opportunities for music-mak<strong>in</strong>g among the<strong>in</strong>habitants of Hackney. Music is an important force <strong>in</strong> the borough cultural <strong>in</strong>dustries andsubstantial sums have been <strong>in</strong>vested <strong>in</strong> the physical regeneration of the area. Believ<strong>in</strong>g thatreal cultural vibrancy comes from people, not build<strong>in</strong>gs, HMDT aims to be a catalyst forcreative activity. It has raised funds to support various local bodies or projects, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gHackney’s Centre for Young Musicians, the Hackney Youth Orchestra and Jazz Ensemble,local schools, a Music Bus<strong>in</strong>ess Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Course at the Hackney Community College and aprogramme of short course and demo cl<strong>in</strong>ics for local musicians.Neither of these projects is build<strong>in</strong>g-based. It is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g to note that a number ofparticipatory music organisations have their own centres and are committ<strong>in</strong>g themselves tomajor build<strong>in</strong>g schemes (often substantially f<strong>in</strong>anced by National Lottery grants).Community Music East, Overtones and the Lewisham Academy of Music are all <strong>in</strong> the


JOINING IN 97throes of ambitious capital developments that will give them the space and the technicalequipment to expand the services they are able to offer.Community Music <strong>in</strong> London is plann<strong>in</strong>g to move <strong>in</strong>to a new build<strong>in</strong>g at a cost of about£5 million. This will allow them to develop access to new technology, will provide morespace for performance and for rehearsal and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. It will also mean that they will be onmore equal terms with the commercial music <strong>in</strong>dustry as regards their scale of activities andrange of facilities.Outside London there are few community music projects large enough and sufficientlywell-established to act <strong>in</strong> this way as a major resource across the musical forms both forprofessionals and amateurs. In Birm<strong>in</strong>gham, though, a major arts centre, mac (formerlyknown as the Midlands Arts Centre) is fill<strong>in</strong>g this role with energy and skill. Its success is<strong>in</strong>structive, for it shows how a large-scale conventional cultural <strong>in</strong>stitution can be an ‘open’facility, non-bureaucratic at the po<strong>in</strong>t of delivery, for musicians of every k<strong>in</strong>d.mac was founded <strong>in</strong> the 1960s as a centre for young people and music has always played alarge part <strong>in</strong> its activities. Dorothy Wilson, Programme Director, told me:‘Our policy <strong>in</strong>terlocks professional production (mostly <strong>in</strong> tour<strong>in</strong>g) and participation. Theethos is the same as it was when the centre was set up – to make the arts a part of dailyexistence.’Many performers and musical groups began their artistic days at mac. So, for example, theCity of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Tour<strong>in</strong>g Opera, one of the country’s f<strong>in</strong>est small-scale operacompanies, orig<strong>in</strong>ated <strong>in</strong> the centre’s music department where for many years Paul Herbertran his pioneer<strong>in</strong>g Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Music Theatre group.Nearly 100 arts organisations see mac as their home. The centre is old enough todemonstrate the power of <strong>in</strong>tergenerational loop-back: that is, people who used the place <strong>in</strong>their childhood and teens have now grown up and send their children there. Some havebecome professional musicians and teach at the centre or use it as a base. Others form partof its loyal audiences.Music groups that are associated with mac <strong>in</strong>clude the community music project, Sound ItOut; Xango, a Lat<strong>in</strong> percussion and w<strong>in</strong>d group; the Maestro Steel Orchestra, now <strong>in</strong> itseighteenth year; and the Jammers’ Caribbean Jazz Band. SAMPAD, the South Asian musicand dance community development organisation, works out of the centre.The question arises whether the formal education sector can help support the unplannedpatchwork of arts centres and community music projects by open<strong>in</strong>g its facilities to theirlocal public as arts resources. One <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g example of what can be achieved is the workof the Estover Community College <strong>in</strong> Plymouth. Estover is a large, bleak hous<strong>in</strong>g estate <strong>in</strong>the outer r<strong>in</strong>g of the city with a population of 14,000 and few amenities of any k<strong>in</strong>d. It hasa large number of older teenagers and above-average levels of youth unemployment.In 1992, the College’s Community Education Department founded the Estover PercussionProject. This was consistent with its academic mission, but was also a consciouscontribution to the local community. The Project has grown from small beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs andnow actively <strong>in</strong>volves more than 200 adults and young people. It consists of a number ofmusical ensembles – an all-female youth steel band, an adult steel band (which emergedfrom an adult education class), two junk funk bands, a street samba band, a youth a capellagroup and a percussion group for adults with learn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties. The project runs anannual festival, Street Rhythms; this hosts a number of <strong>in</strong>ternationally known bands,delivers educational workshops to schools and community groups, br<strong>in</strong>gs professionals to


98 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYwork and perform locally, facilitates <strong>in</strong>ter-agency co-operation with national youthassociations and environmental groups and is engaged <strong>in</strong> the design and development oflow-tech, easy access musical <strong>in</strong>struments.There are three features of this work that merit special attention. First, the Project hassucceeded <strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>ks with media and one or other of its ensembles has frequentlyperformed on national and regional television and radio. This is significant, for it is rarebut tell<strong>in</strong>g evidence that amateur and community-based product can be more than a littlenoticedfull stop at the end of a process, but can attract substantial numbers of listeners.Secondly, with a National Lottery grant, the College is construct<strong>in</strong>g a performancebuild<strong>in</strong>g which will be managed for the most part autonomously and will be an <strong>in</strong>terfacebetween the College and the local community. Thirdly, once it had proved its stay<strong>in</strong>gpower, the College made the Percussion Project a fully <strong>in</strong>dependent <strong>in</strong>stitution. It willstand or fall accord<strong>in</strong>g to its ability to reflect and celebrate the values of the Estovercommunity and the local people who run it. It will not depend on the life-support systemof the College.Community schools – that is, secondary schools which offer cultural and other services toits local community – were pioneered as long ago as the 1940s <strong>in</strong> the shape of VillageColleges <strong>in</strong> Cambridgeshire. The policy was further developed after the Second WorldWar, with local authorities such as Leicestershire, Devon and Coventry tak<strong>in</strong>g the lead. Bythe 1960s and 1970s, perhaps about 10% to 12% of the country’s schools had developedcommunity programmes and facilities. One of the models for the community school isStantonbury Campus <strong>in</strong> Milton Keynes, which has an outstand<strong>in</strong>g record <strong>in</strong> the perform<strong>in</strong>garts. Like many of its counterparts <strong>in</strong> other areas of the country, it has survived theeducation reforms of recent years and, <strong>in</strong>deed, is thriv<strong>in</strong>g. Around 1970 Leicestershireapplied the same pr<strong>in</strong>ciple to primary schools. Today fund<strong>in</strong>g for the community aspect ofschools’ work comes from the Further Education Fund<strong>in</strong>g Council rather than from localeducation authorities, as used to be the case <strong>in</strong> the past.The concept is now tak<strong>in</strong>g on a new lease of life. This is <strong>in</strong> good part due to the impact ofthe National Lottery: educational <strong>in</strong>stitutions are eligible for arts capital grants, providedthere is public access. Also, the success of the BRIT Perform<strong>in</strong>g Arts and TechnologySchool <strong>in</strong> Croydon, which was one of a number of pathf<strong>in</strong>der <strong>in</strong>stitutions under the CityTechnology College scheme, has shown the potential of an arts-centred secondaryeducation. The Department for Education and Employment (DfEE), which launched itsSpecialists’ Schools scheme <strong>in</strong> 1993 to enable secondary schools to specialise <strong>in</strong> such areas astechnology and languages, decided <strong>in</strong> 1996 to open it to sport and the arts. StantonburyCampus is bidd<strong>in</strong>g for specialist school status and may receive as much as £1 million for thefurther development of its arts courses for pupils as well as improv<strong>in</strong>g community access(applicant schools have to raise £100,000 from the private sector to be matched by theDfEE, which will also contribute about £100 per pupil per year).In the light of these opportunities, a number of schools across the country are now plann<strong>in</strong>gthe development of substantial arts facilities. The Latymer School <strong>in</strong> Enfield, for example, isapply<strong>in</strong>g for Lottery funds towards the construction of a £5.6 million perform<strong>in</strong>g artscentre. This grant-ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed state secondary school had orig<strong>in</strong>ally simply <strong>in</strong>tended to <strong>in</strong>stallfacilities for the exclusive use of its pupils, but recast its ideas when it found that it wouldqualify for a Lottery grant only if they were open to the public. What is now be<strong>in</strong>gproposed, after a feasibility study, is that the centre be <strong>in</strong>dependently managed. It will notonly serve the school’s needs, but is also likely to be the headquarters of two professionalarts bodies; the arrangements have not yet been f<strong>in</strong>alised, but they are likely to be the


JOINING IN 99Young Persons Concerts <strong>Foundation</strong> and the well-known young people’s theatre companyTheatre Centre. In addition, amateur societies and local artists will be <strong>in</strong>vited to use thecentre. So far as music is concerned, there will be 19 practice and teach<strong>in</strong>g rooms, threerehearsal studios, a percussion studio and a media suite with a sound record<strong>in</strong>g studio.The school recognises that this development will <strong>in</strong>evitably transform its ‘culture’; bothteachers and pupils will f<strong>in</strong>d themselves engaged <strong>in</strong> artistic activities both with<strong>in</strong> and withthe community, and scholarly isolation will have to give way to <strong>in</strong>teraction with all k<strong>in</strong>ds ofprofessional and amateur practitioners.One can only respond to such schemes with enthusiasm. If a geographic spread of schools,focus<strong>in</strong>g on the arts and open to their local communities, were gradually to emergethroughout Brita<strong>in</strong>, we would be go<strong>in</strong>g a long way to resolve the present <strong>in</strong>adequacies <strong>in</strong>the resourc<strong>in</strong>g of participatory musics.I discuss <strong>in</strong> the follow<strong>in</strong>g chapter, The turn of the tide (see page 101) another scheme, thistime promoted by an orchestra, which promises to create a local resource for participatorymusic-makers; this is the Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia’s plan to establish a centre <strong>in</strong> Gateshead. Theargument I want to advance is that there should be a network of such centres, whether theybe <strong>in</strong>dependent arts organisations or community schools and colleges, to encouragemusicality of all k<strong>in</strong>ds, at every age and <strong>in</strong> every social class.Some musicians may be suspicious of becom<strong>in</strong>g over-dependent on build<strong>in</strong>g-based<strong>in</strong>stitutions on the grounds that, as experience shows, they can easily becomebureaucratically hidebound and artistically unadventurous. Although this is <strong>in</strong>deed a danger,well-run, transparently adm<strong>in</strong>istered centres can be an <strong>in</strong>valuable resource for an art-formwhere facilities, <strong>in</strong>struments, equipment, tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and advice are <strong>in</strong> short supply.There are also some planned <strong>in</strong>itiatives at national level which seek to advance thedevelopment of British music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. In the expectation that proximity will lead tosynergy, a number of umbrella bodies and national service organisations are propos<strong>in</strong>g towork together <strong>in</strong> shared headquarters build<strong>in</strong>gs. Thus, Sound Sense has taken over theresources of the defunct National Music and Disability Information Service and restored itsoperation. Six London-based organisations work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the field of new music – the BritishMusic Information Centre, the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors,the Association of Professional Composers, the Composers’ Guild of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, NMCRecord<strong>in</strong>gs Ltd, Jazz Services and the Society for the Promotion of New Music – areplann<strong>in</strong>g the establishment of a custom-built centre for composers and creative performers.This would both be a resource for professionals and be accessible to the general public. Aswell as offices, it would <strong>in</strong>clude an extensive collection of contemporary music scores andrecord<strong>in</strong>gs as well as <strong>in</strong>formation about contemporary British music, and a concert venue,studios and workshop spaces.In a similar enterprise, the Association of British Orchestras (which already cohabits with anumber of other national music agencies) is engaged <strong>in</strong> a feasibility study with a view tocreat<strong>in</strong>g a national orchestral centre. This would not only offer a range of services for the‘<strong>in</strong>dustry’ and foster artistic as well as adm<strong>in</strong>istrative <strong>in</strong>teraction, but also be a publicresource (perhaps <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g cater<strong>in</strong>g, IT facilities, studios and rehearsal spaces). It is likely toconcern itself with amateur and professional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. Initiatives of this k<strong>in</strong>d, whenthey have a wide remit and welcome all k<strong>in</strong>ds and levels of practice, could be of greatassistance to local musicians, music teachers, young people, community projects andamateur societies throughout the country.


100 THE RE-CREATION OF COMMUNITYIn summary, community music has widened out like a river approach<strong>in</strong>g the sea. Some ofits basic ideas have penetrated every corner of the musical world. Its orig<strong>in</strong>s lie <strong>in</strong> a sociallycommitted,oppositional project to retrieve a lost sense of community, but now, as weapproach the millennium, it has divided <strong>in</strong>to an estuary of many different streams and islets.The notion of ‘community’ has been extended to all k<strong>in</strong>ds of <strong>in</strong>terest groups and there aresigns that agencies with general social objectives, especially those concerned with exclusion,are devis<strong>in</strong>g arts development strategies. There is a grow<strong>in</strong>g understand<strong>in</strong>g of the need tofoster synergy between the music education and community music sectors. There is muchto be said for encourag<strong>in</strong>g schools, colleges and arts centres to act as open resource centresfor local musicians, whether professional or amateur. In the course of time this could lead toa national network of <strong>in</strong>stitutions which would stabilise and enrich a creative activity that isboth massively popular and massively under-f<strong>in</strong>anced.photo: Marcus Tate


5 THE TURNOF THE TIDE


102 THE TURN OF THE TIDEWhen I listen to someone else perform<strong>in</strong>g my music it is clear that the music has left its creator andhas a life of its own. But the nub of the question rema<strong>in</strong>s ... ‘What does this music – or my music –do with<strong>in</strong> our present society, and what do I th<strong>in</strong>k I am do<strong>in</strong>g by compos<strong>in</strong>g it?MICHAEL TIPPETT, MOVING INTO AQUARIUSWhile agree<strong>in</strong>g that music enjoyment should be made available to everybody, I do not feel, assomeone of work<strong>in</strong>g class orig<strong>in</strong>s, that this must be necessarily at the level of the lowest commondenom<strong>in</strong>ator. It is all too easy to assume that the very act of writ<strong>in</strong>g down music is elitist because noteverybody can do it easily, and it is all too easy to assume that a Mozart Quartet is elitist, becausenot only can every str<strong>in</strong>g player not play it easily, but because its beauties rema<strong>in</strong> hidden to manypeople who hear music constantly. This is part of a philosophy which seems to decide what so-calledwork<strong>in</strong>g class people are capable of enjoy<strong>in</strong>g, very much <strong>in</strong> terms similar to the yardsticks Zhdanovused to denounce lead<strong>in</strong>g Soviet composers ... Soviet ideologists decreed that music must beimmediately accessible on first hear<strong>in</strong>g, which <strong>in</strong> practice meant that ‘pap’ was produced, guaranteedto disturb nobody.SIR PETER MAXWELL DAVIES, ADDRESS AT NORTH OF ENGLANDEDUCATION CONFERENCE 1985the orchestra as an ensemble of possibilities, [that does not] excludeanyth<strong>in</strong>g,’ Pierre Boulez remarked, famously. The statement has rather a grand‘IviewFrench r<strong>in</strong>g to it, but what does it mean? Or, perhaps more usefully, what could itmean? Surely, an orchestra is an orchestra is an orchestra – that is to say, an ensemble ofassiduously tra<strong>in</strong>ed musicians whose job is to play the k<strong>in</strong>d of music that has beenwritten for it, the great masterpieces of the classical tradition. It should be left to get onwith its bus<strong>in</strong>ess undisturbed.So where’s the problem? A clamour of voices has been raised, some of them belong<strong>in</strong>g tosenior figures <strong>in</strong> the musical world. The manag<strong>in</strong>g director of the New York Philharmonic,Deborah Borda, was <strong>in</strong> no doubt of the need for reform when she said <strong>in</strong> 1993:‘The measure of the future will be: How can we respond to this chang<strong>in</strong>g societyand time that we are <strong>in</strong>? Those who haven’t the vision and the courage to makesome of the changes that are go<strong>in</strong>g to be needed will fall by the wayside. That maynot be a bad th<strong>in</strong>g.’ 1To those who ask what these changes might be, the manag<strong>in</strong>g director of the Los AngelesPhilharmonic, Ernest Fleischmann, replies <strong>in</strong> specific terms: ‘An orchestra is a“community of musicians” who can provide a jazz band, an early music ensemble or acontemporary music group, as well as act<strong>in</strong>g as a s<strong>in</strong>gle symphony orchestra.’ 21 Borda, Deborah,Americanis<strong>in</strong>g theAmerican Orchestra(American SymphonyOrchestra League, June1993).2 The Orchestra is Dead!Long Live the Orchestra!address at theCommencementExercises of theCleveland Institute ofMusic, 16 May 1987,unpublished.What the orchestral commentators have <strong>in</strong> common is a commitment to l<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g theorchestra to the burgeon<strong>in</strong>g world of participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g among the public atlarge. They share the sense of loss we found among community musicians – a feel<strong>in</strong>gthat old social bonds have been loosened or destroyed and that this has left classicalmusic marooned <strong>in</strong> an elitist Bermuda Triangle – with the orchestra as a Marie Celestefrom which the ord<strong>in</strong>ary evidences of human life are miss<strong>in</strong>g. Gillian Moore, head ofeducation of the South Bank Centre and a pioneer of educational outreach when sheworked for Brita<strong>in</strong>’s lead<strong>in</strong>g contemporary music ensemble, the London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta,used a strik<strong>in</strong>g phrase to evoke the isolation <strong>in</strong> which both audiences and musicians f<strong>in</strong>dthemselves when she described the concert hall as a ‘n<strong>in</strong>eteenth-century world ofsensory deprivation’.


JOINING IN 103It is easier to see what is wrong with orchestral life today than to know what to doabout it – <strong>in</strong> other words, to f<strong>in</strong>d some means of respond<strong>in</strong>g to Pierre Boulez’sprovocative assertion. One could, of course, take the path of least resistance and rejectthe case for change: the orchestra is a wonderful beast and, rather than attempt to<strong>in</strong>terbreed it with other ways of mak<strong>in</strong>g music, we should place a preservation order onit. Its task would then be to make music of the highest excellence and to celebrate theclassical tradition which, even if now <strong>in</strong> some difficulty, represents one of the highestachievements of the human spirit. Rather like historic monuments, a few really greatorchestras could be ‘listed’ as national liv<strong>in</strong>g treasures. They could forget about irrelevantcommunity or educational outreach work and concentrate on be<strong>in</strong>g brilliant on theconcert platform.This is a perfectly viable proposition, except that it would <strong>in</strong>evitably lead to a decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong>their present numbers. The Arts Councils would be tempted to focus their fund<strong>in</strong>g on ahandful of super-bands; and local authorities, except perhaps the very largest, would lose<strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> artistic bodies that showed no feel<strong>in</strong>g for locality or place and were dis<strong>in</strong>cl<strong>in</strong>edto fulfil broader social and educational obligations.This has not been the attitude adopted by most orchestral managements and fund<strong>in</strong>gbodies who, whether with reluctance or enthusiasm, have acknowledged the need forchange. In recent years, largely but not entirely at the prompt<strong>in</strong>g of their funders, all theArts Council-f<strong>in</strong>anced orchestras have come to employ education or community outreachofficers who use players for a variety of participatory programmes. A useful audit of thiswork has been conducted by the Association of British Orchestras (ABO). 3 Mostorchestras consider that their programmes are ‘cont<strong>in</strong>uous’ (as opposed to ‘regular’ or‘occasional’). Although only 63% have written policies, their stated purposes have a gooddeal <strong>in</strong> common; they generally see themselves as a resource for schools and communitygroups and place an emphasis on encourag<strong>in</strong>g people to participate <strong>in</strong> the creation ofmusic, work<strong>in</strong>g with professional players.3 Shaw, Phyllida,Mapp<strong>in</strong>g the Field, aresearch project on theeducation work of Britishorchestras (London,Association of BritishOrchestras, 1996). Sixtyorchestras which weremembers of the ABOwere <strong>in</strong>vited to provide<strong>in</strong>formation about theireducation programmesby complet<strong>in</strong>g aquestionnaire andprovid<strong>in</strong>g support<strong>in</strong>gmaterials. Only 30orchestras responded, sothe f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs are notauthoritative. But thosemost active <strong>in</strong> the fielddid reply and the reportgives a clear <strong>in</strong>dicationof the ma<strong>in</strong> trends. Thereport is purelyquantitative and doesnot offer valuejudgments.Help<strong>in</strong>g teachers to deliver the National Curriculum is a high priority. Many orchestrasregard their contact with schools as an opportunity to familiarise students with theirrepertoire as well as giv<strong>in</strong>g some <strong>in</strong>sight <strong>in</strong>to the life of work<strong>in</strong>g musicians. Projects withschools (secondary, middle and primary) are by far the most common type of workundertaken, with community groups, prisons, hospices and the like <strong>in</strong> a dist<strong>in</strong>ctm<strong>in</strong>ority. Education is seen as a means of rais<strong>in</strong>g an orchestra’s local profile and w<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gaudiences. It also helps musicians to develop their artistic skills and creativity. In fact,one of the most <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g developments (echoed <strong>in</strong> other musical areas) is the growthof general and project-specific tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for players – albeit, it would appear, of variable<strong>in</strong>tensity and value.Projects vary greatly <strong>in</strong> length, from a s<strong>in</strong>gle three-hour session to one day a week for ayear. They fall <strong>in</strong>to a range of categories which <strong>in</strong>clude: schools composition projects;schools multi-art-form projects, usually culm<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a performance; projects withgroups of schools; <strong>in</strong>strumental tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for youth orchestras (as well as privately and <strong>in</strong>schools); performance <strong>in</strong> various k<strong>in</strong>ds of location, with and without participation;residencies with participatory workshops and performances; <strong>in</strong>troductions to orchestrasessions; projects with unpublished composers; pre-concert talks; masterclasses;adm<strong>in</strong>istrative work experience for school students and the publication of guidel<strong>in</strong>esand videos for schools. Increas<strong>in</strong>gly, ‘clients’ are ask<strong>in</strong>g for and gett<strong>in</strong>g complexpackages of activity.


104 THE TURN OF THE TIDEThe ABO, the orchestral world’s umbrella body, is well <strong>in</strong> advance of its constituency.For some years it has placed a high priority on education and runs a national programmefor orchestral players, Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for Education. Libby MacNamara, its Director, saidrecently: ‘This is not audience development <strong>in</strong> terms of stimulat<strong>in</strong>g an <strong>in</strong>terest which maylater be translated <strong>in</strong>to conventional attendance at concerts. This is develop<strong>in</strong>g the currentaudience beyond the concert hall, recognis<strong>in</strong>g that it is equally valid.’ 4 The ABO has beenworried that some orchestras have entered the field for the wrong reasons and a few yearsago staged an ambitious educational project, called The Turn of the Tide, which I describebelow (see page 107).It is good news that, <strong>in</strong> the wake of the ABO survey, the National <strong>Foundation</strong> forEducational Research (NFER) is undertak<strong>in</strong>g a one-year qualitative research project at the<strong>in</strong>stigation of the Arts Council of England (ACE), which will study ‘the salient aims andcharacteristics of current British orchestral education activity’. 5 Among the issues it willaddress are ‘the nature of the <strong>in</strong>terface between educational activities and theorganisation’s ma<strong>in</strong> “core” or “artistic” work’, ‘rhetoric and reality on the place ofeducation <strong>in</strong> the organisation’ and ‘attitudes of different members to, and perceivedchallenges/opportunities <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> educational activities’. 6 These are importantquestions which, <strong>in</strong> anticipation of the publication of the NFER report <strong>in</strong> 1998, areamong the themes of this chapter.For reformers, who have the ear of younger musicians and composers as well as of thefund<strong>in</strong>g bodies, there are two ma<strong>in</strong> ways forward. The first is to proceed by evolutionrather than revolution, build<strong>in</strong>g on l<strong>in</strong>ks that have been created with the education sectorand community projects and encourag<strong>in</strong>g greater creativity and openness among musiciansand composers. The second course is more radical, transform<strong>in</strong>g the orchestra <strong>in</strong>to an allpurpose,all-musics resource. There are difficulties <strong>in</strong>herent <strong>in</strong> each option. Would thedevelopment of community-based work be a bolt-on function without feedback to thecore work of the orchestra? If there were feedback, what would its likely nature be? Is itpracticable to turn a symphony orchestra <strong>in</strong>to a gather<strong>in</strong>g of players equally at home withNorthumbrian bagpipes or Indian tablas as with viol<strong>in</strong>s and oboes? My purpose <strong>in</strong> thefollow<strong>in</strong>g pages is to argue that it is possible to answer these questions positively andconstructively by look<strong>in</strong>g at good practice <strong>in</strong> the field.There is <strong>in</strong> fact an evolutionary theoretical model which is worth <strong>in</strong>vestigat<strong>in</strong>g beforego<strong>in</strong>g on to look at <strong>in</strong>dividual case studies. Peter Renshaw of the Guildhall School, withhis colleague Peter Wiegold, comb<strong>in</strong>es academic theory with practical activity. Hebelieves that orchestras have no option but to change and has set out a five-po<strong>in</strong>t plan bywhich it could be achieved.4 Ibid.5 Orchestral EducationalProgrammes: a proposal fora research project,National <strong>Foundation</strong>for Educationalresearch, unpublished.6 A report of thesem<strong>in</strong>ar The NationalLottery – WhateverNext? (London,National Campaign forthe Arts, 1996) p.29.An orchestra should not be seen as a tightly discipl<strong>in</strong>ed army <strong>in</strong> the control of anautocratic commander-<strong>in</strong>-chief (the term ‘rank and file’ for ord<strong>in</strong>ary members of anorchestra is tell<strong>in</strong>gly military), but as an ‘<strong>in</strong>tegrated community of musicians andmanagement, aim<strong>in</strong>g to serve the widest possible community’. This means that it shouldbe a flexible resource with players contribut<strong>in</strong>g to the development of artistic policy andto decisions about the k<strong>in</strong>ds of music performed. Players would be valued as <strong>in</strong>dividualswork<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> a dynamic ensemble of musicians who are responsible for their collectivedevelopment as well as for respond<strong>in</strong>g to the needs of the larger community.Secondly, attention should be paid to the chang<strong>in</strong>g relationship between performer andcomposer. The last 10 years or so have seen a grow<strong>in</strong>g number of cases where<strong>in</strong>strumentalists and s<strong>in</strong>gers have been given the chance to develop their creative and


JOINING IN 105improvisational skills under the artistic leadership, not of a conductor but a composer. Bytak<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>teractive compositional process, they have been mak<strong>in</strong>g rather than justplay<strong>in</strong>g music.Thirdly, it is necessary to re-exam<strong>in</strong>e the relationship between music as a medium andmusic as a f<strong>in</strong>ished acoustic artefact. In the past, classical music has tended to emphasisethe objective status of a composition, its role as an icon of spirituality and artistic genius,at the expense of its social function. Its l<strong>in</strong>ks to a particular people, time and place are lost.However, Renshaw po<strong>in</strong>ts out that this attitude is los<strong>in</strong>g ground: ‘Music, like the otherarts, is now used <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly as a form of celebration, or as a medium for personal orcommunal celebration.’ 7Fourthly, attention should be paid to the chang<strong>in</strong>g musical environment. Musical languageis open<strong>in</strong>g up to sounds, rhythms and <strong>in</strong>struments from other cultures and from the newtechnologies. Composers are show<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> the opportunities these offerand, unless orchestras are happy to dw<strong>in</strong>dle <strong>in</strong>to museums, they would be wise to widenthe scope of their musical <strong>in</strong>terests and to reconcile the supply of skills they are able toprovide with the new demands be<strong>in</strong>g placed on them.F<strong>in</strong>ally, Renshaw claims that it is worth consider<strong>in</strong>g the fact that attitudes to cross-artswork are chang<strong>in</strong>g. He cites two examples; performance tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is plac<strong>in</strong>g an<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g reliance on voice and body work (often supported by discipl<strong>in</strong>es such as T’aichi, Shiatsu and the Alexander Technique) to supplement purely musical <strong>in</strong>struction.Also, physical and theatrical techniques are used to <strong>in</strong>culcate a stronger sense of musicalperformance and more <strong>in</strong>ventive presentation (this is especially relevant <strong>in</strong> musictheatre).Here then is a comprehensive analysis which is, <strong>in</strong> effect, a summary of the lessons thathave been learnt by the best of those who have developed the education work oforchestras. Its beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs can be traced back to the early 1980s when, mostly <strong>in</strong> theregions, a few enlightened orchestras and imag<strong>in</strong>ative <strong>in</strong>dividuals blazed a trail. Underthe banner of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland’s youth arts policy, the UlsterOrchestra was one of the first to recognise that orchestras had a wider role <strong>in</strong> thecommunity than simply giv<strong>in</strong>g concerts <strong>in</strong> city centre venues. The Scottish ChamberOrchestra (SCO), led by its Manag<strong>in</strong>g Director, Ian Ritchie, developed programmes tomeet the needs of diverse communities, often rural or on the islands, through schoolsand community-based work-programmes which became central to the orchestra’swhole vision.7 Renshaw, Peter,‘New Musician – NewPerformer’, an abridgedversion of a talkdelivered at theNational MusicCouncil’s conference,Music 2000 Revisited<strong>in</strong> Music Journal, January1995, p.254.8 Official Newsletterof Association ofCanadian Orchestras/Ontario Federation ofSymphony Orchestras(Ontario, 1990) p.6.Gillian Moore was an early pioneer when she jo<strong>in</strong>ed the London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta <strong>in</strong> 1983 asits first education director. The S<strong>in</strong>fonietta has earned an <strong>in</strong>ternational reputation for itsperformances of twentieth-century music. It plays a diverse repertoire and has a policyof commission<strong>in</strong>g new works from composers of all nationalities, many of whom workclosely with the orchestra. Gillian Moore’s aim was to elim<strong>in</strong>ate the disjunctionbetween composers and performers on the one hand and their audiences on the other.She wanted to make contemporary music available to as wide a public as possible: <strong>in</strong>her words, ‘for people <strong>in</strong> all walks of life to compose their own music, perform theirown music and become <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> music <strong>in</strong> a very practical way’. 8Her first educational project, devised and led by Richard McNicol with George Benjam<strong>in</strong>as composer-<strong>in</strong>-residence, set the tone for much of what was to follow. It was l<strong>in</strong>ked to aRavel/Varèse festival and <strong>in</strong>volved a three-day residential immersion course for teachers.The participants exam<strong>in</strong>ed Varèse’s compositional tools: by listen<strong>in</strong>g to sounds and


106 THE TURN OF THE TIDEanalys<strong>in</strong>g them – rhythmic and pulse structures, fragments of jazz, the build<strong>in</strong>g ofmelodies from one note – they were <strong>in</strong>troduced to the basic structures of Varèse’s work.Once they had acquired these musical build<strong>in</strong>g blocks, they and the teachers spent a week<strong>in</strong> group composition.The next stage of a characteristic S<strong>in</strong>fonietta education project was for musicians to workwith the teachers’ pupils <strong>in</strong> school and take them through a similar process ofcompositional <strong>in</strong>duction. They would then play their own compositions either at aconcert or a pre-concert event.‘They feel on a par [with the players and often with the composer] – they very oftensay they prefer their own music to a piece by Varèse, or whoever, and that is greatbecause I hope we are equipp<strong>in</strong>g them with that sort of creative and critical faculty tobe able to accept or reject or th<strong>in</strong>k theirs is better.’ 9The S<strong>in</strong>fonietta’s education work went on from strength to strength and became a coreelement <strong>in</strong> its operations. Its range is illustrated by its programme dur<strong>in</strong>g a s<strong>in</strong>gle summerterm a few years ago: this <strong>in</strong>cluded a project on musical ritual and ceremony at Har<strong>in</strong>gey;a collaboration with the Photographers’ Gallery for GCSE students on music,photography and architecture; a two-week ‘residency’ <strong>in</strong> Wormwood Scrubs work<strong>in</strong>gwith life prisoners to create a piece of music theatre <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g S<strong>in</strong>fonietta musicians, acomposer and a theatre director; and a week-long course on composition for adults withlearn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties.Clarity about the purpose of this open and <strong>in</strong>teractive policy is essential. As Gillian Mooreobserved: ‘If we are not very careful, it can become a k<strong>in</strong>d of half-baked <strong>in</strong>adequate socialwork.’ 10 In her view, an orchestra’s education w<strong>in</strong>g is not an optional add-on, but isengaged <strong>in</strong> a two-way process that benefits and changes the organisation as well as thosewhom it reaches. It dissolves the dist<strong>in</strong>ction between professional and amateur, betweenprovider and consumer. At its most radical, it promotes a new k<strong>in</strong>d of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g,almost (she would say) a new art-form.Gillian Moore was one of a new breed of adm<strong>in</strong>istrators, th<strong>in</strong>kers and apologists whocreated the environments <strong>in</strong> which project devisers and workshop leaders such as NigelOsborne, Terry Edwards and Peter Wiegold were able to flourish. One of the most<strong>in</strong>fluential of these pathf<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g musicians is Richard McNicol who founded the ApolloTrust <strong>in</strong> 1977, with support from the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> and Marks and Spencer, ‘tobr<strong>in</strong>g a fresh approach to concert-giv<strong>in</strong>g for children and to educate them for eventualconcert-go<strong>in</strong>g’. This is quite a specific, even narrow, aim when we set it beside the lateraspirations of the orchestral reformers and the community musicians, but it led McNicolto adopt some of the methods which are transform<strong>in</strong>g relations between performers,composers and the public.A former teacher and flautist, his motive for form<strong>in</strong>g the Apollo Trust was frustrationwith the way many children’s concerts were staged. There was little advance preparationand children were bussed <strong>in</strong> and out to unappeal<strong>in</strong>g and often <strong>in</strong>comprehensible publicevents. He wrote at the time:9 Ibid, p.6.10 Ibid, p.10.‘The music teacher <strong>in</strong> school, however imag<strong>in</strong>ative and enlightened he may be, hasthe greatest difficulty <strong>in</strong> relat<strong>in</strong>g serious music to any reality his pupils can grasp.Were he teach<strong>in</strong>g pop (as he often does <strong>in</strong> an attempt to make <strong>in</strong>itial contact) hewould have no such problem. Because of constant and effective commercialeducation, the world of pop is as real and important to school children as it would


JOINING IN 107be if they were <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> it themselves. The world of serious music, on the otherhand, is shrouded <strong>in</strong> carefully and misguidedly ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed mystery. As <strong>in</strong> pop musicand sport, it is personal contact with the everyday performer that will stimulate the<strong>in</strong>terest of the new listener. The mysteries of classical music must be dispelled, and itmust be shown that all musics, pop and serious alike, are there simply to beenjoyed.’ 11McNicol’s basic perception was that participation is the best form of criticism, ofacquir<strong>in</strong>g understand<strong>in</strong>g. He told me:‘We began with a pilot scheme. We would take a t<strong>in</strong>y str<strong>in</strong>g orchestra and use it toexam<strong>in</strong>e music. We asked a basic question: what is it that composers do when theywrite music? We worked with primary school kids; they’d listen to a fugue and discussit. They tended to hear only one l<strong>in</strong>e of the music. So we organised a practicaldemonstration. Children were stationed beside the players and were challenged to puta hand up as each fugal entry came <strong>in</strong> – on the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple that the audience can hearwhat it can see.’To beg<strong>in</strong> with, the Trust’s work ma<strong>in</strong>ly took place <strong>in</strong> London, but <strong>in</strong> 1981 McNicoldevised an education programme for the East Midlands-based chamber orchestra, theEnglish S<strong>in</strong>fonia (work which has been carried on s<strong>in</strong>ce 1984 by the Firebird Trust). Later<strong>in</strong> the same year he helped Michael Vyner start an education programme for the LondonS<strong>in</strong>fonietta. S<strong>in</strong>ce then he has worked with a number of lead<strong>in</strong>g orchestras. He is nowemployed as Music Animateur by the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO).Influenced by John Paynter, the music educationist, he took the view that ‘we can allcompose’ and over the years has ref<strong>in</strong>ed a range of workshop-based techniques. His latestpublication, Music Explorer Project Book, 12 is accompanied by an LSO video; <strong>in</strong> the<strong>in</strong>troduction he writes:‘What better way could there be to get <strong>in</strong>side the music of a great composer than byus<strong>in</strong>g that composer’s musical ideas yourself? ... your pupils will, at the end of eachproject [<strong>in</strong> the book], have the satisfaction of perform<strong>in</strong>g a well-structured piece ofmusic that they themselves have composed.’Not a composer himself, McNicol began to work with people who were. One of themost ambitious projects <strong>in</strong> which he was <strong>in</strong>volved was The Turn of the Tide; organised byKathryn McDowell (formerly Education Officer for the SCO, then Deputy ChiefExecutive of the Ulster Orchestra), it ran for 12 months <strong>in</strong> 1992 and 1993. It was set upby the ABO, which, see<strong>in</strong>g the importance of educational work, wanted to raise publicawareness of the role professional musicians can play <strong>in</strong> schools. It was also aware ofconsiderable scepticism on the part of some orchestral managements and players andhoped that the project would give them useful hands-on experience and raise the status ofeducation work with<strong>in</strong> orchestras.11 McNicol, Richard,Children and Music: anew approach(unpublished essay,1977).12 Published by theApollo Trust <strong>in</strong>association with theOxford University Press(Buxton, 1996).The Turn of the Tide was a compositional and performance project for children andprofessional musicians. Sir Peter Maxwell Davies wrote a piece on an environmentaltheme; parts of it were left open and children were asked to provide short musical <strong>in</strong>sertsof their own. Sixteen orchestras took part, us<strong>in</strong>g the same basic schema. ‘What I did wasto provide a catalyst for young people to make their own work, their own improvisations,slowed down to composition, to be actually presented <strong>in</strong> a concert which slots <strong>in</strong>to mypiece’, Maxwell Davies expla<strong>in</strong>ed at the time. Some critics were unsure that the resultsadded up to a coherent artistic whole, but, although not universally regarded as an artistic


108 THE TURN OF THE TIDEsuccess, there is no doubt that The Turn of the Tide was a landmark event <strong>in</strong> that it raisedawareness of orchestral educational work, supported the newly established musiccurriculum and encouraged orchestras which were new to the field.If McNicol’s objective was to <strong>in</strong>troduce children to classical music through creativepractice, others (among them Maxwell Davies) saw the role of the composer <strong>in</strong> a widerperspective. Were there ways <strong>in</strong> which he or she, Janus-like, could look simultaneously <strong>in</strong>two directions, develop<strong>in</strong>g their art <strong>in</strong> community sett<strong>in</strong>gs and then feed<strong>in</strong>g the resultback to the concert platform? Perhaps this would be a solution to the public’s lack of<strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> contemporary classical music and might also <strong>in</strong>spire composers to producework closer to people’s lived concerns.Of course, this is not an altogether new l<strong>in</strong>e of thought <strong>in</strong> the history of twentiethcenturyclassical music. Elgar, who spent most of his life <strong>in</strong> Worcester, was at one stagethe bandmaster of a local lunatic asylum and, as we have seen, much of his early workwas written for local amateur competitive festivals. The largely forgotten RutlandBoughton, whose opera, The Immortal Hour, had the unique dist<strong>in</strong>ction of a long,unsubsidised West End run, attempted to establish an English Bayreuth <strong>in</strong> Glastonburywhich depended entirely on local community <strong>in</strong>volvement and for which he wrotemany community operas. Gustav Holst was happy to a be a schoolmaster at St Paul’sGirls’ School and he wrote music for his pupils. Benjam<strong>in</strong> Britten had similarcommunity and educational ideals and composed many pieces for local children andamateurs (among them, St Nicolas, Noye’s Fludde and The Little Sweep). Michael Tippettwas Director of Music throughout the 1940s at Morley College.Vaughan Williams epitomised this tradition. He once said: ‘The composer must not shuthimself up and th<strong>in</strong>k about art, he must live with his fellows and make his art anexpression of the whole life of the community.’ 13 He was closely associated with theannual Leith Hill Music Festival <strong>in</strong> Dork<strong>in</strong>g, where he conducted amateur groups andwrote music for them. He gave his Concerto Grosso for triple str<strong>in</strong>g orchestra (1950) <strong>in</strong>which the third section may consist of ‘those players who prefer to use open str<strong>in</strong>gs’.Sir Peter Maxwell Davies is one of the latest standard-bearers. In 1977 he launched the StMagnus Festival on the Orkney Islands with his Martyrdom of St Magnus as its centrepiece.In its first years the festival was a controversial <strong>in</strong>novation, disliked by many islanders. Butit gradually ga<strong>in</strong>ed the trust of the small, closely knit community. The islanders organiseand produce the festival on a voluntary basis. A hundred or so artists are billeted <strong>in</strong> localhomes; amateurs are <strong>in</strong> charge of stage management and backstage production. Theislands’ schools, where there is a strong musical tradition of fiddle play<strong>in</strong>g and Scottishfolk, are heavily <strong>in</strong>volved with children as s<strong>in</strong>gers and musicians. In 1996, the six-dayfestival (which now also <strong>in</strong>cludes drama, dance and literature <strong>in</strong> its programme and hasextended its musical bill of fare to <strong>in</strong>corporate rock, jazz and folk) attracted an attendanceof 18,000, a remarkable feat by any standards.13 Vaughan Williams,Ralph, from his essayWho wants the EnglishComposer? 1912, cited<strong>in</strong> Foss, Hubert, RalphVaughan Williams(London, 1950) p.200.The role of the composer has always been central to the festival and dur<strong>in</strong>g its historynearly 100 new works have been commissioned. However, the number is less materialthan the con<strong>text</strong> <strong>in</strong> which many of them were written – a self-confident, self-help<strong>in</strong>gcommunity where amateurs and professionals, children and adults <strong>in</strong>term<strong>in</strong>gle on equalterms. Maxwell Davies told me:‘The composer should not be a separate be<strong>in</strong>g. All young people are perfectly capableof compos<strong>in</strong>g, given the right tools. The tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of composers baffles me. They get apiece of paper award<strong>in</strong>g them a degree <strong>in</strong> composition without ever hav<strong>in</strong>g conducted


JOINING IN 109<strong>in</strong>cidental music for an art or drama college, say, without ever hav<strong>in</strong>g gone out <strong>in</strong>tothe community or done someth<strong>in</strong>g for a local radio station.’Two remarkable examples of what the St Magnus Festival can achieve were a productionof A Midsummer Night’s Dream <strong>in</strong> 1993 when a group of children with professionalguidance produced the score, the sets were designed by a local secondary school, aga<strong>in</strong>with professional <strong>in</strong>put, and the music performed under the direction of a musician-<strong>in</strong>residence,Steve K<strong>in</strong>g of the SCO; and a revival of The Beggar’s Opera with music devisedfrom orig<strong>in</strong>al airs by practically a complete generation of young Scottish composers whohad studied under Maxwell Davies. The production featured the local St Magnus Playersand the Scottish Chamber Music Ensemble.Later, Maxwell Davies became the SCO’s Associate Composer/Conductor. With thesupport of the now defunct Strathclyde Regional Council, the orchestra embarked <strong>in</strong>1988 on the ground-break<strong>in</strong>g Strathclyde Concertos project. Maxwell Davies undertook thecomposition of 10 concertos, specially written to suit – and to test – the skills of itspr<strong>in</strong>cipal players. The plan was that the series would be completed by 1995 (<strong>in</strong> fact, thef<strong>in</strong>al concert took place <strong>in</strong> 1996) with all the works broadcast, recorded and, hopefully,taken up by other soloists and orchestras across the world. But the aim was not simply tocommission new music.Each concerto was adopted by one of the educational divisions of the Strathclyde regionand a younger Scottish composer-<strong>in</strong>-residence (for example, James MacMillan andWilliam Sweeney) was hired to work alongside the teachers, the soloist for the concerto<strong>in</strong> question and other SCO musicians. The scheme was devised by Kathryn McDowell(who, <strong>in</strong> the same way as Gillian Moore <strong>in</strong> England, had a profound <strong>in</strong>fluence on Scottishorchestral education work). What emerged were either dist<strong>in</strong>ct compositions <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>gstudents and local bands of musicians, or ‘framework’ pieces (along the l<strong>in</strong>es of The Turnof the Tide) <strong>in</strong>to which pupils <strong>in</strong>serted their own work. The material they produced, basedon the Maxwell Davies concerto, was assessed as part of their curricular activity. Also theyhad the chance to perform it <strong>in</strong> their local community with the full SCO a week or sobefore the Glasgow premiere of the Strathclyde Concerto itself.One of the umbrella bodies for composers, the Society for the Promotion of NewMusic (SPNM), has seen the way the w<strong>in</strong>d is blow<strong>in</strong>g and is do<strong>in</strong>g its best toencourage <strong>in</strong>novative forms of practice as well as foster<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>ks with a wide range of‘commissioners’ of new music, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g amateur organisations and the formaleducation sector. In recent years it has explored a number of unusual areas, hav<strong>in</strong>g runprojects for musicians <strong>in</strong> association with architects to explore the analogies betweenmusic and architecture, for steel pan compos<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> 1996 an ambitious collaborativeproject with one of the country’s lead<strong>in</strong>g brass bands, the Black Dyke Mills Band. In1996 it launched a pilot Adopt a Composer scheme (a notion first <strong>in</strong>vented by the Cityof Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Symphony Orchestra with its Adopt a Player scheme <strong>in</strong> the late 1980s)to enable young professional composers to develop a work<strong>in</strong>g relationship with amateurchoirs. In the same year it ran a seven-month compos<strong>in</strong>g project with 28 A-Level andGCSE pupils and four teachers at a Welsh comprehensive school which ended with aprofessional performance at the Vale of Glamorgan Festival. The SPNM has launched anation-wide tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>itiative to help music teachers with the compositional demandsof the National Curriculum.A consequence of the widen<strong>in</strong>g role of the composer and the demands of the musiccurriculum, with its new emphasis on compos<strong>in</strong>g, is that more and more teachers are


110 THE TURN OF THE TIDEgenerat<strong>in</strong>g their own music. In the past, their task was essentially pedagogic, but todaymany see themselves as artists <strong>in</strong> their own right. If this trend cont<strong>in</strong>ues, we may be onthe po<strong>in</strong>t of a remarkable flower<strong>in</strong>g of musical talent. This is <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sically a welcomedevelopment; but it is also a model of renewal, based on the retrieval of live l<strong>in</strong>ksbetween people at large (<strong>in</strong> this case, especially the young) and the bus<strong>in</strong>ess of musicmak<strong>in</strong>g,between a professional caste and amateur creativity.However, too exclusive a preoccupation with composers underestimates the contributionof orchestral players. To be more precise, improvisational techniques are beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g tosubvert the notion of the composer as a dist<strong>in</strong>ct specialist. Of course, this is no newphenomenon, for composers have always made use of improvisation as part of the creativeprocess. But a change <strong>in</strong> degree is becom<strong>in</strong>g a change <strong>in</strong> k<strong>in</strong>d and is hav<strong>in</strong>g a knock-oneffect on a class of professionals whose traditional job has been to <strong>in</strong>terpret the music ofothers. The pianist Veryan Weston commented on the ris<strong>in</strong>g status of improvisation <strong>in</strong>‘serious’ new music:‘Over the last 30 years, some musicians <strong>in</strong> Europe have been develop<strong>in</strong>g ways tobypass notation and enter each moment as a performer with ideas that have beencarefully, personally and consciously developed over years of practice and preparation... There are obviously many profound political ramifications with this process ofmusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g. For a start I feel it is naturally address<strong>in</strong>g our culture which still reflectsan <strong>in</strong>frastructure with feudal orig<strong>in</strong>s. So a composer is like a landlord accru<strong>in</strong>g property<strong>in</strong> the form of notations (PRS registered <strong>in</strong> his name only). These get performed bywell-dressed servants, themselves victims of the system, who are carefully tra<strong>in</strong>ed andthen supervised by the landlord’s policeman – the conductor.’ 14Some claim that these well-dressed servants are so estranged from their <strong>in</strong>dividualcreativity goes that their psychological health is affected. This is a delicate area, but it isreasonable to conjecture that the ability or otherwise to express one’s creativity is likelyto be connected with a satisfactory lifestyle (satisfactory, that is, to the personconduct<strong>in</strong>g it). Those <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> a full discussion of the relationship betweenpersonality and musicianship will f<strong>in</strong>d much of value <strong>in</strong> Anthony E Kemp’s recentstudy, The Musical Temperament. 1514 Weston Veryan,‘It’s time to recognisethe creative strengths ofimprovisation’ NewNotes, SPNM,November 1996.15 Kemp, Anthony E,The MusicalTemperament (Oxford,Oxford UniversityPress, 1996).The perception of the need to foster the personal growth of musicians is the start<strong>in</strong>gpo<strong>in</strong>t for one of the most <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g orchestral experiments currently be<strong>in</strong>gundertaken. The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO) is emerg<strong>in</strong>g from troubledtimes, when its f<strong>in</strong>ancial stability and artistic quality have both been <strong>in</strong> question. Therehas been a long <strong>in</strong>terregnum between general managers. However, for all its difficulties,it established a long-term relationship <strong>in</strong> 1994 with Nott<strong>in</strong>gham and Nott<strong>in</strong>ghamshireand, one of the last orchestras to do so, developed an ambitious education andcommunity outreach programme <strong>in</strong> partnership with the Guildhall School of Musicand Drama.It is perhaps no accident that its Head of Education, Judith Webster, comes from abackground <strong>in</strong> music therapy. Her view on arrival <strong>in</strong> 1993 was that it would not bepossible to engage <strong>in</strong> effective participatory and community work unless the players’approach to music-mak<strong>in</strong>g had been transformed first. She is worried about the way <strong>in</strong>which their tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and career over-emphasised technical virtuosity. She told me:‘When musicians choose their path <strong>in</strong> life, they tap <strong>in</strong>to the opportunity to beexcellent <strong>in</strong> some field. This often leads to a feel<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>in</strong>security and lack ofpersonal recognition. It is possible to get submerged by the orchestra as an


JOINING IN 111<strong>in</strong>stitution and to lose touch with what set them off <strong>in</strong> the first place. It’s possible tobecome quite screwed up.’The RPO, work<strong>in</strong>g with Peter Wiegold, Sean Gregory and Paul Griffiths of the GuildhallSchool, devised a tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programme for a core group of players, tak<strong>in</strong>g as its basic tenetthat musical, social and personal goals are separate but <strong>in</strong>terdependent facets of musicaldevelopment. There have been some remarkable outcomes. The players are nowconfident enough to take part <strong>in</strong> community-based projects, many of which they organisethemselves rather than hand<strong>in</strong>g them over to workshop leaders. The core group has setitself up as a musical ensemble called Sharp Edge, with its own artistic identity, sometimeswork<strong>in</strong>g with composers and on other occasions produc<strong>in</strong>g new musical piecesthemselves, based on improvisation.A project with clients of the Nott<strong>in</strong>gham Probation Service <strong>in</strong> 1995 was successful <strong>in</strong>many ways, but suffered from a characteristic weakness of this k<strong>in</strong>d of scheme. When itwas over, it was over and, hav<strong>in</strong>g aroused expectations, the RPO was unable to offercont<strong>in</strong>uity. This issue was addressed <strong>in</strong> a subsequent project, this time <strong>in</strong> association with aNott<strong>in</strong>gham ‘street’ organisation called Open Door which concerned itself with supportfor drug abusers. A local community musician, Mat Anderson, was co-opted at the outsetto work on a follow-up programme once the project had f<strong>in</strong>ished. The project worked, atleast <strong>in</strong> the sense that it is still runn<strong>in</strong>g and the RPO players have paid a return visit. ButJudith Webster admits that there were difficulties, especially <strong>in</strong> the relationship with thecommunity musician. The essential problem, familiar to many community musicians, washow to establish a partnership between the RPO players, the community musician andthe participants on unpatronis<strong>in</strong>g terms and to get the balance right between periods ofhigh-<strong>in</strong>tensity and low-<strong>in</strong>tensity <strong>in</strong>volvement.What is notable here is the RPO’s long-term commitment to a particular area, thanks toits special relationship with Nott<strong>in</strong>gham and Nott<strong>in</strong>ghamshire, and a will<strong>in</strong>gness toidentify weaknesses and address them. Most <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g of all is the possibility that thecore group of players may be creat<strong>in</strong>g a ‘virtuous circle’ where the orchestra is not justgiv<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g to the community, but is try<strong>in</strong>g to establish an open way of work<strong>in</strong>gthat may eventually lead to new music emerg<strong>in</strong>g from the core group’s creative andcommunity activities which will jo<strong>in</strong> the concert platform repertoire. In other words,this could become a model of practice which feeds directly <strong>in</strong>to the orchestra’straditional artistic mission.I have s<strong>in</strong>gled out the RPO for comment because it is explicitly (and unusually) tackl<strong>in</strong>gthe question of whether community and outreach work can affect the nature of anorchestra. Like all latecomers, it has been able to profit from the experience of those whojo<strong>in</strong>ed the game earlier. Will its ambitious plans succeed? The jury is out and it will besome years before we know the answer.A number of other orchestras are plough<strong>in</strong>g their own furrows. The educational strategyof the Philharmonia pays special attention to the areas where it has residencies – London,Bedford and Leicester. They offer a wide-rang<strong>in</strong>g package of activities, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g schoolsworkshops often l<strong>in</strong>ked to a visit to a Philharmonia concert or rehearsal; special concertsor open rehearsals supported by preparatory workshops and teachers’ packs; and workwith a variety of community groups <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g older or retired people, young peoplethrough the Youth Service and multicultural projects. In Bedford an ‘alternativePhilharmonia’ was created by a group of young people from a disadvantagedneighbourhood who assembled a collection of musical <strong>in</strong>struments made from recycled or


112 THE TURN OF THE TIDEscrap materials. The Philharmonia offers support to the education sector <strong>in</strong> two ways: itruns teachers’ days and <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g (INSET) to help teachers brush up theirknowledge of the orchestral repertoire; and a programme for music students, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gschemes to let postgraduate students play <strong>in</strong> Philharmonia rehearsals and to allowcomposition students to write for smaller ensembles with the results performed at theRoyal Festival Hall.The orchestra sees itself as operat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a European con<strong>text</strong> and is plann<strong>in</strong>g to perform,record and tour the entire opus of György Ligeti. In parallel with this project, it will stagea course explor<strong>in</strong>g Ligeti’s music and its relevance to the classroom. The composer NigelOsborne and the South African musician Eugene Skeef and the conductor Esa-PekkaSalonen will be among those runn<strong>in</strong>g sessions.The LSO, which has recruited Richard McNicol as its Music Animateur, has formed aDiscovery Department with a comprehensive range of educational and communityactivities, cover<strong>in</strong>g nursery, primary, secondary and special educational schools. These<strong>in</strong>clude cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education with targeted access schemes; teacher INSET; opportunitiesfor music students at the ma<strong>in</strong> London conservatoires; commission<strong>in</strong>g composers to writeworks for school students, and collaboration with professionals from other art-forms;schemes for the elderly and the <strong>in</strong>firm; the development of l<strong>in</strong>ks with local communities,especially <strong>in</strong> Isl<strong>in</strong>gton and Hackney; work <strong>in</strong> prisons; tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the personal and musicaldevelopment of LSO musicians; and the compilation of a visual and audio archive of LSOeducation work. The LSO hopes to establish a permanent base for its educational andcommunity work <strong>in</strong> a redundant church <strong>in</strong> Old Street <strong>in</strong> London’s East End.The Bournemouth Orchestras have a well-established Education and Community Unitwhich runs a ‘mixed economy’ of activities with a variety of community groups. Schoolsprojects concentrate on the three pr<strong>in</strong>cipal aspects of the music curriculum – composition,performance and listen<strong>in</strong>g. The unit stages elaborate cross-art-form projects, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>grock music schemes with youth groups and activities with older people based onchildhood rem<strong>in</strong>iscence schemes. It also organises children’s concerts, community concertswith small ensembles <strong>in</strong> villages, masterclasses and coach<strong>in</strong>g.Cross-art-form work and collaboration with musicians work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> other genres arespecialities. One example was a series of performances of music as part of a project withthe North Devon College Band called ‘Musical Maps’ which took the landscape of thearea and its associations, with Henry Williamson’s novel Tarka the Otter as the <strong>in</strong>spirationfor the music. The Bournemouth S<strong>in</strong>fonietta runs Community Music Weeks where theorchestra develops a close relationship with a particular community over three months,culm<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>tensive residential week of activities. As with other orchestras, theEducation and Community Unit devotes a great deal of energy to tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g theorchestra’s musicians <strong>in</strong> the skills needed for outreach work. Plans are under discussionwith Tr<strong>in</strong>ity College of Music to establish a tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programme lead<strong>in</strong>g to aprofessional qualification.At first sight opera, with its complexity of stag<strong>in</strong>g, high cost and (for many people)remote theatrical conventions is an implausible candidate for community-based work.But all the major, large-scale opera companies have community and educationaloutreach departments. In the mid-1980s Sue Harries and Welsh National Opera, withPhil Thomas as composer-<strong>in</strong>-residence, pioneered some ambitious community opera<strong>in</strong>itiatives <strong>in</strong> Cardiff Bay. The idea caught on and some companies mount speciallywritten,ambitious community operas – for example, the Baylis Programme at English


JOINING IN 113National Opera’s Arion and the Dolph<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> the South-West <strong>in</strong> 1993-4 andGlyndebourne’s In Search of Angels <strong>in</strong> Peterborough <strong>in</strong> 1995. This year Glyndebournepresented a community-based piece <strong>in</strong> its opera house for the first time: called Misper(the title comes from police shorthand for miss<strong>in</strong>g person), it is an opera for youngpeople with music by John Lunn and libretto by Stephen Plaice. Less well-publicisedbut often equally effective is the work of Brita<strong>in</strong>’s smaller tour<strong>in</strong>g opera groups. Manyof them exist on a part-time basis and cannot call on revenue fund<strong>in</strong>g from the ArtsCouncils and Regional Arts Boards (RABs). They have found that it is easiest to fundraisefor educational or community projects, whether from charitable foundations, theprivate sector, RABs and local education authorities.Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Jean Nicholson, manager of the Opera and Music Theatre Forum,f<strong>in</strong>ancial necessity soon yielded to cultural conviction as a motive for work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> thisfield: ‘They found it more reward<strong>in</strong>g than they had thought it would be and itstimulated them to th<strong>in</strong>k of how to communicate new ideas about opera.’ So, to choosea few well-regarded examples, Mecklenburgh Opera accompanies each production witha specially devised education project and every two years or so commissions a new pieceof music theatre, often devised through a series of workshops <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g the composer,performers, librettist and conductors. Pimlico Opera specialises <strong>in</strong> tak<strong>in</strong>g opera tounusual venues and is well known for its work <strong>in</strong> prisons, <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>mates <strong>in</strong> allaspects of production and performance. Vocem Electric Voice Theatre creates newpieces us<strong>in</strong>g electronic technology and works directly with young people <strong>in</strong> schools andcommunity groups. F<strong>in</strong>ally, ACE designated 1997 as the Year of Opera and MusicTheatre <strong>in</strong> the East of England. The programme has a substantial education andcommunity component.Stepp<strong>in</strong>g back, then, we can see how more and more attention is be<strong>in</strong>g given tofoster<strong>in</strong>g the creativity of <strong>in</strong>dividual players and their personal growth <strong>in</strong> the con<strong>text</strong> ofcommunity-based practice. Nobody is claim<strong>in</strong>g that this either improves or dim<strong>in</strong>ishesthe quality of their play<strong>in</strong>g of the traditional concert repertoire, although it may help tosharpen their motivation and job satisfaction. There is evidence that it enables them tobroaden the range of their work. This is helpful to their careers <strong>in</strong> a highly competitivemarket and many of them report great pleasure <strong>in</strong> be<strong>in</strong>g able to escape, at least for atime, from the constra<strong>in</strong>ts of conventional music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. It is possible that with thepassage of time this new, freer approach to musicality will contribute to a developmentof the repertoire.Composers too are f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g that work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> community sett<strong>in</strong>gs is an excit<strong>in</strong>g way oftest<strong>in</strong>g their <strong>in</strong>ventiveness. After a long period of relative isolation, contemporary classicalmusic is rega<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g contact with the lives and aspirations of people at large and is learn<strong>in</strong>gto make use of other genres. It is as if a breath of fresh air is blow<strong>in</strong>g through a hothouse.All of this is to the good, but does not mean that the nature of the orchestra is be<strong>in</strong>gturned upside down. Rather its role is be<strong>in</strong>g adjusted to suit its present circumstances.This is no revolution, but gradual reform, and as we look towards the future we canimag<strong>in</strong>e the orchestral world carry<strong>in</strong>g on much as it is now, but with closer and morevigorous <strong>in</strong>teraction with communities as well as with audiences. Indeed, audiences whichhave engaged <strong>in</strong> participatory practice should be able to walk <strong>in</strong>to a concert hall withoutfeel<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the least <strong>in</strong>timidated, because their understand<strong>in</strong>g of the process of musicmak<strong>in</strong>gwill have enhanced their critical appreciation of what an orchestra can do and willhave honed their critical faculties.


114 THE TURN OF THE TIDEIt is much harder to envisage the k<strong>in</strong>d of radical upheaval that presupposes a force ofmusicians who are at home with every k<strong>in</strong>d of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g from the fiddle to the sitar,the jazz trumpet to the gamelan, or who have become a liv<strong>in</strong>g encyclopaedia of all theworld’s musics. The k<strong>in</strong>ds of cross-cultural play<strong>in</strong>g with which some communitymusicians and orchestral groups are now experiment<strong>in</strong>g may or may not lead <strong>in</strong> duecourse to new dom<strong>in</strong>ant forms, but with some exceptions (for <strong>in</strong>stance, traditional musicsand multicultural rock or pop fusion) what is happen<strong>in</strong>g now is a greater openness ofapproach that is enrich<strong>in</strong>g critical understand<strong>in</strong>g rather than transform<strong>in</strong>g the musicallandscape. While it is legitimate to expect the programme of a concert hall to reflect thediversity of contemporary culture, it seems unreasonable to <strong>in</strong>sist that an orchestra shouldperform beyond the natural limits of its skills and <strong>in</strong>terests.It so happens that an imag<strong>in</strong>ative group of people is work<strong>in</strong>g on an <strong>in</strong>stitutional modelthat will embody the communal catholicity I have been outl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. There has long been anaspiration to build a new concert hall at Gateshead <strong>in</strong> the North-East which wouldprovide a home for the region’s chamber orchestra, the Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia, as well asprovid<strong>in</strong>g a platform for jazz, rock and folk. The S<strong>in</strong>fonia’s 37 permanent musicians areused to work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a variety of partnerships for the production of music theatre andopera, small-scale chamber music, popular symphonic music and education and outreach.It has established a dist<strong>in</strong>ctive regional profile and has good relations with Folkworks, thepromotional agency for traditional music, based <strong>in</strong> Newcastle-upon-Tyne.See<strong>in</strong>g the importance of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and of creat<strong>in</strong>g opportunities for the full range of theregion’s musicians, the S<strong>in</strong>fonia and the other <strong>in</strong>terested parties now <strong>in</strong>tend to establisha Regional Music Centre, which <strong>in</strong> addition to two concert halls (with 1,650 and 400seats) would have a perform<strong>in</strong>g arts library and other music-mak<strong>in</strong>g facilities. It will bea focus for music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the region and a resource for all k<strong>in</strong>ds of music andmusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g. The <strong>in</strong>tention is for the orchestra to employ a number ofteacher/players who would comb<strong>in</strong>e teach<strong>in</strong>g at the centre with play<strong>in</strong>g for theS<strong>in</strong>fonia when it performs larger-scale repertoire. The centre would also engage withtraditional music through the <strong>in</strong>volvement of Folkworks which is play<strong>in</strong>g a large part <strong>in</strong>its plann<strong>in</strong>g and development.The idea is def<strong>in</strong>itely not to create a do-it-yourself conservatoire by another name.What the planners have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d is a k<strong>in</strong>d of entrepôt which will be accessible to almostanybody with almost any k<strong>in</strong>d of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> music. It will be an INSET centre formusic teachers; it will offer <strong>in</strong>strumental modules for students undertak<strong>in</strong>g further andhigher education courses and courses for children of exceptional talent; it will be aperformance centre for youth orchestras, bands and ensembles; it will be a nationalresource for the practice and study of folk music; and it will provide a programme ofplacement projects led by professional musicians <strong>in</strong> support of the music curriculum,starter courses and specialist vacation sem<strong>in</strong>ars. The library or archive will lend pr<strong>in</strong>tedmaterials (<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g orchestral parts) and audio-visual materials, and will be a centre forreference and consultation. It will also be l<strong>in</strong>ked electronically to other resources,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the National Sound Archive.It will be crucial to the centre’s success for it to be accessible to everyone, somewhat onthe analogy of sports centres where professionals and amateurs can, and do, exercisehappily side by side. It must not just be an emporium for career development, but a placewith which the young kid who wants to become a rock star, the group <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>Gilbert and Sullivan, the organisers of an Asian religious festival or the old countrymanadept <strong>in</strong> the musical vernacular of a rural past can identify <strong>in</strong> one way or another.


JOINING IN 115It seems likely that this project will be brought to fruition. It has attracted a good deal oflocal support and has applied for lottery fund<strong>in</strong>g from the Millennium Commission. Localauthorities were worried by the ongo<strong>in</strong>g cost implications and Newcastle-upon-Tyne<strong>in</strong>dicated that it could not afford to host the project with<strong>in</strong> its boundaries. HoweverGateshead took it over and agreed to give it a home. Assum<strong>in</strong>g that National Lotterymonies are forthcom<strong>in</strong>g to help with build<strong>in</strong>g costs, the music centre’s prospects look tobe set fair.In many ways these proposals put the seal on the long open<strong>in</strong>g-up of Brita<strong>in</strong>’s orchestraswhich this chapter has sought to describe. It is a rare example of long-term strategicvision, for here at last is a practical means of br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together and reconcil<strong>in</strong>g all thedifferent strands of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g; classical and every k<strong>in</strong>d of popular music, music frommany cultures, amateurs and professionals, community-based and educationalpractitioners. At the heart of the enterprise will be the orchestra, not (one hopes) as anover-dom<strong>in</strong>ant manager but as a primus <strong>in</strong>ter pares among a varied assembly of s<strong>in</strong>gers,players, researchers, students, young and old, poor and rich. It would be a metaphor <strong>in</strong>bricks and mortar of that confluence of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and practice which seeks to rejo<strong>in</strong> musicto its lost social mean<strong>in</strong>g.


photo: Coco


6 THE ELECTRONICSOUNDSCAPE


118 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPEIf you don’t understand the music of your own time, you may never truly understand the music ofany time.PROFESSOR IVOR KEYSAccord<strong>in</strong>g to the evangelists and enthusiasts the digital revolution is the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of the next stage <strong>in</strong>human evolution, and it is dest<strong>in</strong>ed to change the way we live <strong>in</strong> the twenty-first century at least asmuch as the <strong>in</strong>dustrial revolution changed the way life was lived <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth and twentiethcenturies. For many others, though, talk of ROM and RAM, of multimedia and cyberspace, ofCD-Roms and the Web, is at best confus<strong>in</strong>g or baffl<strong>in</strong>g – and at worst downright worry<strong>in</strong>g. Somepeople feel that they do not understand it, some that they can never understand it, and many thatthey don’t like what they do understand about it.OWEN KELLY, DIGITAL CREATIVITYMusic and mass cultureMusic f<strong>in</strong>ds its largest audiences through the record<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustry. 1995 was alandmark year for British companies – shipments atta<strong>in</strong>ed new records andthe value of sales rose by 10.7% and exceeded £1 billion for the first time.Cassette album sales fell, but CDs cont<strong>in</strong>ued their irresistible rise, earn<strong>in</strong>g more thans<strong>in</strong>gles, LPs and cassettes put together. Just over 13,500 new releases were added to thecatalogue, eight s<strong>in</strong>gles sell<strong>in</strong>g more than 600,000 copies each. Dance music took animpressive 12.5% of album sales, but after two years of growth jazz sales fell to 1.25%of total sales. Folk, military music, brass band record<strong>in</strong>g and world music, althoughcommand<strong>in</strong>g only small fractions of market share, all improved their positions.Compilation albums rema<strong>in</strong> extremely popular and rose to capture 29% of the albummarket.Classical record<strong>in</strong>gs are <strong>in</strong> trouble, hav<strong>in</strong>g achieved total sales of £63 million (14.4million units or nearly 7% of total album sales), a fall of nearly £2 million on theprevious year which saw the culm<strong>in</strong>ation of a three-year phase of expansion. But theloss of market share was not so much the result of poor sales performance as of a failureto match growth <strong>in</strong> other sectors. Mid-price and particularly budget sales dom<strong>in</strong>ate theclassical field, creat<strong>in</strong>g difficulties for companies specialis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> new full-price record<strong>in</strong>gs(someth<strong>in</strong>g of importance for the orchestral economy). Unsurpris<strong>in</strong>gly, classicalrecord<strong>in</strong>gs are more popular among older people and those from the AB socioeconomicgroup<strong>in</strong>gs. Classical music magaz<strong>in</strong>es proliferate and three of the four lead<strong>in</strong>gtitles <strong>in</strong>creased their circulations <strong>in</strong> 1995 with the BBC Music Magaz<strong>in</strong>e reach<strong>in</strong>g 66,000.Sales of The Gramophone, the doyen of the field, fell slightly to 59,000, but this is nomean achievement <strong>in</strong> the face of the competition.Older age groups (ie 45+) are not only ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g their habit of buy<strong>in</strong>g recorded music,but buy<strong>in</strong>g more, and s<strong>in</strong>ce many households still do not own a CD player, the market issome way off saturation, so the medium-term future looks reasonably bright. The onlypotential cloud on the horizon relates to copyright issues, for ways will have to be foundto accommodate new forms of distribution on the Internet.1 See Perform<strong>in</strong>g RightYearbook 96/97(London, Perform<strong>in</strong>gRight Society Ltd,1996).The earn<strong>in</strong>gs of copyright holders (composers, publishers and their heirs) are substantial.For 1995-6, the Perform<strong>in</strong>g Right Society (PRS) reports that total UK royalties, dividedmore or less equally between public performance and broadcast<strong>in</strong>g, amounted to £105million. 1 Overseas royalties reached £57 million. The Society adm<strong>in</strong>isters a small budgetfor donations and awards to fund music-related projects, encourage compos<strong>in</strong>g talent,


JOINING IN 119promote music education and foster the performance of PRS copyright music; <strong>in</strong> 1995,this budget was just £90,000.These are the raw statistics of the consequences which flow from the technologicalrevolution of the twentieth century. Among many other th<strong>in</strong>gs, it has been midwife to amass popular culture and, with<strong>in</strong> that, a mass popular music, or musics. Its arrival raisestwo questions – firstly, what is the impact of communications technology on participatorymusic activity? And secondly, how important are the opportunities it affords for mak<strong>in</strong>gmusic <strong>in</strong> completely new ways?The first po<strong>in</strong>t to be made is that the arts no longer have to depend on live performance.In fact, most of the music most of us hear is the recorded production of professionals. Weare no longer obliged to leave our homes to seek it out at arts, social or religious events.This would appear to reduce the social value of music and to make it part of the solitaryrepertoire of <strong>in</strong>dividuals as they prepare their self-customis<strong>in</strong>g lifestyles.However, it is by no means clear that the triumph of the mass media has led to areduction <strong>in</strong> the number of live music events and of those attend<strong>in</strong>g them, nor on thelevel and extent of participation. It is just as plausible that the ma<strong>in</strong> effects have been to<strong>in</strong>crease the total amount of music available and <strong>in</strong> so do<strong>in</strong>g, to have heightened theprofile of music and enhanced the attractiveness of public performance. It may well bethat people are unwill<strong>in</strong>g to abandon the social function of music <strong>in</strong> their lives whateverthe advances of the new communications technologies of the twentieth century. Perhapssome will <strong>in</strong>crease their commitment to it as a reaction aga<strong>in</strong>st the prevalence of recordedmusic. This is a complex field which has attracted little dis<strong>in</strong>terested research, but whichwould repay closer study.Op<strong>in</strong>ions have differed sharply <strong>in</strong> the music world s<strong>in</strong>ce the <strong>in</strong>vention of radio. SirThomas Beecham thought that ‘music on the wireless is the most abom<strong>in</strong>able row thatever stunned and cursed the human ear.’ However, for Sir Henry Wood the mediumoffered a major opportunity. ‘With the whole-hearted support of the wonderful mediumof broadcast<strong>in</strong>g I feel that I am at last on the threshold of realis<strong>in</strong>g my lifelong ambition oftruly democratis<strong>in</strong>g the message of music and mak<strong>in</strong>g its beneficent effect universal.’ Thewonderful synergy of the Proms between the broadcast and live event suggests that SirHenry has had the best of the argument. 22 Two quotationscited by Kenyon, Nick,<strong>in</strong> address to the annualconference of theAssociation of BritishOrchestras(unpublished, 1997).It has to be acknowledged that film and broadcast<strong>in</strong>g, for all their homogenis<strong>in</strong>gtendencies, have extended our access to different k<strong>in</strong>ds of music. This is not so much outof virtuous <strong>in</strong>tent as because their economics have depended on very large and variousmarkets and because they are an <strong>in</strong>satiable consumer of material. Millions of people haveaccess to many k<strong>in</strong>ds of music. To give just one example, there is a great range of styles <strong>in</strong>film music, much of it <strong>in</strong>fluenced (and <strong>in</strong> a few cases written) by some of the greatestmodern composers, and it has been argued with justification that the c<strong>in</strong>ema has beenresponsible for <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>g the languages of atonalism and other avant-garde forms to themasses; although few people will recognise the name of Carl Stall<strong>in</strong>g, many will befamiliar with the quirky atonality of his scores for Bugs Bunny cartoons. It must surely bethe case that there is today a greater familiarity with music, and experience of it, than <strong>in</strong>any previous age <strong>in</strong> history.In recent years, the proliferation of television and radio channels has enabled broadcastersto echo the tendency of retail manufacture to move away from mass production to thedevelopment of niche markets which cater for particular tastes. The PerformanceChannel, available on cable only, offers a rich diet of classic music performances


120 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPE(<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g opera and ballet) as well as jazz. Classic FM’s promotion of popular classicalmusic, which complements that of the somewhat more austere BBC Radio 3, has been arunaway success and Jazz FM has the licence for two local radio stations.Jazz Services is one of the few agencies <strong>in</strong> the participatory sector which is campaign<strong>in</strong>gfor greater exploitation of the potential of broadcast<strong>in</strong>g. Favour<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>in</strong>troduction ofspecialist education strands <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>dependent radio, it has suggested that:‘Jazz FM commission a series of the “discoverers”, the “<strong>in</strong>novators” and the“developers” <strong>in</strong> jazz [and] a series on the “territorial” <strong>in</strong>fluences on the developmentof jazz, eg the West Coast, Cuba, South America, etc.’ 3It has also argued for the establishment of a jazz satellite channel under the aegis of JazzFM. Not<strong>in</strong>g the limited advertis<strong>in</strong>g prospects for such a channel and Jazz FM’s primaryobligation to make a f<strong>in</strong>ancial success of its radio operations, it has proposed a jo<strong>in</strong>t JazzFM/Jazz Services project to establish a charitable trust, funded by National Lotterymoney, to run a satellite station.Jazz Services has also been struck by a new music retail<strong>in</strong>g experiment <strong>in</strong> the UnitedStates, where MCI launched <strong>in</strong> late 1995 1-800 Music Now (18MN) which givesAmericans an easy way to buy music. Customers can browse and buy via a touch-tonephone. The company has cleverly arranged for local radio stations to ‘ “host” a callers’entree <strong>in</strong>to the system and offer <strong>in</strong>dustry news, concert details and other <strong>in</strong>formation’. 4It is difficult to make a judgment at this stage on the viability of such schemes, but it ispossible that new forms of broadcast<strong>in</strong>g and sell<strong>in</strong>g may be of value to the participatorysector. Melvyn Bragg, the arts broadcaster, wrote recently:‘Up to now those who control or pay for television have seen it almost exclusively asthe big audience puller. Niche audiences, discrete numbers, narrow bands, have beenanathema. Now we will have narrow bands all over the airwaves. The cable andsatellite proliferation will be all about niche audiences once sport and the big movieshave been mopped up.’ 5The gradual TV cabl<strong>in</strong>g of Brita<strong>in</strong> and the local radio network do <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple seem toprovide a means of dissem<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g the best of amateur and pro-am musics to local, subregionaland on occasion even national markets. The success of the Estover PercussionProject (see page 97) <strong>in</strong> gett<strong>in</strong>g access to the mass media and the long-stand<strong>in</strong>g record ofBBC Radio 2 <strong>in</strong> the promotion of folk music suggest that this is not beyond the realms ofpossibility. There is a good case for the music umbrella bodies, arts fund<strong>in</strong>g agencies andlocal authorities to explore the potential for <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g the broadcast<strong>in</strong>g of participatorymusics with broadcasters and the licens<strong>in</strong>g authorities.3 Jazz ServicesResponse to the ArtsCouncil of England’sConsultative DocumentNew Lottery Programmes(unpublished, July1996) p.10.4 Ibid, p.6.5 Bragg, Melvyn,‘Head<strong>in</strong>g out of thetwilight zone’, ArtsNews, NationalCampaign for the Arts,w<strong>in</strong>ter 1996:41, p.10.That said, we should not be more than cautiously optimistic. The quantity of professional,let alone amateur and community-based, music production massively exceeds the numberof hours of air-time available for music of all the broadcast<strong>in</strong>g schedules put together.Also, there is simply too much participatory music even for local or regional markets todigest: that is to say, there is too much be<strong>in</strong>g produced for gatekeepers (record<strong>in</strong>gexecutives or radio producers) to listen to and filter.Musical technologiesTechnological advance not only ushered <strong>in</strong> a mass popular culture, but has had, andcont<strong>in</strong>ues to have, a profound <strong>in</strong>fluence on musical style. In fact, we should bear <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d


JOINING IN 121that the history of Western music has always had a significant technological dimensionwhich comes to the fore at moments of aesthetic change.Do we f<strong>in</strong>d ourselves at such a moment now? Has the electronic revolution been overhypedby computer hardware and software manufacturers – or does it signal theimpend<strong>in</strong>g end of the way Europeans have made music <strong>in</strong> the last three centuries?In fact, it was only <strong>in</strong> the twentieth century that composers, players and audiences cameto see the orchestra as a fixed, non-negotiable entity. As recently as the 1950s what wenow th<strong>in</strong>k of as orchestral <strong>in</strong>struments were much more general-purpose; the same<strong>in</strong>struments and play<strong>in</strong>g techniques were used by dance bands, military bands and forrecord<strong>in</strong>g film scores. Jazz too used many of the same <strong>in</strong>struments (and still does), whiledevelop<strong>in</strong>g radical new techniques.Because the orchestral firmament had come to seem more or less unchang<strong>in</strong>g, a generalmisapprehension arose that it was unchangeable. It was someth<strong>in</strong>g to be promoted anddefended on its own absolutist terms. It had become the summit of European (evenworld) musicality and, now that it had been scaled, no further peak was <strong>in</strong> view. Then, asso often happens, history brought <strong>in</strong> its revenges.Change was, <strong>in</strong> fact, just round the corner. However, it presented itself not as further<strong>in</strong>cremental alteration to the status quo, but as an alternative, as someth<strong>in</strong>g completelydifferent. Although anticipated by several precursors earlier <strong>in</strong> the century, the birth ofwhat is now called electroacoustic music took place <strong>in</strong> Paris <strong>in</strong> the sound studios of RTF(Radio Télévision Française) <strong>in</strong> the form of musique concrète – a term which described anew method of composition where the composer worked directly with recorded soundsrather than with silent notation that was only made ‘concrete’ when played on<strong>in</strong>struments which occupied their own universe of sounds, not that of the natural world.Its <strong>in</strong>ventor, Pierre Schaeffer, took as his start<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t the idea that all sounds, regardlessof their orig<strong>in</strong>, are of equal value and can be musically organised.‘These elements, sound objects, ... are recorded, then processed, edited, mixed (note theanalogy to techniques used <strong>in</strong> c<strong>in</strong>ema) and “orchestrated” <strong>in</strong> the studio, through theuse of an ever-evolv<strong>in</strong>g technology.’ 6A tell<strong>in</strong>g pre-echo of another <strong>in</strong>dustrialised artistic form is noted by an obituarist whenSchaeffer died <strong>in</strong> 1995. ‘The first pieces, limited by technology, were characterised byprimitive, often strik<strong>in</strong>g juxtapositions of sounds snatched from their con<strong>text</strong>s ... Some ofthe sampl<strong>in</strong>g found <strong>in</strong> popular music today can sound like accelerated Schaeffer with beat.’ 76 Dhomont, Francis,Acousmatic Update,Journal ofElectroacoustic Music,Sonic Arts Network,January 1996, p.7.7 Smalley, Denis,The Guardian, repr<strong>in</strong>ted<strong>in</strong> Journal ofElectroacoustic Music,Sonic Arts Network,January 1995, London,p.5.In the years that have followed, record<strong>in</strong>g technology has advanced at a rapid pace andbecome a familiar part of the aural landscape we encounter <strong>in</strong> the c<strong>in</strong>ema and ontelevision. As long ago as the 1930s it <strong>in</strong>fluenced the ways <strong>in</strong> which the voice could beused <strong>in</strong> popular music: so, for example, B<strong>in</strong>g Crosby’s croon<strong>in</strong>g would have beenimpossible without the microphone. It helped to transform rock and pop bands fromtour<strong>in</strong>g m<strong>in</strong>strels <strong>in</strong>to highly sophisticated studio artists, some of whose work is <strong>in</strong> thestrict sense unperformable except via cassette or CD. As well as professional players ands<strong>in</strong>gers, there are many pro-am and amateur, or perhaps more accurately part-time,musicians and groups who represent a substantial and expand<strong>in</strong>g market, either directly or<strong>in</strong>directly through record<strong>in</strong>g hire studios. Technology is be<strong>in</strong>g developed to respond totheir musical needs. A grow<strong>in</strong>g number of dist<strong>in</strong>guished contemporary composers work <strong>in</strong>the new medium as well. Software of <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g sophistication (eg Score from StanfordUniversity, F<strong>in</strong>ale and Sibelius 7) is available; it makes self-publication a viable proposition


122 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPEand greatly facilitates the production of parts. The contemporary classical music field is notlarge enough to be commercially attractive and most specially designed software isdeveloped with public sector resources.Some very high claims, both aesthetic and social, are be<strong>in</strong>g made for what musicmakerscan now do. The lead<strong>in</strong>g agency <strong>in</strong> the field is the Sonic Arts Network,founded 15 years ago as the Electroacoustic Music Association, which now has 400members; composers, performers, teachers and others with a general or related <strong>in</strong>terest(eg <strong>in</strong> contemporary dance). It publishes three magaz<strong>in</strong>es (a newssheet, Soundbites; aquarterly, Diffusion; and an annual Journal). It is extremely active <strong>in</strong> the education sectorand is plann<strong>in</strong>g the establishment of a national centre for electroacoustic music withjo<strong>in</strong>t sites <strong>in</strong> Huddersfield and York (possibly with a London presence at the SouthBank Centre). The organisation does not see itself as fall<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> the classicalEuropean tradition, but takes a catholic view and embraces house-parties and raves aswell as concert halls.Just as (it is claimed) there is no state-of-the-art concert hall <strong>in</strong> this country which isfully equipped to do justice to electroacoustic music, so there is a dearth of studios withthe complete range of available hardware and software; this creates problems forcomposers <strong>in</strong> relation to ‘beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs’ and ‘end<strong>in</strong>gs’. They may also not have the facilities<strong>in</strong> their homes to make perfect record<strong>in</strong>gs either of material to be developed ormanipulated (for which latter task PCs are sufficient) or for produc<strong>in</strong>g the f<strong>in</strong>al results. Anational centre, networked <strong>in</strong>to other facilities as they develop, will help to address thesedifficulties. It will also be a resource for research and exchange of ideas amongcomposers and technicians.Paul Wright, Sonic Arts Network’s Education Officer, is <strong>in</strong> no doubt of the importanceof what is tak<strong>in</strong>g place. He told me:‘The advent of sound record<strong>in</strong>g has had a profound <strong>in</strong>fluence on the development ofmusic <strong>in</strong> this century. Indeed, the craft<strong>in</strong>g of musical performances through a record<strong>in</strong>gstudio has become such a commonplace experience that we’ve virtually ceased tonotice it. Moreover, record<strong>in</strong>g, stor<strong>in</strong>g and replay<strong>in</strong>g musical material has become notonly of <strong>in</strong>terest to the studio eng<strong>in</strong>eer, but now, through the latest computertechnology, enables composers to <strong>in</strong>tervene crucially <strong>in</strong> the process to change thematerial <strong>in</strong> a variety of ways before replay<strong>in</strong>g. At one extreme composers exchange thetraditional paper and pencil for a computer screen and <strong>in</strong>terface, chang<strong>in</strong>g the recordedmaterial <strong>in</strong>to note <strong>in</strong>formation which can be pr<strong>in</strong>ted out as score and parts, while at theother, more radical transformations of the material have created entirely new soundworlds and musical languages from serious electroacoustic music through rock and jazz,lead<strong>in</strong>g to edge street cultures such as hip hop, ambient, jungle and trance.’This quotation <strong>in</strong>dicates that the significance of electroacoustic music is twofold. First, asthe pioneers of musique concrète showed, what is at stake is more than the <strong>in</strong>vention ofsome excit<strong>in</strong>g new gizmos, but a new way of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g about the manipulation of sound.The composer Trevor Wishart, <strong>in</strong> his latest book, Audible Design, claims:8 Wishart, Trevor,Audible Design (Orpheusthe Pantomime Ltd,83 Hesl<strong>in</strong>gton Road,York, YO1 5AX).‘Our pr<strong>in</strong>cipal metaphor for musical composition must change from one ofarchitecture to one of chemistry. We may imag<strong>in</strong>e a new personality comb<strong>in</strong>g thebeach of sonic possibilities, not someone who selects, rejects and measures theacceptable, but a chemist who can take any pebble and, by numerical sorcery, separateits constituents, merge the constituents from two different pebbles and, <strong>in</strong> fact,transform black pebbles <strong>in</strong>to gold.’ 8


JOINING IN 123Jonty Harrison, chair of Sonic Arts, makes a similar po<strong>in</strong>t <strong>in</strong> more technical language:‘Compos<strong>in</strong>g can no longer be restricted to formulat<strong>in</strong>g abstract relationships betweenmaterial drawn from a limited array of “musical” sounds via an <strong>in</strong>termediate system ofgraphic (visual) symbols ... No, <strong>in</strong> the studio one works with sound itself and tests theresults on that most fickle and yet most potent discrim<strong>in</strong>atory organ of perception –the ear. Composition becomes “concrete” – a collaboration between the composerand the organic sound matter ... ’ 9Secondly, the new technology gives a tremendous boost, at least potentially, to theaspirations of those participatory musicians who seek to wrest the power to create newmusic from a caste of professionals and give it to people at large. Aga<strong>in</strong>, Wishart is anappropriate witness, hav<strong>in</strong>g been <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> community-based practice for most of hiscareer. ‘My whole approach to electronics (just as with vocal music) is to get people to doit themselves,’ he told me. ‘Music becomes their own activity.’A dist<strong>in</strong>ction needs to be drawn between two basic approaches to exploit<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>formationtechnology. The first is through the manipulation of computer-generated or ‘abstract’sound which is processed <strong>in</strong> real time by vary<strong>in</strong>g its pitch and reverberation. Secondly, itis possible to record prepared samples of live conventional <strong>in</strong>struments, which can then beedited, varied and assembled <strong>in</strong>to a piece of music (us<strong>in</strong>g commercially available MIDIequipment). Some rock and pop music is created wholly or partly <strong>in</strong> this way. It can beargued that there is little po<strong>in</strong>t <strong>in</strong> do<strong>in</strong>g this, on the grounds that it demeans the potentialof the medium and makes it little more than the servant of a outdated musical technology.On the other hand, MIDI does allow people without the means to pay for bands to jo<strong>in</strong>the game, gives them the power to experiment more speedily and effectively than wouldbe possible <strong>in</strong> live rehearsal and enables them to compose directly with sound rather thanon paper <strong>in</strong> advance of performance.Battle has now been jo<strong>in</strong>ed for the soul of music. The proponents of electroacousticmusic assert that for the first time all sound is capable of becom<strong>in</strong>g musical material; thatthis fact opens the power to compose to everyone; and that the dist<strong>in</strong>ction betweenperformance and composition has been <strong>in</strong>validated (a good th<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> their view, because itbreaks down the excessive specialisation of the Western tradition).9 Harrison, Jonty,cited <strong>in</strong> Diffusion, SonicArts Network, July-September 1996, p.2.Critics, however, argue that this case can easily be overstated. They say that there is afundamental problem <strong>in</strong> the public presentation of electroacoustic music; the essentialfusion of real people <strong>in</strong> live performance with the music itself is largely lost. There isplenty to hear, but really noth<strong>in</strong>g to look at. A concert should be a theatrical as well as amusical event and is also a social gather<strong>in</strong>g where artists meet audiences. This is onlypartly true, for there are many k<strong>in</strong>ds of electroacoustic music, some of which requireperformance skills and improvisation. At one end of the spectrum, what is calledacousmatic music can <strong>in</strong>deed simply consist of a tape to be played. But other k<strong>in</strong>ds ofcomposition conta<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>structions to computer ‘players’ and <strong>in</strong>deed mix electroacousticsound with live <strong>in</strong>struments. They can also allow improvisation. However, <strong>in</strong> some cases, aconcert of electroacoustic music is almost a contradiction <strong>in</strong> terms; its ma<strong>in</strong> advantage isthat those who control the mach<strong>in</strong>ery of computers and loudspeakers can manipulatesound flexibly <strong>in</strong> three dimensions <strong>in</strong> ways perhaps never heard s<strong>in</strong>ce Renaissanceantiphony and also are able to improvise. That said, it will surely not be long beforedomestic record<strong>in</strong>g equipment will be able to create the same spatial effects. All th<strong>in</strong>gsconsidered, it is hard to resist the impression that some electroacoustic music is likely tore<strong>in</strong>force the contemporary trend to solitary rather than collective aesthetic enjoyment.


124 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPEA more controversial, but widely held, view is that computers make music creation tooeasy. Sir Peter Maxwell Davies is a composer deeply committed to the democratisation ofmusic, but he believes that an essential element of learn<strong>in</strong>g about music is the acquisitionof musical ‘literacy’. He told me:‘It’s impossible to th<strong>in</strong>k of deal<strong>in</strong>g with Western music without be<strong>in</strong>g able to readand write. It’s as if you could handle German literature without be<strong>in</strong>g able to readGerman. It’s felt to be enough for people to express themselves with the means fordo<strong>in</strong>g so be<strong>in</strong>g unimportant. This is due <strong>in</strong> part to a misconceived idea of elitism <strong>in</strong>music; dexterity is deemed to be elitist. I’m afraid that the electronic keyboard issometimes seen as a panacea for all ills. Oh, yes, kids can produce respectable workwith it, but it bypasses the possibility of relat<strong>in</strong>g your skill <strong>in</strong> creat<strong>in</strong>g sound to yourbody. The core of music is the relation between physical, mental and spiritualabilities.’Some people have a difficulty with this <strong>in</strong>sistence on difficulty. First, is it actually true thatus<strong>in</strong>g computers does not demand first-class technical and theoretical skills? This seemsimplausible. A glance at the equipment <strong>in</strong> a sound studio or through the relevant literaturemakes it very clear that a sound knowledge base and considerable dexterity are required ofcomposers. The development of electroacoustic composition is accompanied byexperimental research <strong>in</strong>to psychology and the properties of sound with whichpractitioners are wise to familiarise themselves. Paul Wright suspects that what lies beh<strong>in</strong>dthis critique of electroacoustic music is a fundamental ‘lack of sympathy with the waymusic is chang<strong>in</strong>g from a note-based system to a timbre-based approach through time’.What is at issue is not so much that compos<strong>in</strong>g is now as easy as fall<strong>in</strong>g off a log as thatthe necessary skills are not the same as those we use <strong>in</strong> learn<strong>in</strong>g to play an <strong>in</strong>strument andread conventional notation or <strong>in</strong> creat<strong>in</strong>g music for <strong>in</strong>struments. If it turns out that theseskills can be learnt more quickly than the old ones and that it no longer takes a lifetime ofquasi-monastic dedication to compose and present new work, so what? Only those forwhom music is a priestly mystery <strong>in</strong>accessible to the multitude will have cause for regret.Musical democrats should cheer.Community musicians are not necessarily wedded to a revolutionary new musicallanguage, as Sonic are, but they too see noth<strong>in</strong>g to regret <strong>in</strong> the arrival of new, easierways of compos<strong>in</strong>g. Alison Tickell of Community Music <strong>in</strong> London told me: ‘The greatstrength of the new technologies is the quality of “eas<strong>in</strong>ess” because it enables all k<strong>in</strong>ds ofpeople to engage with music as performers and composers as opposed to simply be<strong>in</strong>glisteners before.’ Technique is no more than a precondition for music; it is not a sacred<strong>in</strong>gredient.It is easier to agree with Maxwell Davies when he says that once the music has beencreated, it is no longer necessary to recruit and tra<strong>in</strong> armies of people to play it, so thatthe traditional social dimension of the concert or, for that matter, the ceilidh is at risk. Thiswould be true if we were to suppose that electroacoustic music will become universal andthat other forms will die out. At present there is no evidence that this is likely. If we lookat the lively diversity of the musical scene, the old and the new look as if they are <strong>in</strong> astate of cohabitation rather than a fight to the death.In one area where record<strong>in</strong>g technology has taken a firm popular hold there are<strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dications that consumers are compensat<strong>in</strong>g for the absence of players bybecom<strong>in</strong>g more proactive themselves. In pop music the rise of the disc jockey at ravesand other events suggests strongly that theatricality and improvisation can be comb<strong>in</strong>ed


JOINING IN 125successfully with record<strong>in</strong>g technology. Those attend<strong>in</strong>g see themselves as be<strong>in</strong>g at thecentre of the stage and develop danc<strong>in</strong>g skills requir<strong>in</strong>g virtuosity and stam<strong>in</strong>a. Bothprofessional DJs and <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>dividuals manipulate and alter exist<strong>in</strong>g record<strong>in</strong>gsthrough techniques like dubb<strong>in</strong>g and scratch<strong>in</strong>g to create ‘their own’ work which, ifthey wish, they produce and market to CD standard. A good deal of jungle music hasbeen made this way <strong>in</strong> back garages and bedrooms. This is no more than speculation,but if musical presentation were ever decisively to abandon the live performer, perhapswe can anticipate the emergence of <strong>in</strong>dividual music consumers as ‘artists’ <strong>in</strong> their ownright.In pass<strong>in</strong>g, it is worth not<strong>in</strong>g that the live performer may be fac<strong>in</strong>g a challenge fromanother quarter. Science is experiment<strong>in</strong>g with computer equivalents to the player and thes<strong>in</strong>ger. Computer models at the Computer Music Research Institute <strong>in</strong> Stamford,Connecticut, have been devised which show that whereas a mathematically perfectelectronic clar<strong>in</strong>et sounds dull and artificial, the <strong>in</strong>troduction of a 5% uncerta<strong>in</strong>ty factorcreates a result that sounds alive and attractive. By extension, it would appear that humanimperfection is an essential component of art (as the poet Robert Herrick observed <strong>in</strong> adifferent con<strong>text</strong> when he wrote of ‘a sweet disorder <strong>in</strong> the dress [enk<strong>in</strong>dl<strong>in</strong>g] there alovel<strong>in</strong>ess’). Stamford has also created a mathematically perfect ‘human’ voice:‘ “Sheila” passes mathematically measured air through her algorithmic vocal chords andbecause she tends to come up from under each note, just as human s<strong>in</strong>gers do ..., shesounds human. “Sheila” is all the more conv<strong>in</strong>c<strong>in</strong>g because, <strong>in</strong> common with herhuman counterparts, her error factor is greater when she starts s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g.’ 10Meanwhile, a concert pianist and neurosurgeon, Professor Manfred Clynes, not<strong>in</strong>g thatemotion is expressed <strong>in</strong> micro-muscular responses, has <strong>in</strong>vented an <strong>in</strong>teractive computersystem, the Super Conductor, whose programme takes over the motor function aspects ofplay<strong>in</strong>g a piece of music. Computer ‘w<strong>in</strong>dows’ allow the user, whether musical or not, tovary the character or emotional quality of a performance.The question of ease or difficulty is much more problematic <strong>in</strong> schools. As I havealready noted, well-<strong>in</strong>formed and experienced observers such as Eric Bolton, formerHMI Senior Chief Inspector, fear that the child-centred approach to education has beentaken too far. The correct move away from an over-academic view of music teach<strong>in</strong>gtowards creative expression has led to a disturb<strong>in</strong>g lack of rigour. ‘What began to worryme,’ he told me, ‘was the hegemony of “do<strong>in</strong>g it”. Concentrat<strong>in</strong>g on do<strong>in</strong>g rather thanunderstand<strong>in</strong>g has become almost de rigueur <strong>in</strong> arts courses.’ Of the pillars of the musiccurriculum, there have been advances <strong>in</strong> perform<strong>in</strong>g and compos<strong>in</strong>g, but less progress, hefeels, with understand<strong>in</strong>g. Gett<strong>in</strong>g the balance right between two schools of thought –those who favour the <strong>in</strong>st<strong>in</strong>ctual or the impulsive and others who argue for theorganised or the formal – is perhaps one of the most delicate challenges fac<strong>in</strong>g musicteachers.There is general agreement that electronic technology <strong>in</strong> the classroom has great potential,but that this is not be<strong>in</strong>g realised for a number of reasons. Like record players <strong>in</strong> the olddays, an electronic keyboard can be a way of not teach<strong>in</strong>g. There is not enough suitableequipment <strong>in</strong> the classroom and teachers themselves need more tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.10 Robertson, Paul,op cit, p.31.A more fundamental problem may be that there is not enough bespoke software available.Some of the best programmes so far enable young children to select melodic modules andjo<strong>in</strong> them up <strong>in</strong>to a melodic shape. But they tend to place visual perception and choicefirst and do little to stretch aural awareness. In neurological terms this means that they


126 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPEfavour the left side of the bra<strong>in</strong> rather than the right, while most educationists wouldprefer methods which develop a balance of skills. Some software designed for childrenwith special needs comb<strong>in</strong>es visual with acoustic imagery and new ‘pa<strong>in</strong>t’ programmes arebe<strong>in</strong>g produced which enable the user to make ‘brushstrokes’ that create its ‘sound’equivalent, thus stimulat<strong>in</strong>g both sides of the bra<strong>in</strong>.For older children, a range of equipment is on the market which l<strong>in</strong>ks music keyboardsand sequencers; keyboards can also be l<strong>in</strong>ked through MIDI to computer programmes, apowerful comb<strong>in</strong>ation which can be operated by children from about seven years oldright up to professional studio practice. Unfortunately much equipment is generallyunsuitable for the classroom, be<strong>in</strong>g ma<strong>in</strong>ly designed for domestic consumers.However, the music <strong>in</strong>dustry is aware of the potential of the education sector andsupports tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g not only for <strong>in</strong>dividual customers, many of who are young, but also forschools. Manufacturers, such as Yamaha and Technics (part of Polygram), back their saleswith tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programmes. Yamaha Kemble <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom has a Music SchoolDepartment which offers tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for teachers, ma<strong>in</strong>ly with a technical rather thanpedagogic emphasis, and has also established about 90 music schools for customers, oftenassociated with retail outlets.Some electroacoustic musicians sees little real value <strong>in</strong> us<strong>in</strong>g mach<strong>in</strong>ery that reproducesthe sounds of exist<strong>in</strong>g musics; the equipment which Sonic Arts believes to be necessaryfor educational (or community) work could be as basic as a cassette-based four-trackrecorder, a pair of good loudspeakers, a sound processor, which transforms sound <strong>in</strong> realtime and is programmable for echo, reverberation, pitch shift<strong>in</strong>g and so forth and asampler (which is a device for captur<strong>in</strong>g sound that can then be altered <strong>in</strong> a number ofways and ‘triggered’ by a MIDI keyboard or other controller). Like many educationistsand community musicians, the organisation has been much <strong>in</strong>fluenced by the writ<strong>in</strong>gs ofJohn Paynter, for whom learn<strong>in</strong>g about music is a voyage of discovery. More than 20years ago, he and Elizabeth Paynter set out a methodology for which the latest technologyprovides a perfect means of realisation:‘A child mak<strong>in</strong>g a poem searches for the words that will express succ<strong>in</strong>ctly what he hasto say. So <strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>g a piece of music he must also try th<strong>in</strong>gs out, explore andexperiment with his materials until he can discover sounds that will have mean<strong>in</strong>g forhim and convey the essence of what he feels.’ 1111 Paynter, John andElizabeth, The Danceand the Drum(Universal, 1974).Cited <strong>in</strong> The MusicTeacher magaz<strong>in</strong>e,September-November1991, p.22.12 Wright, Paul, ‘NewTechnology <strong>in</strong> theClassroom’, MusicalTimes, August 1992,p.381.As Paul Wright po<strong>in</strong>ts out, there is ‘a gulf between music-mak<strong>in</strong>g with electronic<strong>in</strong>struments and acoustic sound sources’. 12 The as yet unresolved question fac<strong>in</strong>g teachersis how to achieve the right balance between conventional musicianship with <strong>in</strong>strumentsand voices, the use of factory pre-set electronic <strong>in</strong>strumental sounds for composition andthe manipulation of electronically created sounds or sounds recorded from nature. Atpresent there is a wide range of practice <strong>in</strong> the classroom. An <strong>in</strong>terlock<strong>in</strong>g issue concernsthe management of the limited equipment to be found <strong>in</strong> the classroom and thecomb<strong>in</strong>ation of <strong>in</strong>dividual work with full class work.Not surpris<strong>in</strong>gly, <strong>in</strong>spectors and educationists are worried by unimag<strong>in</strong>ative use ofequipment and poor learn<strong>in</strong>g outcomes and concerned about the lack of models of goodteach<strong>in</strong>g practice and assessment. What ways are there out of the impasse? Firstly, there isan urgent need for the development of hardware and software specifically designed for theclassroom and, secondly, for the commission<strong>in</strong>g of classroom teach<strong>in</strong>g materials whichoffer teachers examples of <strong>in</strong>tegrated work. Also, if we bear <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d the grow<strong>in</strong>gimportance of the work of artists <strong>in</strong> schools, the education sector would be well advised


JOINING IN 127to <strong>in</strong>volve professional composers <strong>in</strong> classroom activity <strong>in</strong> much the same way as they mayalready be <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> their community-based practice. Tak<strong>in</strong>g a h<strong>in</strong>t from ContemporaryMusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g for Amateurs, it would be useful to commission new work forconventional <strong>in</strong>struments and live electronics with<strong>in</strong> the technical reach of youngperformers and the equipment resources of schools. Sonic Arts has made a start on thisapproach with Javier Alvarez’ Pyramid of Pianos (1996) which was prepared with and forschool and university students <strong>in</strong> Kirklees.Although the new technologies promise their most excit<strong>in</strong>g applications <strong>in</strong> the field ofdirect creativity, we should not forget that they can also offer support to the developmentof ‘appreciation’. The <strong>in</strong>vention of the CD-ROM, for example, has led to new ways ofimprov<strong>in</strong>g listen<strong>in</strong>g skills. As George Odam po<strong>in</strong>ts out:‘Although some of the early programmes released on CD-ROM did noth<strong>in</strong>g morethan transfer the pages of a book plus an accompany<strong>in</strong>g cassette onto the computerscreen, with<strong>in</strong> a short space of time the potential for <strong>in</strong>teractivity to enhance musicallearn<strong>in</strong>g was already be<strong>in</strong>g discovered. There is no other medium that can provide animmediate l<strong>in</strong>k <strong>in</strong> real time between music and the visual, either through word,diagram or illustration, together with choice and <strong>in</strong>teractivity with the user. Thetechniques already learnt through television are now beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to f<strong>in</strong>d their real home<strong>in</strong> this new medium.’ 13Not unnaturally, Sonic Arts sees education as a crucial area for its activities. Schools, forall their problems, are the only place where a complete cross-section of the population hasaccess to new technology and the challenge of the new music curriculum offers anunrepeatable opportunity to spread the gospel. Sonic Arts set up ‘exemplary’ projects withschools to show how it is possible to go back to the raw materials of sound and how thesecan be structured and manipulated <strong>in</strong>to music. It also provides INSET programmes <strong>in</strong>various parts of the country.New programmes are be<strong>in</strong>g regularly issued and one example of good practice is PeterGabriel’s Xplora, produced <strong>in</strong> 1995, which <strong>in</strong>troduces music and <strong>in</strong>struments from manycultures as well as new studio and compos<strong>in</strong>g techniques.This work has not gone unnoticed by the Department for Education and Employment,which has commissioned Sonic Arts to undertake research <strong>in</strong>to ways <strong>in</strong> which newtechnology could support the music curriculum. It is giv<strong>in</strong>g support to the NationalCouncil for Educational Technology, which, by means of a pilot project with eightschools <strong>in</strong> two London boroughs, is prepar<strong>in</strong>g a comprehensive set of classroom materialsfor teachers, touch<strong>in</strong>g on every musical genre from jungle to Baroque music, which is dueto be published <strong>in</strong> 1997.The techniques of electroacoustic music are as relevant to work <strong>in</strong> the community asto that <strong>in</strong> schools. There is great potential, for example, for <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g access to musicfor people with disabilities. Those work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the field <strong>in</strong>clude the National Disabilityand Music Information Service and the Soundbeam Project. Sonic Arts hasconsistently <strong>in</strong>volved young people with disabilities and learn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties <strong>in</strong> itsworkshops. Soundbeam runs a tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g scheme, SoundAbility, <strong>in</strong> partnership withother organisations, such as Jazz Services, Community Music Wales, Drake MusicProject, Sound It Out and the community music umbrella agency, Sound Sense.13 Odam, George,op cit, p.97.The Drake Music Project is lead<strong>in</strong>g the way <strong>in</strong> the development of customised softwareand hardware for disabled people. Set up <strong>in</strong> 1988, it has pioneered the use of computers


128 THE ELECTRONIC SOUNDSCAPEfor physically disabled children and adults; its aim is not to offer music therapy (for thisassumes that disability is some k<strong>in</strong>d of sickness to be healed as opposed to a condition thatcan limit access to the usual opportunities of life), but to promote creativity throughmusical expression at every level of ability, from those tak<strong>in</strong>g their first musical steps tothe professional composer or player. Currently available standard systems are often<strong>in</strong>adequate to the needs of people with severe disabilities. A number of <strong>in</strong>terrelated factorscan reduce motivation and limit their <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> us<strong>in</strong>g them <strong>in</strong>dependently of outsidehelp. Computer systems are often complicated to use and <strong>in</strong> their visual presentation;some people lack read<strong>in</strong>g skills; screens may not be large or clear enough; and systemsmay be difficult to operate without full mouse or track ball control.Drake have adopted two approaches to improve disabled access to electroacousticcomposition; firstly, by adapt<strong>in</strong>g, extend<strong>in</strong>g or comb<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g exist<strong>in</strong>g software and hardwareand, secondly, by creat<strong>in</strong>g bespoke or customised solutions. For physically disabled usersthis has often meant devis<strong>in</strong>g suitable switches which can be managed by a person whosevoluntary movement is restricted to a few f<strong>in</strong>gers, or the feet, head, ch<strong>in</strong>, elbow or otherpart of the body; and for those with visual impairment they offer screen-reader ormagnifier add-ons. Drake runs regular workshops <strong>in</strong> several parts of the country, alongwith residencies, tour<strong>in</strong>g workshops (often culm<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> performances), taster days andINSET projects.One <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g example of the imag<strong>in</strong>ative exploitation of technology is the EMSSoundbeam (developed and promoted by the Soundbeam Project), which translatesgesture <strong>in</strong>to sound (or, more precisely, is a system of ultrasonic impulses which detectsmovements and turns them <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>structions for controll<strong>in</strong>g electronic musical<strong>in</strong>struments). This is a MIDI controller, orig<strong>in</strong>ally designed for dancers: a sonic beamemitted by the <strong>in</strong>strument can be set to various different modes, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g major scale,whole tone scale, chord with portamento and a user note def<strong>in</strong>able mode. The beam canbe <strong>in</strong>terrupted by any k<strong>in</strong>d of movement – a hand, a foot or a wheelchair – and soenables the user to explore and experiment with a variety of sounds.An extraord<strong>in</strong>ary piece of research gives a flavour of what may be possible <strong>in</strong> the futurefor those almost totally deprived of motor functions. Richard Bamford, the composerand percussionist with the Hands On Technology Group <strong>in</strong> Ed<strong>in</strong>burgh, has establishedthat people <strong>in</strong> this condition may still be able to respond to the world of sound. Evenwhen the eye is all but <strong>in</strong>capable of register<strong>in</strong>g visual images, the musculature of theeyes rema<strong>in</strong>s <strong>in</strong>tact and responds to sound sources. The technology exists to convert eyemovement <strong>in</strong>to controllable sound; it consists of an <strong>in</strong>fra-red reference beamillum<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g the eye, a video camera to record eye movements, a computer whichanalyses the <strong>in</strong>formation from the camera and a tone or sound generator l<strong>in</strong>ked toloudspeakers. Curiously, the M<strong>in</strong>istry of Defence at Farnborough is conduct<strong>in</strong>g researchof its own <strong>in</strong>to a similar system for the benefit of pilots <strong>in</strong> fighter planes. Bamford isseek<strong>in</strong>g support from the Drake Music Project among others and from fund<strong>in</strong>g bodiesto take the project further.A grow<strong>in</strong>g number of musicians and musical organisations are mak<strong>in</strong>g use of the Internet.Evelyn Glennie, the percussionist, for example, has established a Web page which givesvisual and aural <strong>in</strong>formation about her work and is <strong>in</strong>tended to allow her to conductelectronic masterclasses. The capability now exists for musicians <strong>in</strong> different parts of theglobe to ‘jam’ together <strong>in</strong> real time, although it is not yet possible to do so at CD acousticquality. There are many newsgroups on the Internet where people with shared musicaltastes can ‘meet’ and discuss issues of common <strong>in</strong>terest. However, it rema<strong>in</strong>s to be seen


JOINING IN 12914 Kelly, Owen,Digital Creativity(London, <strong>Calouste</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, 1996)pp.115-7.how important an addition to the creative process all these new possibilities will turn outto be. Although many millions world-wide have access to the Internet via their personalcomputers or their employers, this is true only of a m<strong>in</strong>ority of the British population.While prices for the necessary software and hardware have fallen sharply <strong>in</strong> real terms,there is a real risk that the new technologies will tend to create two classes of ‘haves’ and‘have nots’ with the poor and the poorly educated cut off (at least once school days areover) from this brave new world.The future of the Internet is unclear. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Owen Kelly, some argue that: ‘peoplewill create their own unique dataspheres which reveal and reflect aspects of their creators’natures, as any creative work does’ or that ‘the Internet will be the start of a giganticcommunal project <strong>in</strong> which culture ceases to be made by the few for the many andbecomes <strong>in</strong>stead a collective democratic enterprise.’ A more pessimistic view has it that‘we can look forward to a digital realm that mimics the format of the <strong>in</strong>dustrial massmedia: a global web dom<strong>in</strong>ated by a few corporations whose idea of <strong>in</strong>teractivity is tooffer a limited range of personally customisable packages for subscribers.’ 14The Internet faces severe technical problems as it tries to accommodate more and moreusers and threatens to collapse (so to speak) under its own weight. However, it is notimplausible to predict that it will <strong>in</strong> due course become an effective new means ofaccess<strong>in</strong>g and buy<strong>in</strong>g recorded music, whether by commercial companies or by <strong>in</strong>dividuals<strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> self-publication. Also, it may well be possible <strong>in</strong> a few years to develop thepractice of electronic music workshops with dist<strong>in</strong>guished musicians. All of this couldhave major implications for amateur, community-based and education work. But theseth<strong>in</strong>gs lie <strong>in</strong> the future. What is needed now is for the appropriate agencies (fund<strong>in</strong>gbodies and umbrella organisations) to monitor the situation as it develops.It is clear that we are at a cross-roads. The astonish<strong>in</strong>g potential of electroacoustic music,both as a new means of composition and as an educational tool, and the equallyastonish<strong>in</strong>g opportunities for communicat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>formation and for music distribution andmarket<strong>in</strong>g, have yet to be fully assessed. However, we know enough about what ishappen<strong>in</strong>g to see that there are immediate applications, whether <strong>in</strong> the classroom or thecommunity, for which the resources, as well as the political will, need to be assembled.


photo: M Frisby


7 RELATIVE VALUES


132 RELATIVE VALUESTake ... the way <strong>in</strong> which two people, Jack and Jill, might appear to agree or disagree about a thirdperson, say a Giant. Jill might say that the Giant is huge, eats and dr<strong>in</strong>ks a lot, is noisy, a bitrough and ready and very extrovert. She might, be<strong>in</strong>g extrovert herself, thoroughly enjoy thecompany of the Giant and go to all his boisterous parties. Jack, on the other hand, might agree withJill’s description but not with her evaluation. Be<strong>in</strong>g of a reflective and scholarly disposition, he mightf<strong>in</strong>d the Giant an overpower<strong>in</strong>g bore and consequently avoid all <strong>in</strong>vitations to his castle, preferr<strong>in</strong>g tospend his even<strong>in</strong>gs more quietly. They each perceive similar features of the character of the Giant butdiffer <strong>in</strong> their value response ... So it is with music.KEITH SWANWICK, MUSIC, MIND AND EDUCATIONCreativity is not a way of see<strong>in</strong>g or distanc<strong>in</strong>g, but of be<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> and constitut<strong>in</strong>g, the everyday world.In part this is because <strong>in</strong> the human ‘life world’ or ‘everyday culture’, all artefacts, actions and practices‘signify’; they produce mean<strong>in</strong>g. But this mean<strong>in</strong>g is never strictly conta<strong>in</strong>ed or given; there is an ‘excessof mean<strong>in</strong>g’, or potential mean<strong>in</strong>g, which must be selected from, negotiated with, humanly activated <strong>in</strong>order to produce specific personal mean<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the user/viewer/receiver. In this sense every understand<strong>in</strong>gor use of ‘mean<strong>in</strong>g objects’ around us is, <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sically, also an act of creativity.PAUL WILLIS, REALISING THE POTENTIALS OF COMMON CULTUREQuestions of judgmentMak<strong>in</strong>g judgments about art is always tricky. This is because they occur <strong>in</strong> debatableterritory, at the juncture where the objective fact of the work and the subjectivenature of the respond<strong>in</strong>g eye or ear engage with one another. But criticalmethodologies have emerged with which most educated people are broadly familiar. It ispossible to analyse structure and imagery, to determ<strong>in</strong>e the relevance of historical con<strong>text</strong> and,at a m<strong>in</strong>imum, to give some account of the experience of a work of art, whether it be aperformance, a book or a pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g. Over the passage of time a consensus is usually arrived atabout the value we place on it, both <strong>in</strong> itself and <strong>in</strong> comparison with others. We do not kidourselves that the truth about it can be established once for all as firmly as it can with ascientific hypothesis, but certa<strong>in</strong> agreements can be arrived at, however provisionally andtentatively. As the critic F R Leavis used to ask when discuss<strong>in</strong>g his response to a literary <strong>text</strong>:‘This is so, isn’t it?’Here we have a version, with the rough edges smoothed, of the l<strong>in</strong>e Richard Hoggart tookdur<strong>in</strong>g the 1970s debate about the value of community arts (see page 84). The cont<strong>in</strong>uedvitality of competitive festivals <strong>in</strong> the amateur music world and the anxieties which aresurfac<strong>in</strong>g among music teachers and educationists (illustrated by the recent correspondence <strong>in</strong>Classical Music – see page 71) <strong>in</strong>dicate that it is still a common view. It is one I f<strong>in</strong>d I partlyshare. But it does not seem quite adequate to the variety of the contemporary arts scene, nordoes it seem a rich enough response to the various directions which social and cultural changehas taken dur<strong>in</strong>g the twentieth century.If, with particular reference to music, it is the case that ethical and cultural values are<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly seen as relative; that the dom<strong>in</strong>ance of the Western classical tradition has beenchallenged by a new <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>, and sensitivity to, the musics of other world cultures and toold and new popular genres; that the dist<strong>in</strong>ctions between performer and consumer, andbetween amateur and professional, are blurr<strong>in</strong>g; that we need to pay attention to the social aswell as the <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sic mean<strong>in</strong>g of music; and that scientific advance is demonstrat<strong>in</strong>g themultiple synergies of music <strong>in</strong> the function<strong>in</strong>g of the bra<strong>in</strong> – if this analysis is correct, then amore complex model of evaluation will be necessary.


JOINING IN 133The Arts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>’s 1993 policy document, A Creative Future, makes a stab atidentify<strong>in</strong>g the outl<strong>in</strong>es of such a model. It proposed six facets of ‘quality’: creator or producerquality (‘the creator’s gut feel<strong>in</strong>gs, and such standards as “production values” ’); expert assessor/criticquality; consumer quality (‘if [this] is to be a useful concept, it must be at least as much about thenature of the artistic experience as about the numbers <strong>in</strong>volved’); enrichment of the community (‘thearts can be powerful agents for br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g people together <strong>in</strong> communities def<strong>in</strong>ed by geography,ethnicity, gender, religion, or simply shared <strong>in</strong>terest’); quality <strong>in</strong> variety (‘the argument runs that <strong>in</strong>a society of many different <strong>in</strong>terests, cultures and experiences, an essential test of artistic quality isthat the arts reflect that diversity’); and fitness for purpose (‘the essence of this approach ... is that itis not an abstract issue but one which arises from its con<strong>text</strong>’). 1Most, if not all, of this checklist is relevant to participatory music (that is, amateur musicmak<strong>in</strong>g,community-based practice and the educational and outreach work of orchestras andopera companies). As Peter Renshaw told me, echo<strong>in</strong>g A Creative Future:‘In this k<strong>in</strong>d of creative activity, there are different forms of excellence, each with theirown criteria of appropriateness – an awareness of con<strong>text</strong>: social, moral, political, artistic.In a music workshop the artistic criteria should be the same as for a Beethoven quartet;you should remember that the other criteria come <strong>in</strong>to play and, <strong>in</strong> fact, sometimes youmight not even reach the artistic criteria.’One of the strik<strong>in</strong>g features of this field of artistic activity is that evaluation of what is be<strong>in</strong>gdone is fragmented and confused.It could, I suppose be argued that amateur musicians should be regarded as an exception tothis multi-faceted approach; <strong>in</strong> their case, the only issue is creator or producer quality – or,simply, how well they play the music. The still vigorous system of competitive festivals, onemight suggest, is perfectly competent to weed out the sheep from the goats and so, for thatmatter, is audience response. But this argument cannot be susta<strong>in</strong>ed, for it is clear the worldof the amateur musician is chang<strong>in</strong>g. More and more groups realise that they have acommunity role and are undertak<strong>in</strong>g outreach and educational work. Thanks to NationalLottery money, the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system is set to offer them more substantial f<strong>in</strong>ancial supportthan <strong>in</strong> the past and will want to make sure that they are fulfill<strong>in</strong>g cultural as well as purelyartistic functions. Other items on the checklist are also relevant to their work.So far as the community musician is concerned, an outside observer, aware of the wide rangeof possible aims and outcomes, of the different bases for evaluation, will want to focus onsome practical questions. What exactly are you try<strong>in</strong>g to achieve when you set out on suchand-sucha project? And when it is over, can you say with a fair degree of certa<strong>in</strong>ty what hasactually taken place? Has it made a difference to those tak<strong>in</strong>g part and, if so, what k<strong>in</strong>d of adifference?1 A Creative Future,op cit, p.53.It is surpris<strong>in</strong>gly difficult to f<strong>in</strong>d adequate answers. There is a widespread assumption thatparticipation is a good <strong>in</strong> itself and that, provided everyone has an enjoyable time, it isunnecessary – and perhaps impractical – to look further. Dur<strong>in</strong>g my researches, I raised theissue of evaluation with all those directly engaged <strong>in</strong> project work. The almost universalresponse from those I <strong>in</strong>terviewed could be summed up as, oh dear, yes, evaluation isimportant and we know we could do it better; it is someth<strong>in</strong>g we plan to address soon. Manyevaluation reports seem to have been composed with at least half an eye on fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g fromnew sponsors or to satisfy the demands of fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies; and their dom<strong>in</strong>ant characteristic isself-praise. That time-worn device, facsimiles of, or quotations from, enthusiastic letters fromeight year-olds or 80 year-olds, is still not uncommon. While it is true that many projectssolicit the views of participants, this often takes the form of simple tick-box questionnaires.


134 RELATIVE VALUESHere are two examples of self-assessment which are not untypical of the prevail<strong>in</strong>g tone ofvoice: I have carefully chosen them from organisations whose work is generally admirable. Inan account of a Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO) project for children with severelearn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties, we read:‘There was a great deal of hugely positive feedback from teachers, and therapists and someparents from the school ... Some children visibly blossomed ... The success of the projectwas attributable not only to the RPO teams, but to the shared ownership with teachers,with whom we sought to work very closely.’ 2A London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta educational visit to F<strong>in</strong>land was also a triumph:‘The S<strong>in</strong>fonia Lahti project was huge success. A young, dynamic and enterpris<strong>in</strong>g orchestrawith a good relationship to its local community, it seemed the perfect place to beg<strong>in</strong> ... TheTampere Philharmonic was a delight to work with because of the strength of theircommitment ... the project rose to an electrify<strong>in</strong>g climax at the f<strong>in</strong>al performance and was,as a whole, deemed a very valuable and successful enterprise by all parties <strong>in</strong>volved.’ 3So, full marks all round.What we are fac<strong>in</strong>g is a failure of critical debate. There is more than one reason for this stateof affairs. Some are purely practical and essentially to do with f<strong>in</strong>ancial resourc<strong>in</strong>g. Unlikepublic, professional events or performances, most community and education work takes place<strong>in</strong> small, <strong>in</strong>timate groups. Neither the fund<strong>in</strong>g agencies nor the press are <strong>in</strong> a position toattend more than a fraction of what is go<strong>in</strong>g on <strong>in</strong> schools and arts or community centres upand down the country. Professional community artists often work <strong>in</strong>dividually or <strong>in</strong> smallproject teams and, be<strong>in</strong>g poorly funded and extremely busy, are seldom able to sample thework of others <strong>in</strong> the field. There are few critical magaz<strong>in</strong>es or journals to monitor anddissem<strong>in</strong>ate good (and for that matter bad) practice. Conferences take place from time to timeto enable an exchange of views and methods to take place, but demonstrations <strong>in</strong> an artificialcon<strong>text</strong> are <strong>in</strong>sufficient compensation for the direct experience of real-life activity ‘on theground’. Not enough people see not enough work.By the same token, until recent years amateur music-makers have been left very much totheir own devices so far as their nascent social and community role is concerned. It is to thecredit of the National Federation of Music Societies (NFMS) that it is seek<strong>in</strong>g to establishmodels of good practice, but many societies and clubs are <strong>in</strong>experienced and some areun<strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> extend<strong>in</strong>g the scope of their work.2 Royal PhilharmonicOrchestra Communityand EducationProgramme ProjectReport for the Hamlyn<strong>Foundation</strong>(unpublished, June1996).3 Report – LondonS<strong>in</strong>fonietta EducationProject <strong>in</strong> F<strong>in</strong>land,second phase, spr<strong>in</strong>gautumn1995 (LondonS<strong>in</strong>fonietta, 18 May1996), unpag<strong>in</strong>ated.4 Shaw, Phyllida,op cit, p.3.So far as the education and outreach work of professional music organisations is concerned,much of it follows the methodology established by community musicians. But it is sometimesbe<strong>in</strong>g undertaken less from conviction than because it has become the done th<strong>in</strong>g. Althoughthere is a good deal of excellent practice, experienced observers believe that standards arevariable. It is difficult to be quite sure what the situation is, for as Phyllida Shaw notes <strong>in</strong> hersurvey of the education work of British orchestras:‘While most education managers recognise the importance of evaluat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dividual projects,the regular evaluation of the programme as a whole is not undertaken as a matter of course;nor are similar standards, aims or expectations applied across the profession as a whole.’ 4Andrew Peggie, who has been actively <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> community music s<strong>in</strong>ce the 1970s,acknowledges that:‘ ... there has been very little practitioner debate about quality and standards. Manymusicians are by their nature nervous of analys<strong>in</strong>g what they do, believ<strong>in</strong>g access and


JOINING IN 135engagement to be more important than critical debate. Also a good number of them didnot emerge through the formal education or tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g sector and have neither the analyticaltools nor the confidence to engage <strong>in</strong> debate.’In this rather unrigorous climate, a little-exam<strong>in</strong>ed orthodoxy has emerged around the musicworkshop. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to Gillian Moore of the South Bank Centre:‘ ... the formula of the creative music workshop is unhelpful. It can give the illusion offreedom, but <strong>in</strong> fact it has its own set of rules, but, often because they tend to be throwntogether and do not last for a long time, the professionals are firmly <strong>in</strong> control, not theparticipants.’At the 1996 Sound Sense conference Phil Mullen, who tra<strong>in</strong>s community musicians forGoldsmiths College <strong>in</strong> London and is a co-ord<strong>in</strong>ator of the cross-cultural 4 Corners project,led a sem<strong>in</strong>ar on workshop skills. He put two questions to the participants: what did they fearmost as workshop leaders? And what measures could one take to make oneself and one’sgroup feel safe? The discussion that ensued led to some <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g answers. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to theconference report:‘ ... “fear” turned out to be a good word. Its manifestations could take many forms. Insome cases fear was acknowledged as beneficial – the adrenal<strong>in</strong> effect. There was muchtalk of fear of the unknown, as well as problems of personal <strong>in</strong>security and lack ofexperience. Leaders could abuse their position, but were worried that participants mightwalk out or be unco-operative. For their part, workshop members were scared of “whatmight be thrown at them” or suspected that the event might be a waste of time.’ 5Workshops tend to be parachuted <strong>in</strong>to a community which is given a taste of what is possible,only to see it <strong>in</strong>stantly withdrawn. They can be a cheap, patronis<strong>in</strong>g option for sectors ofsociety suffer<strong>in</strong>g from disadvantage. Gillian Moore claims:5 Cut and Blend,conference report,Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board, SoundSense, spr<strong>in</strong>g 1996,Bury St Edmunds, p.50.6 Moore, Gillian, ‘ArtsInstitutions and theirEducation programme– content andPossibility’, speech atBritish-AmericanArts AssociationConference,8-9 February 1995(unpublished).‘ ... [They give] people access, over a limited period of time, to a certa<strong>in</strong> amount of skill.Through these workshops, we are constantly surprised by what people can produce givensuch brief access to resources, expertise and encouragement – songs, books, poems,pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs, whole operas. In my op<strong>in</strong>ion, we are <strong>in</strong> danger of creat<strong>in</strong>g a two-tier system –the rich get performances and exhibitions, the poor get ... workshops ... We work withpeople for one day, two days, one week, two weeks. The workshops take on their ownmomentum and people f<strong>in</strong>d themselves hurtl<strong>in</strong>g towards an <strong>in</strong>evitable conclusion – aperformance, an exhibition, a publication. But we, the <strong>in</strong>stitutions, are very confusedabout these public manifestations – we want the performances <strong>in</strong> the concert hall, billed <strong>in</strong>the ma<strong>in</strong> artistic programme, the pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs hung <strong>in</strong> the ma<strong>in</strong> gallery space – and thencome the excuses: “It’s not really a performance, it’s a shar<strong>in</strong>g, a show<strong>in</strong>g ... ”; “now youmust remember when you look at this work, they only had four days <strong>in</strong> which to do it”;“it’s not the product, it’s the process that counts”.’ 6This problem of gett<strong>in</strong>g the right balance between process and product lies at the heart of theparticipatory idea. The acquisition of artistic skills is <strong>in</strong>deed important and, communitymusicians <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly favour the <strong>in</strong>clusion of some k<strong>in</strong>d of public performance <strong>in</strong> theirprogrammes of work; however, the process of arriv<strong>in</strong>g at an end-product is as valuable as theend-product itself, which, <strong>in</strong> effect, is an illustration of the process, not its goal.Some argue that the term ‘workshop’ should be abandoned. Andrew Peggie, writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board, feels it is time to:‘ ... consign it to the 1970s retro-culture box ... What the workshop orthodoxy largelyignores are the musical perceptions (and <strong>in</strong>deed misperceptions) of the ord<strong>in</strong>ary people


136 RELATIVE VALUESwho are potential participants. Most people’s views of musical participation are colouredby what they see on TV, and stereotypical concepts such as “concert”, “rehearsal”,“practis<strong>in</strong>g”, “conductor”, “teacher and pupil”. It’s with these notions that I believe theworkshop should start. “Let’s make a street band – I’ll conduct” is surely a more honest<strong>in</strong>vitation than “Let’s explore the rhythms of Samba together”.’ 7This is a reasonable po<strong>in</strong>t of view. But a dist<strong>in</strong>ction needs to be drawn between ditch<strong>in</strong>g aword associated with slipshod and unexam<strong>in</strong>ed practice and abandon<strong>in</strong>g a notion of musicmak<strong>in</strong>gthat is more than simply mak<strong>in</strong>g music, more than ‘just’ putt<strong>in</strong>g on a concert. At ameet<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> 1989 for Association of British Orchestras (ABO) education managers, GillianMoore (then still at the London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta) said:‘We must always be will<strong>in</strong>g to ask questions about out methods: are they the mostappropriate to the organisations we work for as well as to the client groups? For example,it could be more appropriate to produce a high quality series of learn<strong>in</strong>g materials <strong>in</strong>response to the needs of a group and the artistic programme, rather than live workshops.’Whatever the chosen methodology, the participatory musical process embodies personal andsocial as well as artistic development. It is perfectly possible to pay no attention to this and notto acknowledge its importance, as was until recently the case <strong>in</strong> the amateur music sector. Ithas been the contribution of the community music movement at its best to demonstrate thatthis is a mistake.Ben Higham put it very clearly to me when I visited Community Music East <strong>in</strong> Norwich,where he works. ‘What we are do<strong>in</strong>g here is to act as a medium through which people candevelop a high level of critical understand<strong>in</strong>g.’ He described what this could mean <strong>in</strong> practice.In a step-by-step development, the participant <strong>in</strong> a project first has to acquire the selfconfidenceto assert a preference: yes, I like this piece of music, or, no, I don’t. The secondstep is to determ<strong>in</strong>e the basis for this judgment. What mean<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the music drives my<strong>in</strong>terpretation? The participant sets out to answer this question by engag<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the process ofmusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g, of active listen<strong>in</strong>g and debate (not only aesthetic but also social or political, onthe grounds that art takes place <strong>in</strong> the wider environment of life as it is lived). This leads to arecognition by the participant that his or her ideas have changed or deepened, which <strong>in</strong> turnforms the basis of a further enquiry.The validity of this model will be widely recognised by community musicians (<strong>in</strong>deed itcould arguably stand as a description of the creative process itself). Of course, people willview it from their own different perspectives. For some, it justifies the position that music is atechnique for personal growth, for open<strong>in</strong>g up the imag<strong>in</strong>ation and becom<strong>in</strong>g fuller and morecomplete human be<strong>in</strong>gs. For others it is a means of com<strong>in</strong>g to terms with the world aroundus and organis<strong>in</strong>g to change it. For others still, like Gillian Moore, it describes a revolutionarynew way of mak<strong>in</strong>g art:7 Peggie, Andrew, ‘It’stime to stop do<strong>in</strong>gworkshops’, Sound<strong>in</strong>gBoard, Sound Sense,Bury St Edmunds,w<strong>in</strong>ter 1997, p.9.8 Peggie, Andrew,‘Cutt<strong>in</strong>g Edge Work’,Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board, SoundSense, Bury StEdmunds, autumn1996, p.11.‘We are constantly flirt<strong>in</strong>g with a new k<strong>in</strong>d of collaborative art mak<strong>in</strong>g, but never quitegett<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to bed with it ... I believe that a new collaborative form of art mak<strong>in</strong>g is burst<strong>in</strong>gto emerge – one <strong>in</strong> which the professional artist benefits artistically from work<strong>in</strong>g with thenon-professional, and vice versa.’ 8It is possible to hold one, two or all of these positions simultaneously, or to disagree with allbut one. But they share a common factor – the process of community music-mak<strong>in</strong>g is notjust a way of express<strong>in</strong>g oneself or of hon<strong>in</strong>g unexplored performance skills, but of develop<strong>in</strong>gone’s understand<strong>in</strong>g. Sue Robertson, former head of education at the South Bank Centre andnow chief executive of the London Arts Board, who has given much thought to questions of


JOINING IN 137creative assessment, told me: ‘The task is to create the conditions <strong>in</strong> which people willachieve confidence about their work and get the critical tools to respond to the music-mak<strong>in</strong>gof other people’. 9 It follows that evaluation and self-assessment are <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sic parts of what is asubjective and at least partly <strong>in</strong>ternalised process. How is one to evaluate evaluation?I want to offer two k<strong>in</strong>ds of answer to this question. The first will seek to address ways <strong>in</strong>which all those concerned can make their necessary judgments and the second will considerimprovements to the external circumstances which are at present <strong>in</strong>hibit<strong>in</strong>g the effectivenessof the participatory process.Let us beg<strong>in</strong> with the person who has signed up to a music workshop or similar event. Fromtheir perspective three processes are tak<strong>in</strong>g place simultaneously. They are a translation of theCreative Future criteria <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>dividual, participatory terms. The first is the development ofmusical techniques; the second is the acquisition or ref<strong>in</strong>ement of <strong>in</strong>dependent social and<strong>in</strong>teractive skills and the third, and arguably the most significant, is the growth of criticalunderstand<strong>in</strong>g – of music both <strong>in</strong> itself and <strong>in</strong> relation to its uses, and of oneself.Now it is perfectly possible, as Andrew Peggie po<strong>in</strong>ted out, to conceive of teach<strong>in</strong>g musicalskills by rote, <strong>in</strong> which case the participant is essentially a pupil or apprentice who could justas well be on a secretarial as a music course. However, if learn<strong>in</strong>g music is more than justlearn<strong>in</strong>g music, even if that is all one th<strong>in</strong>ks one is do<strong>in</strong>g or want<strong>in</strong>g to do (and that is anunderp<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g theme of this book), we will still need to take the second and third categories<strong>in</strong>to account. So whether we are talk<strong>in</strong>g of a classic workshop or some more conventionalmeans of transmitt<strong>in</strong>g skills, active iteration between the participant and the leader orteacher is called for. By the end of a project, assum<strong>in</strong>g it to be effective, they ought ideallyto f<strong>in</strong>d themselves on an equal foot<strong>in</strong>g. One would expect the power relationship <strong>in</strong> thegroup to shift from control by the leader to someth<strong>in</strong>g approach<strong>in</strong>g equal partnership <strong>in</strong> acommon enterprise. While an external eye would be able to assess the objectivedevelopment of musical and social skills (say at a concert), much of what is tak<strong>in</strong>g place issubjective and <strong>in</strong>ternal to the person experienc<strong>in</strong>g it. It is a dialectical process where theknowledge and skills a participant br<strong>in</strong>gs to a project at its outset are modified by thecontribution of the workshop leader and other members of the group; this enhancedunderstand<strong>in</strong>g is then applied to one’s own practice which one then re-<strong>in</strong>troduces to thegroup, and so on. There is a mutual dependency between do<strong>in</strong>g and appreciat<strong>in</strong>g, actionand reflection.This account bears comparison with the notions of ‘progression’ which have been establishedfor the delivery of the music curriculum <strong>in</strong> schools. It will be recalled that the Non-statutoryGuidance for Music issued by the Curriculum Council for Wales (see page 70) classifiesprogression <strong>in</strong> terms of what pupils are to do, focus<strong>in</strong>g on the ‘development and applicationof skills and understand<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly wide range of con<strong>text</strong>s’, and <strong>in</strong> terms of thenature of tasks which pupils should be able to undertake, emphasis<strong>in</strong>g familiarity of thecon<strong>text</strong>, complexity of tasks and <strong>in</strong>dividual responsibility.9 I am <strong>in</strong>debted <strong>in</strong> thefollow<strong>in</strong>g paragraphs toa useful conversation onevaluation which I hadwith Sue Robertson,although the readershould not hold herresponsible for myconclusions.These are necessarily somewhat abstract and abbreviated descriptions of a complex series of<strong>in</strong>terpersonal transactions and <strong>in</strong>trapersonal events. But a number of practical prescriptions canbe derived from them. Workshop leaders should be explicit about their aims, while f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gout what they can about the needs and expectations of the group, always be<strong>in</strong>g sensitive to itsconcerns and ready to negotiate. These aims may well not be exclusively aesthetic, but mayalso be cultural and social (on occasion, even political). The project is worth do<strong>in</strong>g only if acommon set of values is hammered out and agreed at the outset. A succession of small goals,giv<strong>in</strong>g a chance for discussion and revision, is more consistent with an organic development


138 RELATIVE VALUESof jo<strong>in</strong>t endeavour than a s<strong>in</strong>gle large one. It is also the leaders’ responsibility to establish apsychologically secure and physically appropriate and congenial space with<strong>in</strong> which a projectcan take place.Two conclusions can be drawn from this. Firstly, quality <strong>in</strong> any debate-led process is a mov<strong>in</strong>gtarget and it is a contradiction <strong>in</strong> terms to set out def<strong>in</strong>itions <strong>in</strong> advance and apply them toresults which, if they are to have any value, will be unpredictable. To agree aims is not thesame as to be certa<strong>in</strong> about outcomes. All an outside observer can do is look for signs of rigourand vigour. Secondly, because the heart of participatory creativity is <strong>in</strong>visible, it is morepractical to assess objective consequences or side-effects rather than the activity itself. Ananalogy suggests itself with those advanced scientific experiments <strong>in</strong> which physicists deduce theexistence of unmeasurable particles through the effects they have on what can be measured.Tim Joss, <strong>in</strong> a report on a sem<strong>in</strong>ar about the role of community music, identified some of thekey issues:‘An implication of community music activity be<strong>in</strong>g grounded <strong>in</strong> the real world of livedexperience is that the standards used to assess the quality of the activity must be appropriateto the con<strong>text</strong>. For communities to achieve ever-enrich<strong>in</strong>g change, evaluation of activitiesis vital but this <strong>in</strong>evitably entails a move beyond the traditional def<strong>in</strong>itions of excellence asused <strong>in</strong> formal music education. This is a plea therefore not for non-accountability butrather for standards which, because of the nature of the activity, avoid any excessivepreoccupation with the product and do justice to the richness of the process. Theevaluation should also create opportunities for the participants to make judgments,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g those participants who <strong>in</strong> more formal sett<strong>in</strong>gs would lack confidence andsufficient sense of status to make such judgments.’ 10In the light of such considerations, what is the way forward? Because a number of differentparties are <strong>in</strong>volved, there is no s<strong>in</strong>gle nostrum. What follows is a series of practical butprovisional proposals, some of which will add to the costs of participatory practice and so willneed to be taken <strong>in</strong>to account by fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies when they calculate subsidy requirements.Circumstances vary case by case and I do not argue that they are universally applicable; rather,they should be understood as guides to action, not as a detailed bluepr<strong>in</strong>t.10 Joss, Tim, extractfrom the sem<strong>in</strong>ar reportThe Role of CommunityMusic <strong>in</strong> a Chang<strong>in</strong>gWorld (InternationalSociety for MusicEducation/Commissionfor Community MusicActivity, 1994) p.3.The key element <strong>in</strong> demonstrat<strong>in</strong>g the success of a community project is the ‘commonstatement of aims’. This should be recorded <strong>in</strong> some succ<strong>in</strong>ct form, perhaps on paper orthrough video or sound record<strong>in</strong>g. If the workshop project leader is a member of a largerorganisation (for example, the education officer of an orchestra or someone on contract to anamateur music society), it will be easy to show their employer whether or not this isconsistent with its larger strategy. The statement will be the test aga<strong>in</strong>st which outcomes (andpractical/organisational issues) can be described <strong>in</strong> a written distillation of the projectproduced by the workshop leader. Such descriptions should be genu<strong>in</strong>ely critical and notdouble up (as can often happen) as market<strong>in</strong>g or fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g documents. There is a case forargu<strong>in</strong>g that they could be prepared by a participant rather than the project leader and perhapsfrom time to time by well-<strong>in</strong>formed external evaluators.There seems little real virtue <strong>in</strong> ‘audience satisfaction’ questionnaires; most of those I haveread have a flavour of the ‘Darl<strong>in</strong>g, you were wonderful’ atmosphere <strong>in</strong> actors’ dress<strong>in</strong>g roomsafter a first night. It would be more to the po<strong>in</strong>t if participants logged their experiencesthrough written reports or record<strong>in</strong>gs, but not as an additional chore so much as an <strong>in</strong>herentpart of a debate-led process of personal development.Arts Councils, Regional Arts Boards (RABs), local authorities and bus<strong>in</strong>ess sponsors all have


JOINING IN 139an <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> know<strong>in</strong>g that their money has been well spent. They wisely tend to steer clearof aesthetics, but over the years the Arts Councils and RABs have worked out systems ofevaluation which test the effectiveness of an arts organisation. They ask how clear itsobjectives are and whether its performance meets them <strong>in</strong> the event. They keep an eye on itsartistic reputation among its peers and professional critics. They check whether itsmanagement and f<strong>in</strong>ancial controls are adequate. Above all, they make sure that its activitiesare consistent with its own, the fund<strong>in</strong>g body’s, aims.However, the elaborate apparatus of formal appraisals which established professional artsorganisations undergo is too cumbersome for the subjectivities of participatory music. The bestapproach for funders is to agree self-evaluation procedures along the l<strong>in</strong>es I have beenrecommend<strong>in</strong>g rather than to <strong>in</strong>tervene directly themselves (except perhaps for occasional spotchecks if there are rumours of exceptionally good or bad practice). A light regulatory touch willbr<strong>in</strong>g the best results <strong>in</strong> a fluid and <strong>in</strong>dividualistic area of creative work where the object is tofree people to make their own decisions rather than follow the prescriptions of others.A more systematic (but decentralised) address to the ma<strong>in</strong>tenance of standards will not beenough <strong>in</strong> itself to stimulate and enliven the participatory music scene. For that there needsalso to be a lively national discussion – or, more properly, ongo<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong>terlock<strong>in</strong>gdiscussions – about everyth<strong>in</strong>g from the nature and value of participatory music to practicalproblems of market<strong>in</strong>g and management.Dur<strong>in</strong>g the preparation of this report, the steer<strong>in</strong>g group met to advise me and the report’ssponsor and publisher, the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>. At one of our meet<strong>in</strong>gs thegroup’s Chair, the poet Jo Shapcott, asked all those present to speak of their hopes and fearsfor the future of participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. The follow<strong>in</strong>g selection from what they saidsuggests the range and radicalism of the themes we should all be th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and talk<strong>in</strong>g about <strong>in</strong>the com<strong>in</strong>g years:‘We must explore the ground where professional and amateur meet. We shouldn’telim<strong>in</strong>ate the dist<strong>in</strong>ction, but we must arrange a meet<strong>in</strong>g. This k<strong>in</strong>d of work is marked bya lack of <strong>in</strong>tellectual, theoretical underp<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g. What sort of art-form are we creat<strong>in</strong>g?’‘The received perspectives on participatory music must be challenged.’‘There should be no <strong>in</strong>hibition about music-mak<strong>in</strong>g, nor any question<strong>in</strong>g whether there isor is not a role for anyone. Creativity is com<strong>in</strong>g from the community rather than artistsand policy-makers.’‘Music must develop its role as a reflection of contemporary culture.’‘Music is an expression of the spirit. Music can change lives.’‘We must address a lack of vision – a moral and artistic vision – <strong>in</strong> a disconnected society.’It should go without say<strong>in</strong>g that these pr<strong>in</strong>ciples apply as much to amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g asto professional or outreach work. But it is worth emphasis<strong>in</strong>g the po<strong>in</strong>t because my discussionof evaluation has largely concentrated on orchestral and community-based music, s<strong>in</strong>ce it ishere that self-exam<strong>in</strong>ation and appraisal are most fully articulated at present. The language onehears applied to amateurs – that they are ‘do<strong>in</strong>g their best’ and that it is enough if their effortsbr<strong>in</strong>g them ‘satisfaction’ or a ‘sense of achievement’ – is not exactly <strong>in</strong>accurate; <strong>in</strong> fact, itshows clearly enough that their motives are much the same as those <strong>in</strong> other areas ofparticipatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. But the term<strong>in</strong>ology has a paternalistic r<strong>in</strong>g.Brass bands, gospel choirs, folk groups, eisteddfodau, carnivals and rock and pop groups arenot only capable of high achievement <strong>in</strong> their own con<strong>text</strong>s, but often stand comparison (<strong>in</strong>


140 RELATIVE VALUESterms of artistic communication if not of virtuosity) with their professional counterparts.There is everyth<strong>in</strong>g to be said for extend<strong>in</strong>g the critical debate I have been describ<strong>in</strong>g to theseareas of music. So, for example, the tradition of festival competition assessment would beenriched by current th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g about community-based practice and, by the same token, has alot to contribute itself to the general evolution of musical ‘standards’.It is no surprise to learn that NFMS is address<strong>in</strong>g the issues. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to its Five YearDevelopment Plan, it is committed to ‘encourage regular self-critical analyses <strong>in</strong> order toidentify areas where standards can be improved ... to provide member societies with practicalassistance <strong>in</strong> achiev<strong>in</strong>g best practice <strong>in</strong> any aspects of their activities, artistic or adm<strong>in</strong>istrative[and] to ensure greater and more effective communication of <strong>in</strong>formation, op<strong>in</strong>ions and ideasat all levels of the Federation to make <strong>in</strong>dividuals feel fully <strong>in</strong>volved’. 11 It won £200,000 <strong>in</strong> athree-year sponsorship deal from BT for a community development plan, Mak<strong>in</strong>g More ofMusic, and has run the BT Innovation Awards which reward and publicise examples of bestpractice among its member societies. It plans to establish a regional network of at least sixNFMS officers, each servic<strong>in</strong>g two regions and employed on a part-time basis.Other umbrella bodies, such as Sound Sense, and agencies, such as Scotland’s Adult Learn<strong>in</strong>gProject and Folkworks <strong>in</strong> the North-East, are also do<strong>in</strong>g their best to stimulate debate. SoundSense, sensitive to a certa<strong>in</strong> disarray and lack of co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation among its constituency ofcommunity musicians, is gear<strong>in</strong>g itself to a far more proactive role than <strong>in</strong> the past. At its1996 conference, the existence of poor quality work was acknowledged, but despite theuseful debates on workshop practice, few ideas emerged for repair<strong>in</strong>g this state of affairs. Also,community music clearly has an image problem, stemm<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> large part from its undef<strong>in</strong>ablediversity. The outside world is hardly aware of the sector’s existence. Without status andenergetic campaign<strong>in</strong>g, it is no wonder that there is little fund<strong>in</strong>g. Sound Sense, conv<strong>in</strong>ced ofthe urgency of the situation, is tak<strong>in</strong>g action. It is prepar<strong>in</strong>g a research project ‘<strong>in</strong>to the natureand mean<strong>in</strong>g of practice amongst community music practitioners’. The purpose is to ask themwhat they see as the components of good practice. As the project brief states: ‘The <strong>in</strong>tentionis to support and encourage the practitioner by creat<strong>in</strong>g professional common ground,<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g their professional confidence and confirm<strong>in</strong>g their professional identity.’ 12Sound Sense also recognises the need to encourage serious music criticism throughdevelop<strong>in</strong>g its magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board, and encourag<strong>in</strong>g the publication of occasionalpapers. Fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g permitt<strong>in</strong>g, it hopes to establish a community music archive, to makemore use of the Internet through Web pages, to communicate more effectively with itsconstituency and to proselytise local authorities and higher educational <strong>in</strong>stitutions.11 NFMS – Serv<strong>in</strong>gMusic, Five YearDevelopment Plan 1996-2000, op cit, pp.16 and22.12 See Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board,Sound Sense, Bury StEdmunds, autumn1995, p.12.In summary, then, com<strong>in</strong>g to a judgment about the ‘quality’ of participatory music is amultidimensional task and <strong>in</strong>volves a range of different criteria. What these may be <strong>in</strong> anyparticular case will depend on the <strong>in</strong>tentions of those tak<strong>in</strong>g part, or sometimes on anagreement between those tak<strong>in</strong>g part and other stakeholders (say, fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies ormanagers). The failure of critical debate has led to lack of clarity and consensus about theseissues and measures should be taken to stimulate discussion and the exchange of ideas abouttheory and practice. Because much of the value of participatory music lies <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>ternalprocesses of awareness and understand<strong>in</strong>g, evaluation is most effective when it is a partnershipbetween the external observer and those observed rather than an operation conducted by oneon the other. Those outside the creative circle should restrict themselves to draw<strong>in</strong>g upagreed procedures of evaluation and measur<strong>in</strong>g what can be measured – that is, objectiveoutcomes such as the cont<strong>in</strong>uation of a music project <strong>in</strong> be<strong>in</strong>g over time. After that, it has tobe a matter of trust.


JOINING IN 141‘Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the Tra<strong>in</strong>ers’There is widespread agreement that none of the measures I have described so far will besufficient unless there is also an energetic and coherent development of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. Now <strong>in</strong> onesense participation <strong>in</strong> music is itself an exercise <strong>in</strong> self-tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and its encouragement is thewhole purpose of the community music movement. In the amateur sector and among thosegenres where there is a particularly active <strong>in</strong>terface between professional and amateur musicmak<strong>in</strong>g(eg jazz, and rock and pop), there are a grow<strong>in</strong>g number of opportunities for amateurpractitioners and groups to improve a variety of skills – not only <strong>in</strong> terms of artistry but alsoof adm<strong>in</strong>istration and market<strong>in</strong>g.So, for example, Folkworks, whose aim is to recover lost or fail<strong>in</strong>g traditions of popular musicand songs, puts a great deal of effort <strong>in</strong>to provid<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses and workshops for nonprofessionalmusicians. Ros Rigby, one of Folkworks’ two co-directors, told me:‘The great strength of folk as a form is its suitability for access by people of different levelsof skill. We now run one-day workouts for players and s<strong>in</strong>gers of all abilities. We cater foreveryth<strong>in</strong>g from the absolute beg<strong>in</strong>ner to the top professional. All play<strong>in</strong>g the same k<strong>in</strong>d ofmusic. One should not downgrade questions of technical difficulty, but all the same almostanyone can produce good work by any standards without supreme virtuosity.’In 1996 an Absolute Beg<strong>in</strong>ners Workout for National Music Day allowed more than 200people to try a range of <strong>in</strong>struments, song or dance, all for the first time, under the guidanceof experienced tutors. It was a rare chance to experiment with unusual <strong>in</strong>struments such asthe Northumbrian pipe, the melodeon and the Bodhran. In another <strong>in</strong>itiative <strong>in</strong> the autumnof the same year, Folkworks set up a songwrit<strong>in</strong>g project <strong>in</strong> 10 communities nation-wide.Experienced s<strong>in</strong>ger/songwriters <strong>in</strong>troduced a range of techniques to help people develop theirsongwrit<strong>in</strong>g skills. Resident tutors worked with local musicians <strong>in</strong> a series of between eightand 10 weekly sessions or two weekend courses.The Society for the Promotion of New Music (SPNM), founded <strong>in</strong> 1943 by the Romanianémigré composer, Francis Chagr<strong>in</strong>, <strong>in</strong> response to a comment made <strong>in</strong> a BBC lift that ‘peoplearen’t writ<strong>in</strong>g music any more’, has taken recent steps to encourage young people betweenthe ages of 16 and 19 to learn to compose music <strong>in</strong> a ‘wide range of compositional styles’. 13Run by SPNM’s education w<strong>in</strong>g, it offers an extensive programme, led by professionalcomposers, performers and animateurs, of courses, workshops, projects and other eventsnation-wide. It is to be accompanied by a new magaz<strong>in</strong>e targeted at young people which willbe distributed to educational <strong>in</strong>stitutions, youth clubs, venues, Youth Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g schemes andother community and youth groups.In rock and pop, the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> noticed a gap <strong>in</strong> provision for ‘a hardcore of musicians, on the edge of turn<strong>in</strong>g professional, who would benefit from the moresophisticated musical and commercial skills that an “advanced” course <strong>in</strong> popular music wouldoffer’. 14 In response, <strong>in</strong> 1996, it <strong>in</strong>itiated Pop 2000, the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom’s first <strong>in</strong>ternationalmasterclass programme <strong>in</strong> popular music. This offered a range of courses <strong>in</strong> produc<strong>in</strong>g andrecord<strong>in</strong>g, the media and market<strong>in</strong>g as well as an <strong>in</strong>troduction to the music <strong>in</strong>dustry.13 New Notes, SPNM,November 1996, p.3.14 Richey, Simon,preface, Pop 2000(London, EuropeanCultural Centre, 1995).NFMS is sett<strong>in</strong>g up region-specific tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g programmes based on research <strong>in</strong>to the needs ofits member societies and is consider<strong>in</strong>g the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of artistic advisers to help it <strong>in</strong> itswork. The follow<strong>in</strong>g development needs have been identified: concert plann<strong>in</strong>g, voiceproduction/choral tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, orchestral ensemble/player coach<strong>in</strong>g; and on the adm<strong>in</strong>istrativeside, market<strong>in</strong>g and publicity, pr<strong>in</strong>t and design, adm<strong>in</strong>istration, personnel, chairmanship andvolunteer management, f<strong>in</strong>ance and account<strong>in</strong>g, and fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g and sponsorship.


142 RELATIVE VALUESThese are only some of the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>itiatives which umbrella bodies and others areundertak<strong>in</strong>g. They are conv<strong>in</strong>c<strong>in</strong>g evidence that more and more of those <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong>participatory music recognise the need to equip the movement, or perhaps more accuratelythe network of movements, <strong>in</strong> order to make a more dynamic <strong>in</strong>put <strong>in</strong>to the arts of thiscountry. One senses a new self-confidence and feel<strong>in</strong>g of self-worth with respect to theprofessional sector; <strong>in</strong>deed, a k<strong>in</strong>d of professionalisation of the voluntary impulse.All of this is greatly to the good, but it does not give a complete account of all the ways <strong>in</strong>which tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g can help. As well as look<strong>in</strong>g after the developmental requirements of nonprofessionalmusicians of every k<strong>in</strong>d, many of the sharpest m<strong>in</strong>ds <strong>in</strong> community music andmusic education recognise that perhaps the s<strong>in</strong>gle most effective means of advanc<strong>in</strong>g the causeof participatory music is to ‘tra<strong>in</strong> the tra<strong>in</strong>ers’. If progress is to be made, teachers will have to beproperly equipped to deliver the challenges of the new music curriculum; community musiciansneed a more comprehensive ground<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the methodology of outreach work; unless orchestralmusicians’ artistic horizons are widened, they will be unable to fulfil the new roles which manyorchestras are expect<strong>in</strong>g of them; special skills are demanded of those active <strong>in</strong> such fields asmusic and disability; and there are too few tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities for those work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> non-European musics and <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>digenous folk and traditional musics, as well as for peripatetic musicteachers and the isolated lone musician out of contact with other forms of practice.The production of new generations of well-tra<strong>in</strong>ed musicians and music workers will help toaddress one of the key factors <strong>in</strong>hibit<strong>in</strong>g the further growth of participatory music – thepatchy nature of expert support across the country, whether it be <strong>in</strong> the form of too few proamlocal musicians or only sporadic community projects.Community Music <strong>in</strong> London, one of the country’s most successful participatory projects,has shown how a carefully co-ord<strong>in</strong>ated programme of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong>ers can transformmusic provision <strong>in</strong> an area and stimulate the sett<strong>in</strong>g up of autonomous music groups. It isworth look<strong>in</strong>g at an example of their work <strong>in</strong> the London Borough of Newham. In 1992they agreed to run a summer playscheme with 25 low achievers and school refusers. Overtwo years, they raised £20,000 from the European Social Fund and Newham LeisureServices as well as £11,000 <strong>in</strong> equipment from Newham Youth Services, and at the sametime tra<strong>in</strong>ed two local youth workers <strong>in</strong> fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g with the long-term aim of enabl<strong>in</strong>gany project that was established to become <strong>in</strong>dependent. The local owner of a commercialrecord<strong>in</strong>g studio and an ‘apprentice’ were tra<strong>in</strong>ed by Community Music to run a musicworkshop, concentrat<strong>in</strong>g on technology, band work, composition and the creation of alocal identity. A group of young people (ma<strong>in</strong>ly beg<strong>in</strong>ners and many of them at risk)established themselves as the Beckton Music Group, named after a Newham estate. Theycame from a cross-section of Newham society and were part of the Beckton DrugAwareness Project.Meanwhile, Community Music ran a series of five public courses to help the Beckton groupand widen access to the local community. As a result, two local unemployed musicians, oneof whom <strong>in</strong> particular was unmotivated and had a poor achievement record, came to theirattention. They took Community Music’s Music Tutor Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Course: one of them beganwork<strong>in</strong>g with the Beckton Music Group and got a job <strong>in</strong> the project organiser’s commercialstudio, while the other formed a young women’s music project. She also taught elsewhere <strong>in</strong>London and was hired as music tutor to set up a new Beckton music group. Later she tookover Community Music’s education programme <strong>in</strong> Brent.In 1993, after perform<strong>in</strong>g at the National Youth Arts Festival <strong>in</strong> Devon, the group dispersedas a direct result of their raised skills and confidence. One went onto a music course at a local


JOINING IN 143college, another onto a BTEC course, two set up an <strong>in</strong>dependent band and three ga<strong>in</strong>edemployment with a multimedia arts project <strong>in</strong> the borough.In 1993, Community Music was asked to set up a workshop on another estate with seriousracial and social tensions. A group was established which has now performed four times atCommunity Music’s West End headquarters, the Community Music House; a purpose-builtcentre is under construction on the estate and £6,000 has been raised by a local youth workerfor musical <strong>in</strong>struments.In the follow<strong>in</strong>g year, Community Music, <strong>in</strong> association with the London Arts Board andYamaha Kemble, piloted a major education project to look at how professional musicians canenhance the delivery of the National Curriculum. As a result of the previous youth work,three Newham schools were chosen to take part. A group of young Asian people fromNewham came to the Community Music House for a weekly session. Community Musicstaged a further five open music courses <strong>in</strong> the borough.In 1996, the Asian Dub <strong>Foundation</strong>, an <strong>in</strong>dependent group which emerged from work atCommunity Music, toured the borough and created l<strong>in</strong>ks with people from the Asiancommunity. Community Music ran classes <strong>in</strong> a Newham secondary school and an out-ofhoursmusic club at another, which enabled them to keep <strong>in</strong> contact with young people whograduated to secondary level.To conclude, the Beckton Youth Project now has four separate music projects, run<strong>in</strong>dependently, as part of its ma<strong>in</strong>stream activities.I have recorded this remarkable story <strong>in</strong> some detail, because of its virtuous circularity and asan illustration of what one organisation can achieve <strong>in</strong> a neighbourhood by the carefultarget<strong>in</strong>g of limited resources. The policy of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong>ers acts like a snowball, gather<strong>in</strong>gmore and more community <strong>in</strong>volvement as it proceeds. One can envisage a time, perhaps <strong>in</strong>the not too distant future, when Newham will be able to look after itself and CommunityMusic can turn its attention elsewhere.The level of f<strong>in</strong>ancial <strong>in</strong>vestment <strong>in</strong> the k<strong>in</strong>ds of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g so far described, although valuableand ground-break<strong>in</strong>g, is <strong>in</strong>significant when compared to the resources applied to the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gof professional musicians <strong>in</strong> higher and further education. Numerous courses are provided <strong>in</strong>colleges of further education. Music departments <strong>in</strong> colleges of higher education offer avariety of degree and diploma courses. These <strong>in</strong>clude, <strong>in</strong> addition to more conventionalcourses of study: BA (Hons) <strong>in</strong> Popular Music Studies, HND <strong>in</strong> Creative Music Technologyand BTEC ND <strong>in</strong> Popular Music at Barnsley College; BA (Hons) <strong>in</strong> Sound and Image atBath College of HE; BA (Hons) <strong>in</strong> Contemporary Musics and <strong>in</strong> Popular Music Studies atBretton Hall; BSc <strong>in</strong> Music and Mathematics at Christ Church College, Canterbury; ModularBA <strong>in</strong> World Musics and MA <strong>in</strong> Musical Traditions at K<strong>in</strong>g Alfred’s College, W<strong>in</strong>chester;Diploma <strong>in</strong> Jazz and Commercial Music and BTEC ND <strong>in</strong> Rock Music at LiverpoolCommunity College and BA (Hons) <strong>in</strong> Band Musicianship and <strong>in</strong> Popular Music andRecord<strong>in</strong>g at University College, Salford. Fifty-one universities <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom offerdegree courses <strong>in</strong> music, usually more conventional <strong>in</strong> content but often encompass<strong>in</strong>gpopular music, film music and the like. The University of Northumbria has taughtcommunity music for some 10 years and was the first BA (Hons) Music course of its k<strong>in</strong>d <strong>in</strong>the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom. It generates about 25 community music projects a year.The Liverpool Institute of Perform<strong>in</strong>g Arts is a higher education establishment specialis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>popular cultural forms and has the back<strong>in</strong>g of lead<strong>in</strong>g figures <strong>in</strong> the enterta<strong>in</strong>ment <strong>in</strong>dustry,notably Sir Paul McCartney. Founded by the same team that created the BRIT school <strong>in</strong>


144 RELATIVE VALUESCroydon, a secondary school specialis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts, it offers BA (Hons) degrees(validated by the John Moores University) <strong>in</strong> a range of arts/enterta<strong>in</strong>ment subjects. Thecourses are modular and one strand is devoted to community arts (<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g a music option).The 11 conservatoires occupy the command<strong>in</strong>g heights of music education and until recentyears have taken a conservative view of their role. The emphasis has been on produc<strong>in</strong>gvirtuoso musicians to staff the country’s orchestras and classical music ensembles. Curtis Price,Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of the Royal Academy of Music, sees no press<strong>in</strong>g need to make many changes tothis policy although he acknowledges that more effort should be put <strong>in</strong>to equipp<strong>in</strong>g studentsto manage freelance careers <strong>in</strong> a chang<strong>in</strong>g marketplace. He told me:‘Our chief function is to tra<strong>in</strong> orchestral musicians, although there should not be toomuch stress on virtuosity. The problem fac<strong>in</strong>g orchestras is essentially one ofprogramm<strong>in</strong>g; new music should be <strong>in</strong> every programme and people should beencouraged to look forward to it. To direct resources to tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> outreach is <strong>in</strong>effective:where help is needed is <strong>in</strong> schools where <strong>in</strong>strumental teach<strong>in</strong>g, choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and musicread<strong>in</strong>g are dy<strong>in</strong>g. My ambition for the Academy is that it should be like the ParisConservatoire as it was <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century.’In an important sense he is correct, <strong>in</strong> that it will rema<strong>in</strong> the duty of conservatoires for theforeseeable future to ensure a regular supply of classical players and composers. But colleaguesat other conservatoires sense that reform is necessary. David Hoult, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of the City ofLeeds College of Music, wrote to me echo<strong>in</strong>g some of the themes outl<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> earlier chaptersof this book:‘The role of music <strong>in</strong> society as a participatory activity is perhaps the most important issuefac<strong>in</strong>g musicians as we prepare to enter the twenty-first century. We have neglected it fortoo long. As ethnomusicologists such as John Black<strong>in</strong>g have shown, there are twocommon characteristics of the arts <strong>in</strong> developed societies. One is their polarisation <strong>in</strong>tohigh art and low art, whilst the other is the division of those <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong>toproducers and consumers, with the art itself as a commodity supplied by one to the other.I do not decry this – I simply po<strong>in</strong>t it out. The great flower<strong>in</strong>g of Western art music ofthe past 400 years could not have taken place, <strong>in</strong> my view, without creat<strong>in</strong>g thesedivisions. However, we have <strong>in</strong> this period lost some of what less developed societies havereta<strong>in</strong>ed: the benefits of social cohesion conferred by widespread participation <strong>in</strong> (not justconsumption of) the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts.’ 15David Hoult supports the enrichment of music tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g advocated by educationists such asPeter Renshaw of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama (see Orchestral Variations above),although he draws a firm dist<strong>in</strong>ction between improv<strong>in</strong>g access to professional music andencourag<strong>in</strong>g participation by amateurs.15 Hoult, David,unpublished letter tothe author,19 September 1996.16 Caird, George,‘UK Conservatoires <strong>in</strong>a time of change’,Music EducationCouncil, Cheshire,summer 1996.However, there is evidence that other conservatoires are adopt<strong>in</strong>g an approach that goesfurther towards <strong>in</strong>tegrat<strong>in</strong>g amateur and professional practice. As <strong>in</strong> the case of the RoyalAcademy of Music, this is largely <strong>in</strong>spired by a hard-headed perception of the chang<strong>in</strong>g careerpatterns of musicians, but a more catholic approach is taken than that recommended by CurtisPrice. George Caird, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire, wrote:‘All our conservatoires, while cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g to offer high quality <strong>in</strong>strumental and vocaltra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, are work<strong>in</strong>g on professional development ... and there are many different andexcit<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>itiatives which provide students with a bewilder<strong>in</strong>g choice of specialist courses<strong>in</strong>, for example, Music Theatre, Community Music, Technology and Record<strong>in</strong>g, FolkMusic, Advanced Orchestral Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, Composition and Instrumental Teach<strong>in</strong>g.’ 16


JOINING IN 145Birm<strong>in</strong>gham, which has developed a range of study opportunities for students <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>discipl<strong>in</strong>es outside Western classical music, is soon to offer new degree routes for jazz andnorth Indian classical music. A believer <strong>in</strong> partnerships, it has an association (among manyothers locally, nationally and <strong>in</strong>ternationally) with the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham-based Asian musicdevelopment agency, SAMPAD. It has pioneered courses with Sound It Out, the communitymusic organisation for Birm<strong>in</strong>gham and a wider area, and the two organisations are nowwork<strong>in</strong>g together on a proposal to establish a community music module at the Conservatoire.When this comes on-stream, the Conservatoire will jo<strong>in</strong> a select group of higher education<strong>in</strong>stitutions which provide community music options – the Guildhall School of Music andDrama, Goldsmiths College and Dart<strong>in</strong>gton College of Arts. Also, from this year theUniversity of York will be offer<strong>in</strong>g an MA <strong>in</strong> Community Music.Gradual, but significant, changes are tak<strong>in</strong>g place elsewhere. For example, at the RoyalCollege of Music a postgraduate Pathway for Orchestral Musicians has been <strong>in</strong>troduced which<strong>in</strong>troduces students to educational work and to the k<strong>in</strong>ds of mental and physical exercisesdeveloped by pioneers such as Peter Wiegold, formerly of the Guildhall School of Music andDrama. Gill Graham, the college’s orchestra manager, wrote to me:‘Address<strong>in</strong>g the question of be<strong>in</strong>g a musician these days is someth<strong>in</strong>g we are constantlydo<strong>in</strong>g. As far as hav<strong>in</strong>g exemplary play<strong>in</strong>g skills for orchestral play<strong>in</strong>g positions this is takenfor granted by most. The skills required, certa<strong>in</strong>ly by all the orchestras <strong>in</strong> this country, <strong>in</strong>the field of community music, be<strong>in</strong>g part of a smaller group that grows out of an orchestraand experienc<strong>in</strong>g repertoire not necessarily related to orchestral life as it used to be etc. arecerta<strong>in</strong>ly new th<strong>in</strong>gs to most students com<strong>in</strong>g through our hands.’ 17Gav<strong>in</strong> Henderson, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of Tr<strong>in</strong>ity College of Music, acknowledges:‘ ... a new pulse <strong>in</strong> young music-makers – people who will have come with a morecreative attitude, fostered through the National Curriculum – a life <strong>in</strong> which composersare at last rega<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the central ground, a mood <strong>in</strong> which the public may at present choosean even<strong>in</strong>g of African drumm<strong>in</strong>g and dance <strong>in</strong> preference to an orchestral concert, for thevery reason that it can engage directly as a social experience’. 18The College has launched a new MA (Music Education) which offers professional musiciansthe chance to extend their skills as educators and animateurs and helps teachers to developtheir musical, personal and pedagogic skills. Those tak<strong>in</strong>g part can work on curriculum- andteach<strong>in</strong>g-based, community, musical/multimedia presentation, or animateur projects.The London College of Music at Thames Valley University, which offers studentsopportunities to study music technology, popular music and world musics, also <strong>in</strong>troducesthem to work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools and to community-based practice.17 Graham, Gill,unpublished letter tothe author, 6 December1996.18 Henderson, Gav<strong>in</strong>,address to theAssociation of BritishOrchestras’ AnnualConference, Leeds1995 (unpublished).It could no doubt be argued that the conservatoires are mov<strong>in</strong>g too slowly <strong>in</strong> theirprogrammes of reform and are largely (and <strong>in</strong>deed properly) motivated by a concern to equipstudents for their professional careers rather than by any deeply felt commitment to atransformation of the role of orchestras. Nevertheless, even if they are follow<strong>in</strong>g rather thanlead<strong>in</strong>g events, we can safely predict that com<strong>in</strong>g generations of orchestral players will bemuch better tra<strong>in</strong>ed than their predecessors <strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>g a contribution to the cause ofparticipation <strong>in</strong> music. They will be able to play a more active part <strong>in</strong> the creation of newmusics and be more <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> work<strong>in</strong>g alongside composers and amateurs <strong>in</strong> the freer,<strong>in</strong>tercultural, improvisatory, <strong>in</strong>teractive musical life of contemporary Brita<strong>in</strong>.What is strik<strong>in</strong>g about the various tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities that are available is their diversity.There is an enormous amount of activity with different k<strong>in</strong>ds of expertise often built up over


146 RELATIVE VALUESyears of experiment. There is little overall moderation and no comprehensive overview.Outside the formal education sector nobody has quantified likely demand and related it topotential supply. Colleges, universities and conservatoires are dipp<strong>in</strong>g their feet <strong>in</strong>to the waterand engag<strong>in</strong>g with areas of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g previously unfamiliar to them, and many of themappear to be do<strong>in</strong>g excellent work. But their <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> community outreach andeducational projects is not yet a measured response to perceived need. This should be nocause for surprise, see<strong>in</strong>g that the extent of the participatory music sector and its requirementshave not yet been quantified.A positive sign, though, is the <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g will<strong>in</strong>gness of those concerned to look forpartnerships <strong>in</strong> those areas where they do not themselves have the relevant expertise. Thealliance between Sound It Out and the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire is an outstand<strong>in</strong>g case <strong>in</strong>po<strong>in</strong>t. The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system and the education sector have opened a door onto a huge newterritory of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and, even if the extent of its tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g needs is unclear, it is notunreasonable to suppose that they will be expensive to satisfy. The pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of mak<strong>in</strong>g themost effective use of exist<strong>in</strong>g resources through collaboration is a good one. It is certa<strong>in</strong>ly thebest way of mak<strong>in</strong>g progress at a time when public <strong>in</strong>vestment both <strong>in</strong> the arts and <strong>in</strong>education is unlikely to expand.photo: Horniman Museum and Gardens


8 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTION


148 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTION‘To encourage music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and play-act<strong>in</strong>g among the people themselves.’ One of the aims of theCouncil for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts.CEMA, 1940The Arts Council believes, then, that the first claim upon its attention and assistance is that ofma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> London and the larger cities effective power houses of opera, music and drama; forunless those quality <strong>in</strong>stitutions can be ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed the arts are bound to decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong>to mediocrity.W E WILLIAMS, THE ARTS COUNCIL: THE FIRST TEN YEARS, 1956Government motivation used to be that the arts were an ornament of national identity. For <strong>in</strong>stance,part of the glory of Brita<strong>in</strong> was its theatre and – you can see how old I am – the Third Programme.States now have a self-evident reason to promote education and the arts as part of (<strong>in</strong> thecontemporary jargon) the quality of life. It’s an ecological argument. We should care to have the arts<strong>in</strong> a good society.SUSAN SONTAG, 1996The National Lottery is br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g about a historic change to the way <strong>in</strong> which thearts are funded. For the last 50 years s<strong>in</strong>ce the foundation of the Arts Council ofGreat Brita<strong>in</strong> (ACGB), by far the largest proportion of the available resourceshas been devoted to the development of the professional arts. The participatory sector –amateur and community arts – has received a very small slice of the cake. Regional ArtsBoards (RABs) and local authorities have given modest support to community-basedpractice and have <strong>in</strong>vested <strong>in</strong> arts festivals which often have an amateur or participatorycomponent. Umbrella bodies, such as the National Federation of Music Societies(NFMS) and Jazz Services, have received annual grants from the national Arts Councilsdirectly or via the RABs. This has enabled amateur societies and associations tocommission new music and has been of considerable (if limited) assistance. But that hasmore or less been that.Comparisons are not only odious, but sometimes difficult to susta<strong>in</strong> and mislead<strong>in</strong>g.However, one should not forget that other countries have found it possible to do th<strong>in</strong>gsdifferently. It is estimated that <strong>in</strong> 1991 British local authorities spent about £3.5 millionson amateur and participatory arts: a common practice has been to give block grants tolocal arts councils, leav<strong>in</strong>g them with the task of spread<strong>in</strong>g limited cash among the localsocieties <strong>in</strong> their area. No reliable figures are available for the national Arts Councils andthe RABs, although they contributed about £370,000 to amateur music societies. Thetotal sum is unlikely to exceed £1 million. Not far away across the North Sea, we f<strong>in</strong>d amore generous spirit. In The Netherlands, with a population of only 15 million (as aga<strong>in</strong>st56 million <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom), the amateur arts receive about £18 million ofnational, regional and local fund<strong>in</strong>g, of which the state contributes directly about £3.5million. Substantial resources are also allocated from education budgets.Arts education <strong>in</strong> The Netherlands is seen as a crucial means of foster<strong>in</strong>g the amateur arts,the purpose be<strong>in</strong>g to ‘offer high quality education and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g by professional artists witha view to promot<strong>in</strong>g the quality of amateur art’. Music education outside the formalschools sector thrives and the huge growth <strong>in</strong> the number of music schools s<strong>in</strong>ce theSecond World War (<strong>in</strong> 1990 there were 142 subsidised establishments as well as 66general Creativity Centres and other Comb<strong>in</strong>ed Institutions) has made a valuablecontribution to today’s lively musical scene, both <strong>in</strong> terms of new audiences and of playersand composers.


JOINING IN 149Why should this be so? The answer is that the state is committed to the importance ofculture. The Dutch M<strong>in</strong>istry of Welfare, Health and Cultural Affairs (a suggestiveconjunction of responsibilities) is explicit on the subject. It takes a broad, cultural l<strong>in</strong>e, not<strong>in</strong>consistent, it is <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g to note, with the underly<strong>in</strong>g purposes of community music asdescribed <strong>in</strong> this book:‘Participation <strong>in</strong> cultural activities is a manifestation of factors such as enterta<strong>in</strong>ment,personal experience and personal development but also of much broader social<strong>in</strong>fluences. The dissem<strong>in</strong>ation of culture not only means that as many people aspossible can profit from and enjoy cultural achievements (“lire, c’est vivre plus”), italso <strong>in</strong>creases the awareness of the citizen, the <strong>in</strong>dependent development of orig<strong>in</strong>alideas ... By stimulat<strong>in</strong>g participation <strong>in</strong> cultural activities one is able to provide peoplewith the opportunity to compare their own views and op<strong>in</strong>ions with the po<strong>in</strong>ts ofview and experiences of others ... It is for this reason that the dissem<strong>in</strong>ation of culturethroughout the social spectrum – seek<strong>in</strong>g to achieve a situation <strong>in</strong> which everymember of the community, whatever his or her social orig<strong>in</strong>s or position, has theopportunity to participate <strong>in</strong> cultural activities – serves not only a cultural but a general<strong>in</strong>terest.’ 1This is not the k<strong>in</strong>d of language we are used to hear<strong>in</strong>g from the Arts Councils andBritish governments, nor the levels of <strong>in</strong>vestment we have come to expect. However, thesituation <strong>in</strong> this country now appears to be on the po<strong>in</strong>t of transformation. A newappreciation of the importance of cultural participation is dawn<strong>in</strong>g.With the arrival of the National Lottery <strong>in</strong> 1995 very large sums of money becameavailable for capital projects, and amateur and community arts groups were eligible forsupport. Dur<strong>in</strong>g the early months of 1996 pressure grew for the rules to be relaxed toaccommodate support for activity as well as build<strong>in</strong>gs. In March the Department ofNational Heritage signalled its grow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> participation <strong>in</strong> the arts with thepublication of an important booklet, appropriately entitled Tak<strong>in</strong>g Part. It advocated active<strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> creative practice <strong>in</strong> addition to the development of audiences for theprofessional arts:1 Invest<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Culture,Netherlands PolicyDocument on Culture1993-1996, (TheHague, M<strong>in</strong>istry ofWelfare, Health andCultural Affairs) p.25.2 Tak<strong>in</strong>g Part (London,Department of NationalHeritage, 1996) p.10.3 New LotteryProgrammes, op cit,foreword by theChairman(unpag<strong>in</strong>ated).4 Arts4Everyone, ArtsCouncil of England,application leaflet, p.2.‘Celebrat<strong>in</strong>g our shared culture means not just watch<strong>in</strong>g sport, but gett<strong>in</strong>g out andplay<strong>in</strong>g it; not just admir<strong>in</strong>g the achievements of professional actors, musicians andcraftsmen, but hav<strong>in</strong>g a go ourselves ... Amateur participation <strong>in</strong> the arts and craftsrepresents a key element <strong>in</strong> this country’s cultural fabric.’ 2With<strong>in</strong> a few weeks the Arts Council of England (ACE) launched a consultativedocument, announc<strong>in</strong>g:‘We are ... very grateful to the Secretary of State for the National Heritage forlisten<strong>in</strong>g to our pleas and allow<strong>in</strong>g us to make Lottery awards for certa<strong>in</strong> k<strong>in</strong>ds ofcreative activity ... a range of new Lottery programmes will be drawn up – oncommissions for new work, access to and participation <strong>in</strong> the arts and enhanc<strong>in</strong>g thecreative abilities of young people <strong>in</strong> particular’. 3Events moved at great speed: a rapid consultation phase ensued and before the year’s endthe national Arts Councils had announced schemes to ‘give a very wide range of peoplethroughout [the country] the chance to enjoy high-quality creative activity – either asaudiences and viewers or by tak<strong>in</strong>g part’. 4Cynics have argued that this spurt of activity resulted from the negative publicity whichsome large grants to major professional arts organisations, such as the Royal Opera House,


150 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTIONhad generated. But, for all the suddenness of the <strong>in</strong>ception of this new policy, there isevidence that over a number of years those concerned with arts fund<strong>in</strong>g had beengradually reth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g the system’s exclusive commitment to professional excellence.The pendulum appears to be sw<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g back to the early 1940s when the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of statesupport for the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts was first established. Dur<strong>in</strong>g the Second World War it wasobserved that, while ENSA was responsible for organis<strong>in</strong>g enterta<strong>in</strong>ment for the armedservices, no arrangements had been considered for civilians on the ‘home front’. ThePilgrim Trust, a charitable foundation, was approached by the Board of Education (theDepartment for Education and Employment’s predecessor) to create the Council for theEncouragement of Music and the Arts (CEMA). It was to have two broad objectives – toencourage the amateur arts (that is, ‘music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and play-act<strong>in</strong>g by the peoplethemselves’) and to ensure that professional artists, their livelihoods threatened by the war,were given work. CEMA’s underly<strong>in</strong>g philosophy was rooted <strong>in</strong> the social idealism of the1930s and, of its two aims, the emphasis on participation, on the <strong>in</strong>volvement of ord<strong>in</strong>arypeople of all classes, took precedence. One typical scheme was the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of anumber of ‘music travellers’ whose task was to encourage amateur music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and topromote concerts.However, it was not long before the claims of the professional artist began topredom<strong>in</strong>ate. Despite the fact that when government fund<strong>in</strong>g arrived to complement thePilgrim Trust’s own resources it was <strong>in</strong>tended exclusively for amateur practitioners, aprofessional repertory theatre company was established to tour the regions. So almost fromits beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs, an ideological conflict underp<strong>in</strong>ned the theory and practice of publicfund<strong>in</strong>g of the arts. Serious efforts were made to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> a holistic approach to policy,but gradually the <strong>in</strong>terests of the public as audience, reader or spectator overtook those ofthe public as doer, maker or participant.The economist John Maynard Keynes was appo<strong>in</strong>ted chairman of CEMA and he went onto plan the ACGB to which the baton would be handed after the end of hostilities. Hewas, <strong>in</strong> fact, ‘<strong>in</strong> only limited sympathy with [CEMA’s] objectives’. He wrote: ‘I wasworried lest what one may call the welfare side was to be developed at the expense of theartistic side, and standards generally.’ Here we see the orig<strong>in</strong>s of the long quarrel aboutquality which I have shown <strong>in</strong> earlier chapters to be a common thread runn<strong>in</strong>g throughthe debates on participation <strong>in</strong> the arts over the years.Although they were revised follow<strong>in</strong>g opposition from people such as Vaughan Williamswho did not want to lose all the ga<strong>in</strong>s of the CEMA days, Keynes’s draft objectives forthe new Arts Council charter make his basic attitude clear. In his view, the organisationshould aim:5 It should be notedhere that the ArtsCouncil of Wales,sensitive to thetraditions of the arts <strong>in</strong>Wales, has always takena more active l<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong>encourag<strong>in</strong>g amateuractivity.‘a to <strong>in</strong>crease and widen the distribution of the audiences of the artsb to improve the standard of execution <strong>in</strong> the artsc to encourage and aid an adequate system of professional tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.’In the years which have followed the war, the Arts Councils have enjoyed manysuccesses. The arts of the metropolis flourish as never before; <strong>in</strong> the regions orchestras,opera companies and regional theatres proliferate. Focus<strong>in</strong>g on the needs of theprofessional artist and usually see<strong>in</strong>g the public as consumer rather than producer, theCouncils have helped to stimulate a great artistic revival. 5But this achievement has been a partial one. The state, through the Arts Councils, hastended to focus on what are often called the ‘high arts’ (or <strong>in</strong> Raymond Williams’ phrase,


JOINING IN 151the ‘old arts’) and little attention has been paid until recently to traditional folk arts ormass popular culture. While professional arts production has <strong>in</strong>creased together withaudiences, the social composition of the arts public has not significantly altered.Voices of dissent were never stilled. The amateur arts cont<strong>in</strong>ued on their way, excludedfrom national policy, although <strong>in</strong>form<strong>in</strong>g local cultures. As NFMS observed, ‘the term“amateur” has often been used pejoratively despite the fact that excellence and amateurmusic were never mutually exclusive.’ 6 When the Arts Council closed its regional offices<strong>in</strong> 1957, the long birth of the Regional Arts Associations (RAAs, now RABs) began: localpeople came together to form organisations which they controlled, not some distantcentral authority. The arts centre movement spread across the country, br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g all k<strong>in</strong>ds,levels and degrees of artistic activity under a s<strong>in</strong>gle roof. Then, as we have seen, thecommunity arts movement sprang up from the ferment of the 1960s.Meanwhile, <strong>in</strong> 1948, local authorities were given the power to devote the product of a 6drate to all forms of enterta<strong>in</strong>ment and <strong>in</strong> 1963 were enabled to spend limited sums ongeneral projects (<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the arts) to improve their areas and to subsidise organisationsoutside their own boundaries, so empower<strong>in</strong>g them to contribute to RAAs. The Labourgovernment’s famous White Paper on the arts <strong>in</strong> 1965 gave an impulse to decentralisationwhen it argued that ‘if a high level of artistic achievement is to be susta<strong>in</strong>ed and the best<strong>in</strong> the arts made more widely available, more generous and discrim<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g help is urgentlyneeded, locally, regionally and nationally.’ 7 Slowly, local government <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> the artsgrew and began to extend beyond the larger cities; these had long ev<strong>in</strong>ced a naturalconcern for the major arts organisations and build<strong>in</strong>gs that operated <strong>in</strong> their centres anddeveloped f<strong>in</strong>ancial partnerships with ACGB (an exception prov<strong>in</strong>g the rule were thegreat Northern cities which, with other local councils, helped to found the North EastArts Association – now the Northern Arts Board – with regional grant-mak<strong>in</strong>g purposesspecifically <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d). Relations began to develop between local councils and the RAAswhich assiduously recruited them as pay<strong>in</strong>g members. By the mid-1980s there was hardlya local authority not <strong>in</strong> membership.In 1976, Lord Redcliffe-Maud published his magisterial report, Support for the Arts <strong>in</strong>England and Wales, <strong>in</strong> which he argued the primary role of local authorities and proposedsubstantial devolution of responsibilities from ACGB to the RAAs. In response to thequestion ‘For whose benefit should we support the arts from public funds?’, he offered aformulation which was far closer to that of CEMA than that of Keynes:6 NFMS – Serv<strong>in</strong>gMusic, Five YearDevelopment Plan 1996-2000, op cit, p.3.7 A Policy for the Arts:the first steps (London,HMSO, 1968).‘ “The many and the few” is my broad answer. The many, because no one is<strong>in</strong>capable of some enjoyment or experience of the arts if he has an opportunity touse his own peculiar powers of creation and recreation. The few, because at all timesand all places creative talent is rare and genius is very rare <strong>in</strong>deed. Our society, itseems to me, will not become more civilised if it ignores the claims of either group... The “many” and the “few” do not together constitute the whole population.They must be thought of, rather, as the largest and smallest of a whole series ofconcentric circles. The <strong>in</strong>nermost circle consists of the few people of genius ... Widerthan the circle of genius, is that of talent, of many various k<strong>in</strong>ds. Wider still is thecircle of those capable of professional teach<strong>in</strong>g of their art (for <strong>in</strong>stance music)though not themselves so talented as the professional performers. Outside that circleare the active amateurs – s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> choral societies, play<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> orchestras, brass bandsand pop groups, act<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> drama societies or community art, but earn<strong>in</strong>g their liv<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> other ways. Beyond them is the still wider circle of those who enjoy the arts asaudience, whether of broadcast or live performance. And beyond them “the many”.


152 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTIONNo circle is at any moment static or exclusive. All of them fade <strong>in</strong>to each other likecolours <strong>in</strong> a ra<strong>in</strong>bow.’ 8For most of the post-war period it has been the local authorities and RAAs, which after<strong>in</strong>itial suspicions have moved <strong>in</strong>to often close alliance, that by and large have sought topursue this holistic approach and the Arts Councils which by and large have spent most oftheir resources and energy on the professional arts. What is <strong>in</strong> essence a battle of ideas wasfought with <strong>in</strong>stitutional weapons; from the late 1970s <strong>in</strong> England the RAAs and the ArtsCouncil have locked horns over devolution of fund<strong>in</strong>g responsibilities. In 1984 theACGB published a strategic review, The Glory of the Garden, which while applaud<strong>in</strong>g theeducational policies of the professional arts made no reference to the amateur orparticipatory arts; however, it announced a programme of limited devolution. In the lastdecade or so a good deal has been handed over by the centre to the regions, but at theprice of closer supervision through a national plann<strong>in</strong>g process managed by the ArtsCouncil.I do not want to oversimplify the picture; while it is true that the RAAs took a wider andmore <strong>in</strong>tegrated view of the arts than the Arts Council few of them have shown muchmore <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> support<strong>in</strong>g amateurs than the Arts Councils (Wales excepted). LordRedcliffe-Maud aga<strong>in</strong>:‘RAAs have tended to ignore amateur music unless it <strong>in</strong>volves the <strong>in</strong>troduction of“professional stiffen<strong>in</strong>g” for an orchestra or a concert. But they are well placed to seekways of actively encourag<strong>in</strong>g and stimulat<strong>in</strong>g amateurs. At present few RAAs have anysizeable amateur representation on their music panels. If this fault is corrected, theRAAs will at least become aware of the needs to be met ... Meanwhile amateurs mustcont<strong>in</strong>ue to look to their local authority for aid <strong>in</strong> the first <strong>in</strong>stance.’ 9Little has changed <strong>in</strong> substance s<strong>in</strong>ce he wrote these words.Most local authorities have arts and recreation or leisure departments (despite the fact thatspend<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> this area rema<strong>in</strong>s discretionary rather than compulsory) with some specialiststaff and vary<strong>in</strong>g sizes of budget. They own and manage museums and galleries, libraries,perform<strong>in</strong>g venues and educational facilities and so are responsible for much of thenation’s arts <strong>in</strong>frastructure. They also promote festivals, concerts and various outdoorenterta<strong>in</strong>ment and event programmes. What they do not do directly they often assistf<strong>in</strong>ancially. Councils also often support the arts from other budgets too (for example, thosefor economic development, property services and education). This makes it difficult toestablish their overall expenditure. No precise calculations exist for their spend<strong>in</strong>g on theparticipatory arts <strong>in</strong> general, and participatory music <strong>in</strong> particular.8 Redcliffe-Maud,Lord, Future Support forthe Arts <strong>in</strong> England andWales (London,<strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, 1976)pp.21-22.9 Ibid, p.131.However, accord<strong>in</strong>g to the estimates of the Chartered Institute for Public F<strong>in</strong>ance andAccountancy, <strong>in</strong> 1995-6 total local government spend<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> England and Wales on thearts as a whole amounted to about £277 million. This is more than the total monies atthe disposal of the Arts Councils of England and Wales. Government arts spend<strong>in</strong>g is£3.80 per person <strong>in</strong> England, £5.30 <strong>in</strong> Scotland, £4.90 <strong>in</strong> Wales and £4.10 <strong>in</strong> NorthernIreland. Individual councils spend at very different levels, rang<strong>in</strong>g from Birm<strong>in</strong>gham’s £11per head of population to Solihull’s 77p among metropolitan authorities; Leicestershire’s£5 to Hertfordshire’s 10p among county councils; and Cambridge’s £16.50 to Haver<strong>in</strong>g’s49p among district and borough councils.A lead<strong>in</strong>g local authority arts official notes:‘Many local authorities now provide susta<strong>in</strong>ed programmes of participatory arts


JOINING IN 153activities with<strong>in</strong> the community. Some of them yield permanent fruit <strong>in</strong> the form ofdecorative artworks, whose community orig<strong>in</strong>s enable them to tell a more potent storythan imported sculptural purchases can hope to match. Not only do these communityarts programmes awaken and develop arts <strong>in</strong>terests amongst many people who have noeducational predisposition to the arts. They also make far-reach<strong>in</strong>g personalcontributions to the lives of people tak<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong> them, creat<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> dispirited andfragmented communities a new sense of purpose and hope.’ 10Local councils have long supported amateur arts groups, often through subsidised facilities,often <strong>in</strong> schools. But government reforms and f<strong>in</strong>ancial pressures are reduc<strong>in</strong>g the value ofthis assistance. The compla<strong>in</strong>ts of NFMS are not untypical:‘One of the biggest problems ... is the provision and hire charges for venues, both forrehearsals and concerts. There has been a large <strong>in</strong>crease <strong>in</strong> the cost of hir<strong>in</strong>g schoolhalls <strong>in</strong> the past few years and a number of societies have moved to church premises <strong>in</strong>consequence. These are <strong>in</strong>variably cheaper but often not so well-suited to theirneeds.’ 11Community arts, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g community music, have been supported by local government,but only spasmodically because fund<strong>in</strong>g came from poorly-resourced leisure/arts/librariesdepartments as opposed to the comfortably f<strong>in</strong>anced local education departments. Also,dur<strong>in</strong>g the 1980s many politicians <strong>in</strong> major authorities were impressed by the case put forthe economic impact of the arts and <strong>in</strong>vested <strong>in</strong> glamorous city-centre capitaldevelopments (‘city imag<strong>in</strong>g’). However, there are signs, albeit largely anecdotal, of arevival of <strong>in</strong>terest. Irene McDonald, deputy leader of K<strong>in</strong>gs Lynn and West NorfolkBorough Council, told me: ‘One reason it’s happen<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong> is because of the widespreadappo<strong>in</strong>tment of arts development officers <strong>in</strong> recent years. Some of them are act<strong>in</strong>g asagents provocateurs, present<strong>in</strong>g all k<strong>in</strong>ds of community-based projects.’ Unfortunately,because local authority arts budgets often have to be devoted to the management ofcouncil-owned facilities (civic theatres and the like), most of this work is poorly resourcedand limited to one-off projects.10 Sargent, Anthony,‘More than the sum ofits parts: cultural policyand plann<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>Birm<strong>in</strong>gham’, CulturalPolicy, HarwoodAcademic Publishers,vol. 2, no. 2, TheNetherlands, 1996,p.310.11 Letter from DonaldSheppard, Secretary ofNFMS South, toRussell Jones, ChiefExecutive, NFMS,23 November 1995.Two further trends are worth not<strong>in</strong>g. Local government has traditionally (although by nomeans exclusively) focused on the services it can provide and its own direct promotions,but a comb<strong>in</strong>ation of decl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g powers and f<strong>in</strong>ancial resources, the availability of variousk<strong>in</strong>ds of national and European Union grants for economic and social regeneration and agrow<strong>in</strong>g debate about the importance of <strong>in</strong>dependent voluntary organisations (the socalled‘Third Sector’) <strong>in</strong> civil governance is lead<strong>in</strong>g some authorities to see encouragementof the arts less as a discrete activity than as an essential component of communitydevelopment. As Irene McDonald po<strong>in</strong>ts out, the emphasis is shift<strong>in</strong>g from high culture to‘our “common culture”. That is, you should always start where the people are and thenbr<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> whatever is necessary. You ask “What do you want to do”, rather than “This iswhat we would like you to do”.’This approach harmonises with the philosophy underly<strong>in</strong>g the new Lottery schemes.While traditional arts organisations are eligible, the criterion of professional excellencematched by expand<strong>in</strong>g audiences has been subsumed <strong>in</strong> five wider aims: encourag<strong>in</strong>gnew audiences to experience high-quality arts activity; encourag<strong>in</strong>g and develop<strong>in</strong>gparticipation <strong>in</strong> arts activity; gett<strong>in</strong>g more young people actively <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> arts andcultural activities; support<strong>in</strong>g new work and help<strong>in</strong>g it develop its audience; andbuild<strong>in</strong>g people’s creative potential through tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g or professional development.The National Lottery is br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g torrents of cash <strong>in</strong>to the arts world and it looks very


154 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTIONmuch as if the outcome will be, at long last, a reunion of the two fund<strong>in</strong>g traditions thatderive from CEMA and Keynes. The four Arts Councils are likely to receive fromLottery receipts an estimated £1.6 billion <strong>in</strong> total by the year 2000. There really ought tobe enough to satisfy everyone’s demands and the prospects for the participatory arts lookbright.However, it would be wrong not to sound a few cautionary notes. It is not known forhow long the five ‘good causes’ (the arts, sport, the heritage, the charity sector and theMillennium Commission) will rema<strong>in</strong> the sole beneficiaries of National Lottery proceeds.The Millennium Commission is, by def<strong>in</strong>ition, a fixed-term enterprise and, althoughnone of the political parties have yet made it clear how they will dispose of this fund<strong>in</strong>gstream after the turn of the century, it appears unlikely that it will be distributed amongthe four survivors. The new Labour adm<strong>in</strong>istration has already said that it is <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>extend<strong>in</strong>g the number of good causes. The difficulties of f<strong>in</strong>anc<strong>in</strong>g the Welfare Statecould well persuade a future government at some stage to divert some or all of the Lotteryproceeds to other social purposes. That would leave the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system with widerresponsibilities, but without the resources to f<strong>in</strong>ance them.A further difficulty is that, although the Arts Councils are now <strong>in</strong> a position to subsidiseactivity as well as build<strong>in</strong>gs, the grants available through Arts4Everyone and their Scottish,Northern Irish and Welsh equivalents are not for cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g support, but for one-off orfixed-term projects. There is good reason for this limitation, because otherwise it wouldbe possible for the Treasury to argue that Lottery money was be<strong>in</strong>g spent on the samepurposes for which their annual grant-<strong>in</strong>-aid to the Arts Councils is designed – and,accord<strong>in</strong>gly, that the grant-<strong>in</strong>-aid should be reduced.Nevertheless, the question arises what amateur and community groups will do once theirLottery projects have come to an end if they are prohibited from apply<strong>in</strong>g for furthergrants for the same purposes. Expectations will have been raised <strong>in</strong> the short to mediumterm which may have to be dashed <strong>in</strong> the long term. This is a difficult dilemma for thefund<strong>in</strong>g system, which it will have to address <strong>in</strong> the next few years.There are already om<strong>in</strong>ous signs of an <strong>in</strong>cipient and potentially divisive quarrel betweenthe professional and the participatory (amateur and community-based) sectors.Community musicians, for example, are worried that the orchestras, highly experienced asthey are <strong>in</strong> fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> what one might call the ‘subsidy game’, will grab the lion’sshare of resources for their educational and outreach work at their expense. At aconference convened by the National Campaign for the Arts, Peter F<strong>in</strong>ch of the actors’union Equity had a diametrically opposed anxiety:12 The National Lottery– Whatever Next? op cit,p.14.13 From a letter toThe Times, 3 September1996.‘The Arts Council is look<strong>in</strong>g at chang<strong>in</strong>g the way it has funded historically. [Its]Green Paper says that the fund<strong>in</strong>g system has wanted for some time to f<strong>in</strong>d ways ofhelp<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> such areas – amateur theatre, opera etc. Now that does seem to me afundamental change <strong>in</strong> the Arts Council of England’s fund<strong>in</strong>g policy. I totallysupport amateur arts, but the thread runn<strong>in</strong>g through this document does seem to methat we should use all the new money to support amateur arts. Now when thewhole professional sector is so neglected, <strong>in</strong> particular, the performers, that mustmean we have got our priorities wrong.’ 12The issue also boiled over <strong>in</strong> the letters page of The Times, where a former MusicDirector of the BBC, Robert Ponsonby, wrote criticis<strong>in</strong>g ACE’s approach: ‘At this stage,amateur bodies should not be eligible for support: our professionals must come first.’ 13


JOINING IN 155It is true that public sector arts budgets are under pressure; local government spend<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>England and Wales fell by about £3 million <strong>in</strong> 1995-6 and the Arts Council’s Treasurygrant for 1997-8 stands at £186 million – the same amount as for 1992-3. But the fears ofthe arts world regard<strong>in</strong>g Lottery fund<strong>in</strong>g are not borne out by the Arts Council’s explicit<strong>in</strong>tention to help both the amateur and the professional, although should the resourcesavailable fall short of overall demand at some stage <strong>in</strong> the future it is not unreasonable toforesee trouble ahead among compet<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest groups.An <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g feature of the arrangements for the new Lottery schemes is that thedistribution of grants is to rema<strong>in</strong> firmly <strong>in</strong> the hands of the Arts Councils. Bear<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>m<strong>in</strong>d that, as I have said, many local authorities have set up arts departments, that theRABs have a wide range of expertise on their staffs, and that both sets of organisations seethemselves as be<strong>in</strong>g closer to, and so more knowledgeable about, the activities of manyamateur and community-based applicants than the Arts Councils, this seems an odd stateof affairs. Some RAB op<strong>in</strong>ion feels that from be<strong>in</strong>g relatively autonomous <strong>in</strong>stitutions theywill be reduced to little more than conduits for, and promoters of, someone else’sschemes. If this is to be so, it is hardly <strong>in</strong> l<strong>in</strong>e with the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of subsidiarity – namely,that decisions should be taken as close as possible to those whom they will affect.Dur<strong>in</strong>g the period of consultation, a number of agencies suggested that, rather thandelegate Lottery grant-giv<strong>in</strong>g down the official arts fund<strong>in</strong>g structure, it would be betterto exploit the potential of the numerous umbrella bodies that speak for the amateur arts.Thus NFMS wrote:‘The political dynamic and the only sensible delivery mechanism is subsidiarity via theexist<strong>in</strong>g grass roots support networks. The voluntary arts are typically organisedpyramidically. Clubs and societies are grouped by region and affiliated to a nationalfederation. Like the pyramid, this structure is enormously strong and the nationalbodies draw their legitimacy directly from the grassroots activity they service.’ 14Some of them, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g NFMS, have received public sector grants for distributionamong their members.It is an appeal<strong>in</strong>g notion. Unfortunately, important sectors of amateur musical practice (egrock and pop) are not represented by umbrella bodies and not every umbrella body is aswell-equipped as NFMS to undertake a fund<strong>in</strong>g role. It could also be objected that itwould be wrong to hand decision-mak<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>in</strong>terested parties (‘jobs for the boys’), eventhough the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of draw<strong>in</strong>g a l<strong>in</strong>e between benefactors and beneficiaries has alreadybeen breached to no evident harm.The chief explanation for the present arrangements is that the Lottery legislation andaccompany<strong>in</strong>g m<strong>in</strong>isterial directives forbid the named Lottery distributors, among themthe Arts Councils, from devolv<strong>in</strong>g any of their responsibilities to other bodies. That said,they are expected to consult widely among all relevant <strong>in</strong>terested parties, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g localauthorities and RABs, before determ<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g grants. It is also worth remember<strong>in</strong>g that manylocal authorities are themselves likely to be applicants for Lottery funds and their positionwould clearly be compromised if they were <strong>in</strong> charge of fund<strong>in</strong>g decisions.14 New LotteryProgrammes – a Responsefrom the NationalFederation of MusicSocieties (London,undated) p.4.However, this centralisation will place a very heavy adm<strong>in</strong>istrative burden on already busyagencies and may be a distraction from what has been their function <strong>in</strong> the past, thedistribution of their Treasury grant-<strong>in</strong>-aid for the benefit of the professional arts. Somealso suspect that the press of events will make it difficult for them to engage <strong>in</strong> the generalpolicy review which the open<strong>in</strong>g up of their policies to amateurs will no doubt


156 THE SUBSIDY REVOLUTIONnecessitate. This is clearly a danger, but the Arts Councils have done their best to devisestreaml<strong>in</strong>ed procedures to avert it; the ‘express’ route for applications for grants of up to£5,000 will necessitate a m<strong>in</strong>imum of assessment.So far as music policy is concerned, ACE’s music department is well up with the game.Follow<strong>in</strong>g its policy reviews for orchestras <strong>in</strong> 1995 and jazz <strong>in</strong> 1996, it has recently issuedCreat<strong>in</strong>g New Notes, a policy for the support of new music <strong>in</strong> England. It adopts a consciously<strong>in</strong>tegrated approach to the full spectrum of musics <strong>in</strong> England, for the first time s<strong>in</strong>ceCEMA more than half a century ago. Its <strong>in</strong>troduction states:‘Music is a fundamental impulse. Whether as ritual, celebration or enterta<strong>in</strong>ment, asparticipation or performance, it has played a central role <strong>in</strong> the life of every society ...the geographical, cultural and historical barriers which used to restrict people’s musicalexperience have largely disappeared. Recent developments <strong>in</strong> music educationembrace a much more diverse range of musical styles and place creative music-mak<strong>in</strong>gat the heart of the syllabus for the National Curriculum. And <strong>in</strong> a society where<strong>in</strong>dividuals have <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g amounts of leisure time, there is a grow<strong>in</strong>g demand foropportunities to participate <strong>in</strong> new music, whether through access to record<strong>in</strong>g studiosfor young people or through amateur ensembles and adult education.’ 15Its objectives <strong>in</strong>clude: ‘To enable people of all ages to participate <strong>in</strong> the creation andperformance of new music through voluntary organisations ... ; to work <strong>in</strong> partnershipwith the education sector to ensure that creative music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools is extended anddeveloped’. 16 To judge from their literature, the other Arts Councils <strong>in</strong> Northern Ireland,Scotland and Wales would not dissent from a word of this.The greatest s<strong>in</strong>gle obstacle to ensur<strong>in</strong>g that Lottery monies have an optimum impact onthe development of participatory musics lies <strong>in</strong> the government’s <strong>in</strong>sistence that thedistributors do not target spend<strong>in</strong>g accord<strong>in</strong>g to their strategic priorities or particularpolicy objectives. It is asserted that this is the <strong>in</strong>evitable consequence of Parliament’s<strong>in</strong>tention, enshr<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> the terms of the National Lottery Act, that all applicants be treatedon an equal basis and judged on their <strong>in</strong>dividual merits – <strong>in</strong> other words, that there shouldbe a ‘level play<strong>in</strong>g field’.If this approach is to be applied literally, it will not be easy to address some of thechallenges I have identified <strong>in</strong> this book <strong>in</strong> more than an ad hoc way. To pluck out acouple of them at random, one might cite the need to <strong>in</strong>vest <strong>in</strong>telligently <strong>in</strong> newtechnologies and the importance of develop<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities coherently andcomprehensively.15 Creat<strong>in</strong>g New Notes,a policy for the support ofnew music <strong>in</strong> England(London, Arts Councilof England, 1996) p.2.16 Ibid, p.3.However, it would appear that <strong>in</strong> other areas the government is tak<strong>in</strong>g a flexible l<strong>in</strong>eand allow<strong>in</strong>g a grow<strong>in</strong>g degree of prioritisation. The National Lottery Charities Board,for example, whose ma<strong>in</strong> aims are to help meet the needs of those at greatestdisadvantage <strong>in</strong> society and to improve the quality of life <strong>in</strong> the community, hasannounced a roll<strong>in</strong>g series of targeted programmes: the first was to focus on poverty, thesecond on youth issues and low <strong>in</strong>come, the third on health, disability and care, and thefourth on ‘new opportunities and choices and voluntary sector development’. There isalso an International Grants Programme which supports UK-based charities work<strong>in</strong>gabroad.It would be helpful if the Arts Councils, <strong>in</strong> relation to their new schemes (Arts4Everyone<strong>in</strong> England, Arts for All <strong>in</strong> Wales and New Directions <strong>in</strong> Scotland), were empowered to godown the same road. They would then be able to set out a chang<strong>in</strong>g series of favoured


JOINING IN 157themes or priorities and so address particular challenges or opportunities <strong>in</strong> theparticipatory arts. In order to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of open application, each themewould run for a set number of years and would not be expected to consume more than apredeterm<strong>in</strong>ed proportion of overall expenditure.Fund<strong>in</strong>g structures may be seen as no more than a neutral question of adm<strong>in</strong>istrativedetail. The history of arts subsidy <strong>in</strong> the last 60 years suggests, on the contrary, that theyreflect and embody cultural assumptions. The arrangements for Lottery distribution willdoubtless cont<strong>in</strong>ue to be the subject of close scrut<strong>in</strong>y and sometimes heated debate.However, a system has been set <strong>in</strong> place and is unlikely to be greatly altered <strong>in</strong> the nearfuture. The com<strong>in</strong>g year or two will demonstrate how well it works <strong>in</strong> practice. The ArtsCouncils and the government would be wise to keep it under close scrut<strong>in</strong>y and makesuch changes as seem necessary from to time. They might even go further. The speedwith which the new policy has been brought <strong>in</strong> means that it is be<strong>in</strong>g implemented by<strong>in</strong>stitutions which were designed for other purposes and it would be surpris<strong>in</strong>g if this didnot create stra<strong>in</strong>s; while I hesitate to suggest yet another overhaul of the arts fund<strong>in</strong>gsystem, there is a case for a review of Lottery fund<strong>in</strong>g procedures once they have had timeto prove themselves – say, <strong>in</strong> three or five years’ time. The signs are that the new Labourgovernment’s arts policy will major on <strong>in</strong>ter-departmental co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation across the fullextent of Whitehall, on the provision of extra-curricular cultural opportunities and on apossible enhanced obligation laid on local authorities to plan and provide for culturalactivities at community level. This may mean that the need for a review will be rathermore urgent.The worst th<strong>in</strong>g would be not to see the wood for the trees. While it is true that thedevil often lies <strong>in</strong> the detail, we should not underestimate the seismic importance of thestate’s new commitment to the participatory, voluntary, amateur and community arts.This will surely generate its own momentum <strong>in</strong> the development of artistic practice. Oneway or another, the technicalities of grant management will be obliged to follow suit.


photo: Horniman Museum and Gardens


9 WHAT NEXT?


160 WHAT NEXT?Iam near<strong>in</strong>g the end of my journey. And, like Alice <strong>in</strong> the garden of the look<strong>in</strong>g-glasshouse, I f<strong>in</strong>d I am suddenly at my start<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t aga<strong>in</strong> – that is to say, the nature andfunction of participation <strong>in</strong> society today. In these clos<strong>in</strong>g remarks, I want to stepback, draw out some of the themes I have argued earlier and br<strong>in</strong>g forward suggestions forwhat could or should be done to build on all that has been achieved so far.My key theme has been this. Music is the first th<strong>in</strong>g we ‘say’, for it pre-dates languageand we receive and transmit mean<strong>in</strong>gs from sounds before we have mastered words. Itemerges from our deepest mental processes. This is the orig<strong>in</strong> of its endur<strong>in</strong>g powerthroughout our lives and is perhaps the fundamental reason that music is a near-universalaccompaniment to the bus<strong>in</strong>ess of existence.The ubiquity and variety of participatory music <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom can be partlyexpla<strong>in</strong>ed as the contemporary expression of cultural traditions go<strong>in</strong>g back many hundredsof years. But they also reflect the way we live now. For many people, value judgmentshave become relative and a pervasive <strong>in</strong>dividualism is alter<strong>in</strong>g our notions both of stable,fixed communities and of stable, fixed ideas of artistic quality. Technological advance hasmassively expanded the availability of every k<strong>in</strong>d of music and consumers are beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g toplay an active rather than a passive role – by hav<strong>in</strong>g to choose from the multiplicity ofcultural material on offer, by exploit<strong>in</strong>g the arts <strong>in</strong> the construction of their lifestyles and,<strong>in</strong> some cases, by us<strong>in</strong>g technology to modify the works of others. Digitisation is enlarg<strong>in</strong>gthe possibilities of creativity, for it enables the mak<strong>in</strong>g of music without <strong>in</strong>struments.It is no wonder, then, that music, whether created with a computer <strong>in</strong> a bedroom,presented <strong>in</strong> the top room of a pub or crafted for the discrete charm of the concert hall, isbecom<strong>in</strong>g more of a solitary pursuit. While, of course, it rema<strong>in</strong>s <strong>in</strong> many ways avigorously social art, much of it tak<strong>in</strong>g place <strong>in</strong> societies, associations and clubs, a keytrend <strong>in</strong> recent years has been towards celebrat<strong>in</strong>g or serv<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>in</strong>dividual, alone or <strong>in</strong> agroup of other <strong>in</strong>dividuals, rather than <strong>in</strong>tegrat<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>in</strong>dividual <strong>in</strong>to the group.This has meant that we have to redef<strong>in</strong>e the purposes of community music, shift<strong>in</strong>g theemphasis from a territorial def<strong>in</strong>ition of community to the multifarious and oftenprovisional forms of socialisation that have emerged <strong>in</strong> today’s climate of shift<strong>in</strong>gallegiances. In fact, it is time to ditch the term and replace it with ‘participatory music’.In a conventional report, this, the f<strong>in</strong>al chapter, is where the reader expects to f<strong>in</strong>d aneatly tabulated list of recommendations. I would not like to disappo<strong>in</strong>t. There are anumber of practical measures that need to be taken and I shall say what they are. But thisbook is aimed at provok<strong>in</strong>g thought and discussion rather than simply draw<strong>in</strong>g up abluepr<strong>in</strong>t for decision-makers. What is to be done depends <strong>in</strong> the first <strong>in</strong>stance on whatpeople want to have done.Participatory music faces no particular crisis. In fact, one could argue the reverse. It ispractised by millions and enjoyed by millions. It is one of the success stories ofcontemporary British civilisation. Whatever the government, local councils and the artsfund<strong>in</strong>g system choose to do is unlikely to make a fundamental difference to thisunend<strong>in</strong>g efflorescence of musicality.Perhaps the most strik<strong>in</strong>g feature of the creative world I have tried to describe is its<strong>in</strong>visibility. The fact that it is everywhere may be one reason why it is so little regarded. Itpasses as unnoticed as pav<strong>in</strong>g stones or street furniture. Happily, there are signs of change.Perhaps the most encourag<strong>in</strong>g development of recent years is that professional musiciansand public authorities are beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to shift their stance and to accord participatory music


JOINING IN 161the social and artistic status it deserves. My fervent hope is that this process cont<strong>in</strong>ues.What those who care about participatory music are rightly demand<strong>in</strong>g of the music worldand the state is that they adopt a common vision of music which embraces the rich varietyof practice <strong>in</strong> this country. Anne Hunt put it well when she said:‘My vision is simple. I would like to see created <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom a musicalclimate where no one had any <strong>in</strong>hibitions about s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g or play<strong>in</strong>g an <strong>in</strong>strument; wherecollective music-mak<strong>in</strong>g as a social activity was high on the agenda of hundreds ofthousands of people of all ages throughout the country; where <strong>in</strong>dividuals would be<strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> try<strong>in</strong>g new th<strong>in</strong>gs musically (from different cultures or different po<strong>in</strong>ts onthe traditional-contemporary spectrum); where people would voluntarily work togetherto try and develop their skills and their creativity; where a tremendous groundswell ofenthusiasm from the community itself, rather than from a handful of professionalpractitioners, would transform the practice of community music; where the activities ofmusic and danc<strong>in</strong>g would once aga<strong>in</strong> become <strong>in</strong>extricably l<strong>in</strong>ked <strong>in</strong>to people’s creativepractice and <strong>in</strong> social sett<strong>in</strong>gs; and where participatory music-mak<strong>in</strong>g and dance wouldbecome as much part of our lives as sitt<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> cafés or watch<strong>in</strong>g football.’ 1However, this shared vision may take some time to realise and it will come only throughmore and more people listen<strong>in</strong>g to and play<strong>in</strong>g more and more music – <strong>in</strong> a word,through good practice. In the meantime, a little practical help is necessary – a push hereand a shove there. That is the purpose of the suggestions that follow. They fall <strong>in</strong>to n<strong>in</strong>eclusters and, for the busy reader, are summarised <strong>in</strong> a table at the end.The most fundamental recommendation is the provision of easy access tomusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> strik<strong>in</strong>g distance of everyone <strong>in</strong> the country. The aim isto help <strong>in</strong>dividuals or groups to pursue their own ideas and practice.The fact that so many people make music might suggest that it is easy for an <strong>in</strong>dividual oran emerg<strong>in</strong>g music group to know where to go, whom to contact, if they want help orsupport or even a few basic <strong>in</strong>troductions. I do not believe this to be universally the case.Those who are isolated <strong>in</strong> the countryside or marooned on a provisionless urban estate,those who are poor, or young, or old, or disabled, do not all have the self-confidence andthe basic know-how to jo<strong>in</strong> the game. Some may feel that they have left music beh<strong>in</strong>d orthat it has left them beh<strong>in</strong>d.More particularly, research has shown that there is a musical hiatus <strong>in</strong> most lifespans.Between the end of school<strong>in</strong>g and their late 20s or early 30s, many young people lose<strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g. No doubt they have other th<strong>in</strong>gs to do as they set up careersand start families. A good number are unaware of, and do not know how to locate andmake use of, established networks.1 Hunt, Anne, froma letter to the author,28 April 1997.So we must f<strong>in</strong>d ways of mak<strong>in</strong>g it easier for those who would like to get <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong>music to ga<strong>in</strong> a foothold. In appendix one, I list the addresses of organisations whichcould be of assistance. In some cases, their response to enquiry may well turn out to bestill more lists of addresses. This would, of course, be valuable, but many enquirers willhope for someth<strong>in</strong>g a little more substantial – practical advice and even tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. There isno easy answer to this problem. What is needed is a k<strong>in</strong>d of ‘one-stop shop’ for musicmakers,a network of citizens’ music advice bureaux which would not only offer goodcounsel but identify the whereabouts of such resources as musical <strong>in</strong>struments andequipment, studios and rehearsal space.


162 WHAT NEXT?But which set of <strong>in</strong>stitutions could or should be <strong>in</strong>duced to play this role? There are manypotential candidates – local authorities, Regional Arts Boards (RABs), public libraries andmusic umbrella bodies. Each has its pros and cons. District councils are close enough to theirgrass roots, but their arts and recreation departments are ill-equipped, I suspect, to act ascultural dat<strong>in</strong>g agencies. In pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, RABs have the specialist expertise, but their catchmentareas are wide, they are relatively unknown to the general public and few have the necessaryknowledge-<strong>in</strong>-depth of the participatory music scene. If there were music umbrella bodiescover<strong>in</strong>g the complete range of practice and with regional offices, they would be ideallyplaced to offer <strong>in</strong>formation and guidance – but sadly this is not (yet) the case.Another possibility would be to make use of the numerous commercial music shops,whether <strong>in</strong>dependents or cha<strong>in</strong>s such as Virg<strong>in</strong> and Our Price, some of which already run<strong>in</strong>formation noticeboards. This is an option worth explor<strong>in</strong>g, although it might bedifficult <strong>in</strong> practice to persuade them to operate a coherent nation-wide system. F<strong>in</strong>ally,most people have a public library near where they live or work. The library system knowsthat the new technologies offer it the potential to be an <strong>in</strong>valuable resource for localcitizens, and that its future role lies <strong>in</strong> ‘customer services’ rather than simply the loan ofbooks. It is also worth not<strong>in</strong>g that a substantial number of local councils have specialistmusic libraries. Many public libraries already provide community <strong>in</strong>formation services,although provision is patchy.The answer may lie <strong>in</strong> some comb<strong>in</strong>ation of agencies. Public libraries (led by the specialistmusic libraries) could provide a basic national music <strong>in</strong>formation network, <strong>in</strong> partnershipwith the music umbrella bodies (especially if the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system were will<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>in</strong>vest<strong>in</strong> their further development) and with schools, colleges and universities. The Departmentof National Heritage, the Library Association and local authorities should discuss howsuch a network could best be planned and funded. It could be an ideal project to submitto the Millennium Commission.The network would be greatly assisted if it had access to the Internet so that <strong>in</strong>dividual localdatabases could lock <strong>in</strong>to others and <strong>in</strong>deed to national databases. A national Internet Website(whoever set it up) would be an admirable way of l<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g umbrella organisations, local musicbodies, local education authorities (LEAs), fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies and, above all, participatorymusicians. This is a matter which merits the attention of all the parties concerned.Music resource centres should be established across the country, to be focusesfor music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of every k<strong>in</strong>d and to offer practice, rehearsal andperformance spaces, equipment, access to tuition and the opportunity to meetother people with similar <strong>in</strong>terests.Music <strong>in</strong>formation networks are f<strong>in</strong>e, but will not be enough <strong>in</strong> themselves. Another<strong>in</strong>gredient is needed to complete the recipe. So far I have been talk<strong>in</strong>g only about people,as if the participatory musician were an updated stroll<strong>in</strong>g m<strong>in</strong>strel. Bricks and mortar havea part to play as well.Build<strong>in</strong>g-based arts and educational <strong>in</strong>stitutions can act as ‘open’ permanent resourcecentres for rehearsal, performance, tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, cheap access to <strong>in</strong>struments and the exchangeof ideas. On the same pr<strong>in</strong>ciple as the sports centres promoted by the Sports Council <strong>in</strong>relation to swimm<strong>in</strong>g or athletics, they can provide places where people can rehearse andplay who cannot easily do so at home. The example of mac (the Midlands Arts Centre) <strong>in</strong>Birm<strong>in</strong>gham shows that arts centres can be an ideal location over a period of decades for


JOINING IN 163the <strong>in</strong>tergenerational transmission of commitment and practice. They can cover all musicalgenres (classical, popular, traditional and non-European). Many are already <strong>in</strong> existence <strong>in</strong>one guise or another, but are hard pressed for funds. It would be a move <strong>in</strong> the rightdirection if Arts Councils, RABs and local authorities identified <strong>in</strong>stitutions of this k<strong>in</strong>dand made sure they had the money they need to fulfil their potential.It would be wrong to be prescriptive about the nature of these <strong>in</strong>stitutions, for this islikely to vary from place to place accord<strong>in</strong>g to local conditions. In one town it will be anarts centre, <strong>in</strong> another a long-established community music project, and <strong>in</strong> yet another aresource centre led by a local orchestra. In some circumstances, music developmentagencies, which have access to build<strong>in</strong>gs rather than occupy<strong>in</strong>g one themselves (such asthe Hackney Music Development Trust), may be adequate for the purpose. It reallydoesn’t matter which model is followed – provided that the aim is to create a focus formusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g of every genre and musicians of every level of aspiration and atta<strong>in</strong>ment. Inthose cases where noth<strong>in</strong>g of this k<strong>in</strong>d is yet <strong>in</strong> place, a new organisation will have to becreated – witness the regional music centre which the Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia and Folkworksare plann<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Gateshead.Community schools and community colleges are <strong>in</strong> a position to make a similarcontribution to the musical life of their localities. Lottery <strong>in</strong>vestment could help to createmusic facilities <strong>in</strong> such schools and colleges (studios, rehearsal and performance spaces,new technology and <strong>in</strong>strument banks) which would serve the dual function of assist<strong>in</strong>gthe delivery of the music curriculum and of be<strong>in</strong>g an open and affordable resource forparticipatory musicians. For this policy to have maximum value, it would be good to seeall schools develop<strong>in</strong>g stronger relationships <strong>in</strong> this way with their local communities.Facilities of this type would be of real value to amateur music societies, which are f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>git <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly difficult to afford the ris<strong>in</strong>g hire fees of school halls and similar venues. Inthe meantime, it would be a helpful <strong>in</strong>terim measure if the Department for Education andEmployment and the Department of the Environment could consider ways ofameliorat<strong>in</strong>g the situation by relax<strong>in</strong>g the requirement on local authorities and schools tocharge commercial rents.Plans are under way to establish jo<strong>in</strong>t headquarters for a number of music umbrella bodiesand service agencies. While it would be <strong>in</strong>appropriate to endorse any particular projecthere, the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple should be warmly welcomed if it enhances day-to-day<strong>in</strong>tercommunication among different musical <strong>in</strong>terests and provides a collective nationalresource for <strong>in</strong>formation and advice for both musicians and the general public.A key task of local music centres will be to feed <strong>in</strong>to the national <strong>in</strong>formation network Ihave described above. They will be able to do so only if they take on three newresponsibilities. Firstly, they should be encouraged to compile a database of all musicactivities <strong>in</strong> their locality – full-time college and part-time adult education courses, privatetutors, summer schools and so forth. Secondly, because they will not, <strong>in</strong> the nature ofth<strong>in</strong>gs, be able to respond directly to everyone’s requests, they must be <strong>in</strong> touch with thefull range of local musicians, musical groups and entrepreneurs who are <strong>in</strong> a position to<strong>in</strong>troduce newcomers to the music scene.F<strong>in</strong>ally, they should liaise with the non-cultural voluntary sector (for example, charitiessuch as the National Early Years Network (NEYN), Age Concern and the youth service),much of which has long supported arts activity and shows every sign of <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g itsengagement <strong>in</strong> the com<strong>in</strong>g years. This will enable a shar<strong>in</strong>g of experience and will helpsometimes <strong>in</strong>experienced groups to develop their work.


164 WHAT NEXT?As policy-makers enter the field of participatory music, they will f<strong>in</strong>dthemselves hampered by <strong>in</strong>adequate <strong>in</strong>formation. The RABs should considercommission<strong>in</strong>g surveys measur<strong>in</strong>g the extent of participatory musical activity<strong>in</strong> their regions <strong>in</strong> order to develop exist<strong>in</strong>g provision and identify gaps.One of my most depress<strong>in</strong>g discoveries when research<strong>in</strong>g <strong>Jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g</strong> In was the absence ofcomprehensive and reliable data embrac<strong>in</strong>g the entire field of participatory musics. Thereare particularly strik<strong>in</strong>g gaps <strong>in</strong> rock and pop, disability musics and community music.Where there are well-established umbrella bodies, a good deal is known (for example, aboutamateur music societies, choirs and amateur operatic societies), but elsewhere <strong>in</strong>formation islargely anecdotal. The amount of public sector support (especially by local authorities) forparticipatory musics has not been accurately computed. It is high time for a quantitativesurvey of the field. This would <strong>in</strong>volve survey<strong>in</strong>g the extent of <strong>in</strong>dependent creative activityacross the country (<strong>in</strong> terms both of active participants and of their audiences), tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gopportunities both <strong>in</strong> the education sector and elsewhere, music courses <strong>in</strong> adult education,festivals, summer schools arts centres, community schools and colleges.A study of this k<strong>in</strong>d need not be a major and lengthy exercise as some knowledge alreadyexists, but unless it is undertaken, it is hard to see what policy-makers, local, regional andnational, will be able to base their decisions on. One cost-effective means of gather<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>formation would be through analysis of material on the proposed <strong>in</strong>formation database(see above), assum<strong>in</strong>g that it was established quickly.It is essential that the music curriculum <strong>in</strong> schools is made to work effectively.This means ensur<strong>in</strong>g that music is a part of children’s lives from playgroupright through to nursery, primary and secondary school.For most of us, school is where we get our first real chance to engage with music. Thediscoveries of neurological research have demonstrated beyond peradventure thefunctional relevance of music to our <strong>in</strong>tellectual and emotional well-be<strong>in</strong>g. Educationalstudies have conv<strong>in</strong>c<strong>in</strong>gly supported the claim (long suspected but previously hard tosubstantiate) that, as well as be<strong>in</strong>g valuable and pleasurable <strong>in</strong> its own right, music <strong>in</strong> theclassroom positively enhances the learn<strong>in</strong>g process <strong>in</strong> other discipl<strong>in</strong>es, especiallymathematics and languages.A potentially excellent new music curriculum is now <strong>in</strong> place on paper with the approvalof most of those concerned with music education. It offers a wonderful opportunity for allchildren and not just the few who already have access to good music teach<strong>in</strong>g. But <strong>in</strong> thecon<strong>text</strong> of a still struggl<strong>in</strong>g education system, where fund<strong>in</strong>g for facilities and equipment,let alone adequate timetabl<strong>in</strong>g or teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, is scarce, its full implementation hasbeen delayed. What is required is hard-headed discussion about how to make thecurriculum work <strong>in</strong> practical terms. Perhaps the best way forward is to set up a short-termwork<strong>in</strong>g party with a membership drawn from teachers, music educationists, localauthority representatives and practis<strong>in</strong>g musicians, amateur and professional. The SchoolsCurriculum and Assessment Authority, <strong>in</strong> association with the Arts Council of England(together with its Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish equivalents), should considerconven<strong>in</strong>g the group. This is not to argue for yet more talk<strong>in</strong>g shops. The work<strong>in</strong>g partyshould set itself a tight timetable to recommend achievable aims. Some of the good practicedescribed <strong>in</strong> this book might provide a start<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t.A number of areas call for urgent attention. The first of these is music <strong>in</strong> children’s early


JOINING IN 165years, <strong>in</strong> the light of the likely <strong>in</strong>troduction of widespread nursery education; musicumbrella bodies and the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system should seek to <strong>in</strong>fluence specialistorganisations <strong>in</strong> the field, such as NEYN. More time should be given to music for allchildren <strong>in</strong> primary schools. Classroom choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g should be encouraged and thepotential of music at school assemblies exploited, not simply <strong>in</strong> a religious con<strong>text</strong> butbecause they are regular occasions when the school comes together as a whole. Musicshould play a larger part <strong>in</strong> primary teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and, as a long-term aim, thereshould be a music specialist <strong>in</strong> every school. Music is already compulsory up to and<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Key Stage 3 <strong>in</strong> the secondary curriculum and should be easily available foreveryone throughout the school. There should be a requirement that Music GCSE beavailable <strong>in</strong> every school. There should also be an identification of easy routes forprogression for children with a particular aptitude for music, whatever their social class.Opportunities for music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of all k<strong>in</strong>ds outside the curriculum should also beencouraged.Enhanced teacher <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is essential whether for the music specialist, thegeneralist primary teacher or the visit<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>strumental teacher, but there is a limit to whatany <strong>in</strong>dividual teacher can achieve. A way forward for the beleaguered music teacher isfor schools to forge relations with the very many different musicians and music groups,amateur and professional, that already exist <strong>in</strong> the locality. Greater <strong>in</strong>teraction of this k<strong>in</strong>dwould enable staff and pupils to ga<strong>in</strong> access to a wide range of skills and talent. It wouldprobably help to surmount the fall<strong>in</strong>g-off <strong>in</strong> music-mak<strong>in</strong>g among young people whenthey leave school for the adult world, as well as giv<strong>in</strong>g a boost to non-curricular musicalactivity at school.If there are to be specialist arts schools, LEAs should ensure that children <strong>in</strong> other schoolsdo not suffer from dim<strong>in</strong>ished provision; those who develop a serious <strong>in</strong>terest should begiven the opportunity to transfer on a full-time basis to such schools.Another field of knowledge could be helpfully trawled. Because of the advances <strong>in</strong>neurological and psychological research <strong>in</strong>to music and mental activity, it would aid policycreation and provide <strong>in</strong>valuable material for advocacy if music educationists as well asmusic umbrella bodies and the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system kept themselves <strong>in</strong>formed of the lateststate of scientific op<strong>in</strong>ion. They would be wise to consider ways of establish<strong>in</strong>g ongo<strong>in</strong>gliaison with the scientific community.Participatory music will thrive only if all those <strong>in</strong>volved are given theopportunity to improve their skills. This will mean access to a wide range oftra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities. Everyone work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> music should have the chance toattend regular courses or summer schools so that they can improve their skillsand exchange good practice.Learn<strong>in</strong>g, of course, is for life. Participatory musicians are well aware that they needvarious forms of support, many of which <strong>in</strong>volve tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. The first of these is the need toimprove standards of performance. But how is that best done? There are many ways oflearn<strong>in</strong>g how to make music – from imitation of one’s seniors as a member of a brass bandto workshop-based practice. Just as <strong>in</strong> the classroom, there is no one simple pedagogicideal and we need a flexible model which suits method to con<strong>text</strong>.It would be helpful if there were a concerted effort to exploit the full scope ofpossibilities. One option would be to br<strong>in</strong>g together a range of practitioners to identify


166 WHAT NEXT?and publicise opportunities and to share and debate different methodologies. This is a jobperhaps for the music umbrella bodies work<strong>in</strong>g separately <strong>in</strong> their <strong>in</strong>dividual areas or <strong>in</strong>unison on jo<strong>in</strong>t strategic projects. The basic pr<strong>in</strong>ciple should be access for all, whetherthey are teachers, music project leaders, music therapists, peripatetic <strong>in</strong>strumentalists orprivate tutors.Participatory musicians are liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a chang<strong>in</strong>g economic and cultural climate. Musicsocieties and other groups need to develop expertise <strong>in</strong> fund-rais<strong>in</strong>g, market<strong>in</strong>g andrecruit<strong>in</strong>g skills. More of them are <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> educational and outreach work than <strong>in</strong>the past and would profit from <strong>in</strong>duction <strong>in</strong>to the relevant skills. Community musicians,<strong>in</strong> the specialist sense, are few <strong>in</strong> number and usually poorly resourced; unsurpris<strong>in</strong>gly,they often fail to satisfy the long-term aspirations of those for whom they work. Throughforce majeure, they tend to be limited to fixed-term projects, which raise hopes only to dashthem. One of the challenges they face is how to encourage the creation of free-stand<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>dependent music groups which will survive and thrive once their <strong>in</strong>tervention is overand they have moved on and away to their next project. Experience shows that the mosteffective way of deal<strong>in</strong>g with this problem is through a ‘cascade effect’ policy – that is,through schemes <strong>in</strong> which community musicians and visit<strong>in</strong>g workshop leaders transmit tolocal musicians, those runn<strong>in</strong>g music groups and employees of charities, youthorganisations and so forth, the skills to establish their own <strong>in</strong>dependent music projects. Inthis way they can help to ensure both an extension and a cont<strong>in</strong>uity of provision, byleav<strong>in</strong>g beh<strong>in</strong>d them competent musicians who can carry on the work they <strong>in</strong>itiated.Community Music London is one of a handful of organisations that offer a model ofexcellent practice <strong>in</strong> this respect.A grow<strong>in</strong>g number of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities are open to professional and participatorymusicians across the musical genres, both <strong>in</strong> higher and further education and <strong>in</strong> the field.The trouble is that provision is sporadic and scattered. Good tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g calls for a highdegree of specialisation, which <strong>in</strong> the nature of th<strong>in</strong>gs, is liable to be <strong>in</strong> short supply. Acollaborative approach, which br<strong>in</strong>gs together expertise wherever it can be found, wouldhelp to ensure that a scarce commodity is made the best of rather than constantly re<strong>in</strong>vented.There are already admirable examples of mutually advantageous<strong>in</strong>terdependence (for example, the Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire’s partnership with Sound ItOut). Community music organisations, <strong>in</strong>-service teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g schemes, conservatoires,universities and colleges could all benefit from draw<strong>in</strong>g on each other’s knowledge. Apractical way for the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies to address the issue would be to offer more helpto those participatory music organisations which operate a policy of ‘tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the tra<strong>in</strong>ers’.In response to the growth of educational programmes among the country’s lead<strong>in</strong>gorchestras, most of the country’s conservatoires are gradually open<strong>in</strong>g up their courses toparticipatory practice. While it is true that some musicians are not temperamentally suitedto it, all music students should be given direct experience of work<strong>in</strong>g on community oroutreach projects, if only because such schemes are likely to imp<strong>in</strong>ge on their futurecareers <strong>in</strong> one way or another.Amateur music societies and ensembles are <strong>in</strong> particular need of support as they beg<strong>in</strong> toexpand their activities to <strong>in</strong>clude work <strong>in</strong> schools and with local communities. They alsoface a grow<strong>in</strong>g challenge to improve their adm<strong>in</strong>istrative and market<strong>in</strong>g competence.With some additional f<strong>in</strong>ancial support, umbrella bodies are well placed to provide theliaison and skills improvement their members require. In addition, if the Arts Councilsdecide to <strong>in</strong>volve them more closely as assessors of National Lottery applications, they willbenefit from careful <strong>in</strong>duction and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> evaluation.


JOINING IN 167A catholic approach to music, which embraces every k<strong>in</strong>d of musical activity,will entail a review of what is meant by artistic standards. The music worldand the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system should move towards new, more flexible criteria ofevaluation.Participatory musicians apply differ<strong>in</strong>g standards when judg<strong>in</strong>g their work. A number offactors need to be taken <strong>in</strong> account <strong>in</strong> artistic assessment: they <strong>in</strong>clude creator or producerquality; expert or critic quality; consumer quality; enrichment of the community; quality<strong>in</strong> diversity; and quality as ‘fitness for purpose’. However, these criteria are sometimesapplied <strong>in</strong>consistently or <strong>in</strong>sensitively. While avoid<strong>in</strong>g the imposition of a criticalorthodoxy, there should be a debate about standards <strong>in</strong> participatory music and ways ofapply<strong>in</strong>g them that are sensitive to the various requirements of those directly <strong>in</strong>volved –not only musicians but also arts managements, arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies and bus<strong>in</strong>ess sponsors.The emphasis should be placed on procedures of evaluation, leav<strong>in</strong>g the responsibility formak<strong>in</strong>g artistic judgments so far as possible to the music-makers themselves. Fund<strong>in</strong>gbodies and arts managements should adopt a self-deny<strong>in</strong>g ord<strong>in</strong>ance and apply a lightregulatory touch.There are other ways of encourag<strong>in</strong>g discussion about standards <strong>in</strong> participatory music.Umbrella bodies could do more than at present by way of publish<strong>in</strong>g magaz<strong>in</strong>es andhold<strong>in</strong>g conferences and summer schools to <strong>in</strong>form their constituencies and to enablethem to meet members of other constituencies. The fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies have a particularresponsibility here <strong>in</strong> those areas of music-mak<strong>in</strong>g where there are no umbrella bodies.Fund<strong>in</strong>g officials – arts and leisure officers of local authorities and the staffs of the ArtsCouncils and RABs – would themselves profit from the exchange of ideas and examplesof good practice, especially as regards policy development and evaluation. There is a rolehere too for the national group<strong>in</strong>gs of arts and leisure officers of local authorityassociations and, equally, for the RABs to meet their local authority counterparts at theregional level.But it is not enough for bureaucrats to talk among themselves. The Arts Councils, <strong>in</strong>consultation with local authorities and RABs, should work closely with umbrella bodies,major professional arts managements and music practitioners, both amateur andprofessional, to discuss an agreed approach to the evaluation of participatory musics.Indeed, as Lord Redcliffe-Maud recommended all those years ago, the presence of moreamateur or participatory artists on fund<strong>in</strong>g panels or as actively used members of advisorystructures would do much to create a more open and constructive atmosphere.The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system should systematically monitor the development of newtechnologies and their impact on musical practice.The new communications technologies have had a revolutionary effect on music-mak<strong>in</strong>g.Through record<strong>in</strong>gs and broadcast<strong>in</strong>g there is far greater access to music of every k<strong>in</strong>dthan <strong>in</strong> the past. The latest digital <strong>in</strong>ventions have immense potential for participatorymusic-mak<strong>in</strong>g, whether by amateur practitioners, community musicians or schoolstudents. However, technology cont<strong>in</strong>ues to change rapidly and it is hard to be sure offuture developments more than a few years ahead. Its glamour and power make it easy toexaggerate the benefits it confers. Good practice needs to be identified and dissem<strong>in</strong>ated.Clearly, more resources should be devoted to the development of hardware and softwarefor music composition and performance. For example, the opportunities for improv<strong>in</strong>g


168 WHAT NEXT?access to participation <strong>in</strong> music by disabled people are considerable and this could be anideal field for support by the Arts Councils from National Lottery funds <strong>in</strong> f<strong>in</strong>ancialpartnership with the education sector.In this difficult and highly technical field, there may be a case for creat<strong>in</strong>g a nationalagency for electronic music, to monitor and test developments as they occur. It shouldoffer support and guidance for schools and music groups <strong>in</strong> every genre of music fromrock to classical; the aims would be to identify the best methods of exploit<strong>in</strong>g newtechnology, to liaise with the commercial sector and to provide general <strong>in</strong>formation andadvice.The network of national and local radio stations and the arrival of cable televisionchannels able to provide local services suggest that there may be potential for <strong>in</strong>creasedbroadcast<strong>in</strong>g of participatory music. The success of the Estover Project is a case <strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t.It would be to the mutual benefit of all concerned – broadcasters, musicians, ArtsCouncils, RABs, local authorities and broadcast<strong>in</strong>g licens<strong>in</strong>g authorities – if they couldseek practical ways of encourag<strong>in</strong>g this.There is <strong>in</strong>sufficient cheap access, especially for young people, to studios, record<strong>in</strong>gequipment and other facilities and, where appropriate, rehearsal and perform<strong>in</strong>g spaces.This is a particular issue <strong>in</strong> the rock and pop sector and for young black musicians. Thegap could be filled by the music resource centres I was propos<strong>in</strong>g earlier at arts centres orcommunity schools. But, as ever, money will be needed for equipment purchase,ma<strong>in</strong>tenance and, over the passage of time, re-equipment.The Arts Councils should improve their own knowledge of the field. One way of do<strong>in</strong>gso would be to recruit expert advisers who would enable them to monitor anddissem<strong>in</strong>ate up-to-date <strong>in</strong>formation on technological opportunities for the arts <strong>in</strong> general,and participatory music <strong>in</strong> particular, and who would advise on <strong>in</strong>vestment policies.Government policy places a welcome emphasis on the participatory arts. Asthe case of music demonstrates, the promotion of creative practice is ofconcern to a wide range of social and voluntary services. Interdepartmental coord<strong>in</strong>ationshould be encouraged especially <strong>in</strong> Health, Social Services andEducation and Employment both at national and local government levels.It is <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly evident that music-mak<strong>in</strong>g, and <strong>in</strong>deed the arts <strong>in</strong> general, are becom<strong>in</strong>ga regular feature of the policies and programmes of charities, trusts and voluntary agencieswith social remits. The surveys currently be<strong>in</strong>g conducted by Age Concern and theYouth Arts Network will form a useful basis for future policy development. The longstand<strong>in</strong>gand dist<strong>in</strong>guished record of arts <strong>in</strong> healthcare has charted ways <strong>in</strong> which musiccan enhance the quality of life of people work<strong>in</strong>g or undergo<strong>in</strong>g treatment <strong>in</strong> hospitals.Likewise, as I have shown, there are many examples of good practice so far as music <strong>in</strong>prisons is concerned.As the Department of National Heritage develops an ever more <strong>in</strong>clusive and holisticapproach to arts policy, it should consider ways not only of support<strong>in</strong>g groups and<strong>in</strong>dividuals whose prime concern is artistic production, but the complete spectrum ofagencies <strong>in</strong> community education, the social services, youth umbrella organisations andcharities to <strong>in</strong>itiate or (as appropriate) further develop musical and artistic activity amongtheir ‘constituencies’. Local authority arts strategies should also take an <strong>in</strong>terdepartmentalview (as many already do) and encompass a similar scope of activity.


JOINING IN 169The Arts Councils <strong>in</strong> England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales shouldf<strong>in</strong>ance participatory music <strong>in</strong> a coherent manner. This will entail a revision ofthe rules of National Lottery distribution.It is difficult to see how those work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the field and <strong>in</strong> the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system will be ableto address the issues I have outl<strong>in</strong>ed unless a strategic approach is agreed and implemented.The availability of National Lottery money for the amateur and community arts makes suchan approach all the more necessary if these new resources are to be well spent.When it established the National Lottery, the Government of the day eschewed a policyledapproach to the distribution of Lottery proceeds to good causes, believ<strong>in</strong>g that fundsshould be available to all on an equal basis. This openness and simplicity of process, withaccess for everyone at its heart, is both welcome and unprecedented. However, it isdifficult to see for how long the Arts Councils can stand back from tak<strong>in</strong>g any strategicmeasures and perhaps it is time for the government to relax its rules. The regional audits Ihave recommended are likely to reveal areas of activity that call for special attention. Thefirst step might simply be to fill the gaps identified. It would be sensible if the ArtsCouncils were allowed to take the necessary action – perhaps (follow<strong>in</strong>g the example ofthe National Lottery Charities Board) by announc<strong>in</strong>g favoured priorities with specialreference to access and participation. In this way, it would be possible to address the needsof participatory music <strong>in</strong> an orderly rather than a piecemeal fashion. Priorities could beestablished after consultation with the local organisations concerned, local authorities,RABs and other relevant constituencies (for example, the education sector). In order toma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of open application, each priority would be time-limited and notconsume more than a predeterm<strong>in</strong>ed proportion of overall expenditure.These are practical measures. A larger issue of pr<strong>in</strong>ciple also has to be faced. The ArtsCouncils and many local authorities have spent much of the last 50 years promot<strong>in</strong>gexcellence <strong>in</strong> the professional arts and, by most dis<strong>in</strong>terested accounts, they have done agood job. They acted on the basis of assessed need: where they saw a gap they devised apolicy to fill it. A classic example has been the establishment across the country of regionaltheatre companies <strong>in</strong> custom-designed build<strong>in</strong>gs. Another has been balanced support forsymphony orchestras to ensure that most people were with<strong>in</strong> strik<strong>in</strong>g distance of live, highquality, classical music. The underly<strong>in</strong>g assumption was that even if the professional artswere a m<strong>in</strong>ority <strong>in</strong>terest of the well-off and the well-educated, they should neverthelessbe made genu<strong>in</strong>ely available to every citizen.This is a worthy aim. But what it left out of account was that <strong>in</strong> music, for example, avery large number of citizens had their own cultures with which they were well satisfied –but <strong>in</strong> which the fund<strong>in</strong>g system showed little or no <strong>in</strong>terest. Now that the situation ischang<strong>in</strong>g and all music is fall<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> the state’s purview, the old habits of <strong>in</strong>terventionare not so appropriate as they were. To use a military metaphor, the question is no longerhow to raise, equip and tra<strong>in</strong> a small but effective professional army, but how to satisfy therequirements of a levée en masse or a nation of home militias.The old watchword, ‘We know what you need; here it is and we hope you like it’ willhave to yield to another more permissive one, ‘We know what you like; so how can wehelp you do it as well as possible?’ This suggests that when the fund<strong>in</strong>g bureaucracy f<strong>in</strong>dsitself respond<strong>in</strong>g to the creativity of citizens rather than focus<strong>in</strong>g exclusively on the needsof a creative elite, it will be well-advised to adopt a humbler, more responsive attitude.The light regulatory touch I was recommend<strong>in</strong>g earlier <strong>in</strong> the con<strong>text</strong> of evaluation has awider relevance.


170 WHAT NEXT?This does not mean that I am advocat<strong>in</strong>g an abdication from rigour and excellence, but itdoes call for an <strong>in</strong>sight <strong>in</strong>to the many varieties of excellence and a recognition thatjudgment can no longer be the monopoly of a class of highly tra<strong>in</strong>ed experts apply<strong>in</strong>g ahierarchy of values. It will be a more complicated work<strong>in</strong>g environment for the politiciansand the bureaucrats <strong>in</strong>volved and they will face the hard task of eras<strong>in</strong>g the old <strong>in</strong>gra<strong>in</strong>edculture of well-<strong>in</strong>tentioned paternalism. It will be a revolutionary change of heart andm<strong>in</strong>d. But success will br<strong>in</strong>g great prizes <strong>in</strong> its tra<strong>in</strong>.A holistic arts policy, <strong>in</strong> which culture is broadly def<strong>in</strong>ed, will be likely to attract warmpublic support, if we can go by the example of countries like The Netherlands and Sweden.More to the po<strong>in</strong>t, it will be possible to foster a re<strong>in</strong>tegration of the British artistic scene,divided as it still is <strong>in</strong>to the mutually distrustful camps of the high arts, the amateur arts andmass popular culture. It is seldom that an alteration <strong>in</strong> adm<strong>in</strong>istrative procedures cancontribute to an artistic renaissance, but this may well be one such occasion.photo: Frank Rodgers


ACTION POINTS


172 ACTION POINTSA The first, and most fundamental, recommendation is the provision of easyaccess to music-mak<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> strik<strong>in</strong>g distance of everyone <strong>in</strong> the country.The aim is to help <strong>in</strong>dividuals or groups to pursue their own ideas andpractice.1 The establishment of ‘one-stop shops’ for music-makers – through the public librarysystem or another appropriate set of agencies <strong>in</strong> association with music umbrella bodiesprovid<strong>in</strong>g a national music <strong>in</strong>formation network. The Department of National Heritage,the Libraries Association and local authorities should discuss ways and means.2 The creation of a music Internet Website, so creat<strong>in</strong>g a national <strong>in</strong>formation database.B Music resource centres should be established across the country which can bea focus for music-mak<strong>in</strong>g of every k<strong>in</strong>d and can offer performance andrehearsal spaces, equipment, access to tuition and the opportunity to meetother people with similar <strong>in</strong>terests.1 Selected exist<strong>in</strong>g arts organisations – arts centres, community projects and musicdevelopment agencies, not necessarily those with build<strong>in</strong>gs – to act as ‘open’permanent resource centres for rehearsal, performance, tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, cheap access to<strong>in</strong>struments and the exchange of ideas. In areas where there is no suitable exist<strong>in</strong>gbody, one should be created.2 Music resource centres to compile databases of all music activities <strong>in</strong> their locality; tobe <strong>in</strong> touch with local musicians, music teachers, music groups and promoters whoare <strong>in</strong> a position to <strong>in</strong>troduce newcomers to the music scene; and to liaise with thenon-cultural voluntary sector where it promotes musical activity.3 Some community schools and community colleges also to be encouraged to be musicresource centres, with National Lottery <strong>in</strong>vestment pay<strong>in</strong>g for music facilities (studios,rehearsal and performance spaces, new technology and <strong>in</strong>strument banks). Theywould serve the dual function of assist<strong>in</strong>g the delivery of the music curriculum andbe<strong>in</strong>g a resource for participatory musicians, as well as facilitat<strong>in</strong>g greater <strong>in</strong>teractionbetween them and teachers.4 The Department for Education and Employment and local authorities to considerways of reduc<strong>in</strong>g hire fees for school halls and similar venues, the ris<strong>in</strong>g cost of whichamateur music societies are f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly difficult to afford.5 Proposals by music umbrella bodies and national music service agencies for theestablishment of jo<strong>in</strong>t headquarters to be supported.C As policy-makers enter the field of participatory music, they will f<strong>in</strong>dthemselves hampered by <strong>in</strong>adequate <strong>in</strong>formation. They should commissionsurveys measur<strong>in</strong>g the extent of musical activity <strong>in</strong> all sections of society and<strong>in</strong> all parts of the country.1 The Arts Councils to consider commission<strong>in</strong>g a quantitative survey of participatorymusics <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom to assist them <strong>in</strong> policy development, perhaps throughanalysis of the proposed national <strong>in</strong>formation database.2 As an aid to advocacy, the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system to keep itself <strong>in</strong>formed of the lateststate of scientific research <strong>in</strong>to the neurology and psychology of music and establishongo<strong>in</strong>g liaison with the scientific community.D It is essential that the music curriculum is made to work effectively. Thismeans ensur<strong>in</strong>g that music is a part of children’s lives from playgroupthrough to nursery, primary and secondary school.


JOINING IN 1731 The Schools Curriculum and Assessment Authority, <strong>in</strong> association with the ArtsCouncils of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, to consider sett<strong>in</strong>g up ashort-term work<strong>in</strong>g party drawn from teachers, music educationists, local authorityrepresentatives and practis<strong>in</strong>g musicians (both amateur and professional). Its task wouldbe to f<strong>in</strong>d practical ways of help<strong>in</strong>g to deliver the music curriculum; and also ofsupport<strong>in</strong>g the development of music-<strong>in</strong>-education schemes and community schools.2 Music to be compulsory <strong>in</strong> early years education.3 More time to be made available for music <strong>in</strong> primary schools, with classroom chorals<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and music at school assemblies. Music should play a larger part <strong>in</strong> primaryteacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, and, <strong>in</strong> the long term there should be a music specialist <strong>in</strong> every school.4 Music is already compulsory for all up to and <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g Key Stage 3 and should be easilyavailable for everyone throughout the school. Music GCSE should also be available atevery school and more encouragement should be given to non-curricular musical activity.5 In-service teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g to be enhanced for music specialists, generalist primaryteachers and visit<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>strumental teachers.6 Co-operation between schools and local musicians to be actively encouraged, enabl<strong>in</strong>gstaff and pupils to ga<strong>in</strong> access to a wide range of skills and talent.E Participatory music will thrive only if all those <strong>in</strong>volved are given theopportunity to improve their skills. This will mean access to a wide range oftra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities. Everyone work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> music should have the chance toattend regular courses or summer schools so that they can improve their skillsand exchange good practice.1 Music umbrella bodies to improve standards of performance by identify<strong>in</strong>g andpublicis<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities. They should also share and debate different tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gmethodologies with all those <strong>in</strong>volved – teachers, music project leaders, musictherapists, peripatetic <strong>in</strong>strumentalists and private tutors.2 Arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies to consider giv<strong>in</strong>g practical support to professional participatorymusic organisations which equip local musicians and community groups with the skillsto establish <strong>in</strong>dependent music projects of their own.3 Conservatoires to ensure that all music students are given direct experience ofwork<strong>in</strong>g on educational, community-based or outreach projects.4 Music umbrella bodies to be given additional f<strong>in</strong>ancial support from arts fund<strong>in</strong>gagencies to help amateur societies and ensembles <strong>in</strong> their membership to developeducational, community-based and outreach skills and to improve their market<strong>in</strong>g andadm<strong>in</strong>istrative competence.F A catholic approach to music, which takes <strong>in</strong> every k<strong>in</strong>d of musical activity,will entail a review of what is meant by artistic standards. The music worldand the arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system should agree new, more flexible criteria ofevaluation.1 Musicians, arts managements, arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies and bus<strong>in</strong>ess sponsors to movetowards flexible criteria for the assessment of creative standards <strong>in</strong> participatory music.Fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies and managements should apply a light regulatory touch.2 Music umbrella bodies to encourage debate on creative standards through magaz<strong>in</strong>es,conferences and summer schools.3 Arts fund<strong>in</strong>g agencies, local authority arts and leisure departments and local educationauthorities to exchange ideas and examples of good practice, especially as regardspolicy development and evaluation, both at national and regional levels.


174 ACTION POINTS4 Arts fund<strong>in</strong>g agencies to consider appo<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g more amateur and participatorymusicians onto their fund<strong>in</strong>g panels or advisory structures.G The arts fund<strong>in</strong>g system should systematically monitor the development ofnew technologies and their impact on musical practice.1 More resources to be <strong>in</strong>vested <strong>in</strong> the development of hardware and software for musiccomposition and employment.2 Establishment of a national agency for electronic music. It would monitor and testdevelopments as they occur, offer<strong>in</strong>g support and guidance for schools and musicgroups <strong>in</strong> every musical genre from rock to classical; its task would be to identify thebest methods of exploit<strong>in</strong>g new technology, to liaise with the commercial sector andto provide general <strong>in</strong>formation and advice.3 Broadcasters, musicians, arts fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies, local authorities and broadcast<strong>in</strong>glicens<strong>in</strong>g authorities to consider practical ways of encourag<strong>in</strong>g the broadcast<strong>in</strong>g ofparticipatory musics.4 Music resource centres (see recommendation B 1 and 2) to help to ensure cheapaccess, especially for young people, to music studios, record<strong>in</strong>g equipment and otherfacilities, with particular reference to rock, pop and black music.5 The Arts Councils of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to considerestablish<strong>in</strong>g a stand<strong>in</strong>g UK committee, or national committees, to monitor anddissem<strong>in</strong>ate <strong>in</strong>formation on opportunities for the arts <strong>in</strong> general, and participatorymusic <strong>in</strong> particular, <strong>in</strong> the new technologies.H Government policy places a welcome emphasis on the participatory arts. Asthe case of music demonstrates, the promotion of creative practice is ofconcern to a wide range of social and voluntary services. Interdepartmentalco-ord<strong>in</strong>ation should be encouraged especially <strong>in</strong> Health, Social Services andEducation and Employment.1 The Department of National Heritage should consider ways not only of support<strong>in</strong>ggroups and <strong>in</strong>dividuals whose prime concern is artistic production, but the completespectrum of agencies <strong>in</strong> community education, the social services, youth umbrellaorganisations and charities to <strong>in</strong>itiate or (as appropriate) further develop musical andartistic activity among their ‘constituencies’.2 Local authority arts strategies should also take an <strong>in</strong>terdepartmental view of culturalpolicy (as many already do) and encompass a range of activity similar to thatrecommended for national government.I F<strong>in</strong>ally, the Arts Councils <strong>in</strong> England, Northern Ireland, Scotland andWales should f<strong>in</strong>ance participatory music <strong>in</strong> a coherent manner. This willentail a revision of the rules of National Lottery distribution.1 The government should consider allow<strong>in</strong>g the Arts Councils to distribute NationalLotteries more strategically; for example, by select<strong>in</strong>g themes with special reference toaccess and participation, which would run for period of years and not consume morethan a predeterm<strong>in</strong>ed proportion of overall expenditure. This would enable them toaddress the needs of the participatory arts <strong>in</strong> general, and participatory music <strong>in</strong>particular, <strong>in</strong> the most efficient way possible.


APPENDICES


176 APPENDICESAPPENDIX ONESome useful addresses formusic participantsAdult Learn<strong>in</strong>g Project184 Dalry RoadEd<strong>in</strong>burgh EH11 2EPScotlandTel 0131 337 5442Fax 0131 337 9316Association of Irish Music Societies24 Glenbourne GreenLeopardstown ValleyDubl<strong>in</strong> 18Republic of IrelandTel +353 1 294 0775Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Centre4a Castletown RoadLondon W14 9HQTel 0171 381 3086/4608Fax 0171 381 8758British Association of SymphonicBands and W<strong>in</strong>d Ensembles3 Northbrook RoadSolihullWest Midlands B90 3NTTel/fax 0121 743 2483/0121 744 1529British Federation of Brass Bands3 Grendon StreetCoombe Vale RoadTeignmouthDevon TQ14 9EWTel 01626 770362British Federation of FestivalsFestivals House198 Park LaneMacclesfieldCheshire SK11 6UDTel 01625 428297Fax 01625 503229British Federation of Youth Choirs37 Frederick StreetLoughboroughLeics LE11 3BHTel 01509 211664Fax 01509 233749British Music Information Centre10 Stratford PlaceLondon W1N 9AETel 0171 499 8567Fax 0171 499 4795Contemporary Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g forAmateurs (COMA)13 Well<strong>in</strong>gton WayLondon E3 4NETel 0181 980 1527English Folk Dance and Song Society2 Regents Park RoadLondon NW1 7AYTel 0171 485 2206Federation of Music CollectivesMusicBaseTemple Bar Music CentreCurved StreetTemple BarDubl<strong>in</strong> 2Republic of IrelandTel +353 1 679 0533Fax +353 1 679 0535Federation of Music Services12 Lucas RoadHigh WycombeBucks HP13 6QETel/fax 01494 439572Fèisean nan GàidhealQuay BraePortreeIsle of Skye IV51 9DBScotlandTel 01478 612990Fax 01478 613263Folkworks69 Westgate RoadNewcastle-upon-Tyne NE1 1SGTel 0191 222 1717Fax 0191 230 2484Jazz Services Ltd5 Dryden StreetLondon WC2E 9NWTel 0171 829 8352/3/4Fax 0171 829 8355/0171 240 5600Music Association71 Margaret RoadNew BarnetHerts EN4 9NDTel 0181 440 6919


JOINING IN 177Music for Youth4 Blade MewsLondon SW15 2NNTel 0181 870 9624Fax 0181 870 9935www.pjbpubs.co.uk/mfyNational Association of Choirs21 Charmouth RoadLower WestonBath BA1 3LJTel 01225 426713National Association of MusicEducators and Schools MusicAssociation52 Hall Orchard LaneFrisby-on-the-WreakeMelton MowbrayLeicestershire LE14 2NHTel 01664 434379Fax 01664 434137National Association of YouthOrchestrasA<strong>in</strong>slie House11 St Colme StreetEd<strong>in</strong>burgh EH3 6AGScotlandTel 0131 225 4606Fax 0131 225 3568National Federation of Music SocietiesFrancis HouseFrancis StreetLondon SW1P 1DETel 0171 828 7320Fax 0171 828 5504National Music and DisabilityInformation ServiceSound SenseRiverside HouseRattlesdenBury St Edmunds IP30 0SFTel 01449 736287Fax 01449 737649E-mail 100256.30@compuserve.comNational Operatic and DramaticAssociationNODA House1 Crestfield StreetLondon WC1H 8AUTel 0171 837 5655Fax 0171 833 0609Northern Ireland Bands Association28 Knockfergus ParkGreenislandCarrickfergus BT38 8SNNorthern IrelandTel 01232 866179Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association45 Wash<strong>in</strong>gton StreetGlasgow G3 8AZScotlandTel 0141 221 5414Fax 0141 221 1561SAMPADmacCannon Hill ParkBirm<strong>in</strong>gham B12 9QHTel 0121 440 4221 ext 206Tel/fax 0121 440 8667Society for the Promotion of NewMusicFrancis HouseFrancis StreetLondon SW1P 1DETel 0171 828 9696Fax 0171 931 9928Sonic Arts NetworkFrancis HouseFrancis StreetLondon SW1P 1DETel 0171 828 9796Fax 0171 233 5159E-mail jonathan@sonicart.demon.co.ukSound SenseRiverside House, RattlesdenBury St Edmunds IP30 0SFTel 01449 736287Fax 01449 737649E-mail 100256.30@compuserve.comTraditional Music and SongAssociation of ScotlandLevel 3Greenside House25 Greenside PlaceEd<strong>in</strong>burgh EH1 3AAScotlandTel 0131 557 8484Welsh Amateur Music Federation9 Museum PlaceCardiff CF1 3NXWalesTel 01222 394711Arts Councils and English Regional ArtsBoardsArts Council of England14 Great Peter StreetLondon SW1P 3NQTel 0171 333 0100Fax 0171 973 6590E-mail <strong>in</strong>fo.music.ace@artsf6.org.uk


178 APPENDICESArts Council of Northern Ireland181a Stranmillis RoadBelfast BT9 5DUNorthern IrelandTel 01232 381591Fax 01232 661715Arts Council of Wales/CyngorCelfyddydau CymruMuseum PlaceCardiff CF1 3NXWalesTel 01222 394711Fax 01222 221447Scottish Arts Council12 Manor PlaceEd<strong>in</strong>burgh EH3 7DDScotlandTel 0131 226 6051Fax 0131 225 9833E-mail music.sac@artsf6.org.ukEast Midlands Arts BoardMountfields HouseForest RoadLoughboroughLeics LE11 3HUTel 01509 218292Fax 01509 26221E-mail firstname.surname.ema@artsf6.org.ukEastern Arts BoardCherry H<strong>in</strong>ton HallCherry H<strong>in</strong>ton RoadCambridge CB1 4DWTel 01223 215355Fax 01223 248075E-mail firstname.surname/department@eastern-arts.co.ukLondon Arts Board133 Long AcreCovent GardenLondon WC2E 9AFTel 0171 240 1313Fax 0171 240 4580E-mail lab@lonab.demon.co.ukNorth West Arts BoardManchester House22 Bridge StreetManchester M3 3ABTel 0161 834 6644Fax 0161 834 6969E-mail nwarts-<strong>in</strong>fo@mcr1.poptel.org.ukNorthern Arts Board9-10 Jesmond TerraceJesmondNewcastle-upon-TyneNE2 1NZTel 0191 281 6334Fax 0191 281 3276E-mail nab@norab.demon.co.ukSouth East Arts Board10 Mount EphraimTunbridge WellsKent TN4 8ASTel 01892 515210Fax 01892 549383E-mail firstname.surname.sea@artsf6.org.ukSouth West Arts BoardBradn<strong>in</strong>ch PlaceGandy StreetExeter EX4 3LSTel 01392 218188Fax 01392 413554E-mail firstname.surname.swa@artsf6.org.ukSouthern Arts Board13 St Clement StreetW<strong>in</strong>chester SO23 9DQTel 01962 855099Fax 01962 861186E-mail firstname.surname.southarts@artsf6.org.ukWest Midlands Arts Board82 Granville StreetBirm<strong>in</strong>gham B1 2LHTel 0121 631 3121Fax 0121 643 7239E-mail firstname.surname.wma@artsf6.org.ukYorkshire and Humberside Arts21 Bond StreetDewsburyWest Yorkshire WF13 1AXTel 01924 455555Fax 01924 466522E-mail firstname.surname.yha@artsf6.org.uk


JOINING IN 179APPENDIX TWOSteer<strong>in</strong>g Group and list of those consultedThe names of those whom I consulted dur<strong>in</strong>g the process of writ<strong>in</strong>g this report follow. Most of themI have spoken with personally, but others gave me <strong>text</strong>s they had written or publications by theorganisations for which they work (these are marked by *).Pride of place goes to the Steer<strong>in</strong>g Group with whom I worked under the guidance of Siân Ede,Assistant Director (Arts), <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, UK branch.Jo Shapcott, (Chair of the Steer<strong>in</strong>g Group) poet and Education Consultant to theAssociation of British OrchestrasKeith Griff<strong>in</strong>, Director, Welsh Amateur Music FederationBen Higham, Director, Community Music EastAnne Hunt, Director, World Circuit ArtsRussell Jones, Chief Executive, National Federation of Music SocietiesKathryn McDowell, (Observer) Music Director, Arts Council of EnglandJoanna MacGregor, musicianDermot McLaughl<strong>in</strong>, Music Officer, Arts Council of IrelandGillian Moore, Head of Education, South Bank CentreAndrew Peggie, community musicianPeter Renshaw, Professor of Community Music, Guildhall School of Music and DramaErrollyn Wallen, composer, pianist, s<strong>in</strong>ger songwriterMat Anderson, composer and performerJudy Arnold, Manager, Sir Peter Maxwell DaviesRichard Bamford, community musician and composerEd Bicknell, popular music promoter, Manager of DamageRoy Bohana, Music Director, Arts Council of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau CymruProfessor Eric Bolton, former Senior Chief Inspector, HMIHelena Braithwaite, Education Officer, BBC Wales (Music)*Andrew Burn, Education and Community Director, Bournemouth S<strong>in</strong>foniettaGeorge Caird, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire*Michael Calder, Head of Orchestral Studies, Royal Scottish Academy of Music and DramaCiaran Carson, Traditional Arts Officer, Arts Council of Northen IrelandDuncan Chapman, community musician*Ian Clarke, Arts Development Officer, Borough of BlackburnJudith Clarke, formerly of South East Arts BoardKeith Clarke, Editor, Classical MusicPenny Collier, Sound It OutGerald<strong>in</strong>e Connor, musician*Arthur Cormack, Fèisean Nan GaedhealAlastair Creamer, Director, London College of MusicPaul<strong>in</strong>e Crossley, Expressive Arts Officer, Welsh Jo<strong>in</strong>t Education CommitteeJane Dancer, Northern S<strong>in</strong>foniaDr Jane Davidson, Department of Music, University of SheffieldKathryn Deane, Adm<strong>in</strong>istrator, Sound SenseGordon Dougall, Director, Sounds of Progress


180 APPENDICESAdèle Drake, Project Director, Drake Music ProjectGail Dudson, consultantAlice Dumas, Campaigns Officer, Latymer School, Enfield*Jan Dungey, Arts Development Officer, Great Yarmouth Borough Council*Roger Durston, Music Education CouncilJennifer Edwards, Director, National Campaign for the ArtsJean Escott, Wrek<strong>in</strong> Council (Chairperson, National District Arts Officers Society)Andrew Fairbairn, former Director of Education, Leicestershire County CouncilSteve Fletcher, South Wales Intercultural Community ArtsRoger Fox, Director, Voluntary Arts NetworkSimon Foxley, COMAFi Frances, Researcher for Age ConcernSarah Gibbons, Education Officer, Society for the Promotion of New MusicChristopher Gordon, English Regional Arts BoardsKathy Graham, Society for the Promotion of New MusicSarah Harman, Community Music WalesBill Harpe, The Blackie, LiverpoolWendy Harpe, freelance arts workerKeith Harris, Glenys Hughes, Artistic Director, St Magnus FestivalTony Haynes, Grand Union Music Theatre*Steve Heap, Festival Director, Mrs Casey MusicJane Hell<strong>in</strong>gs, consultant, The Arts Bus<strong>in</strong>essGav<strong>in</strong> Henderson, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, Tr<strong>in</strong>ity College of MusicMichael Henry, composerClare Higney, community artistGraham Hitchen, Director of Corporate Policy, Arts Council of England*David Hoult, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, City of Leeds College of MusicGlenys Hughes, Artistic Director, St Magnus FestivalEmyr Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, Chief Executive, Arts Council of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau CymruMarcel Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, Arts Assistant, East Midlands ArtsHeather Johnson, Chairman, Scottish Committee, National Federation of Music SocietiesJo<strong>in</strong>t Officers Group (a stand<strong>in</strong>g committee of Arts Council of England and Regional ArtsBoard officers)Naseem Khan, writer*Heather La<strong>in</strong>g, formerly Music Officer, Eastern Arts BoardTerence Lloyd, Chairman, Music Committee, National Eisteddfod of WalesIrene McDonald, music consultantAndrew McKenzie, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal Music Officer, London Arts BoardEd McKeon, National Federation of Music SocietiesLibby MacNamara, Association of British OrchestrasRichard McNicol, Apollo TrustMichael Marx, formerly Music Officer, Southern Arts BoardSir Peter Maxwell DaviesMark Monument, Northern ArtsNigel Morgan, composer and Research Fellow; University of LiverpoolJohn Muir, music consultantDr M N Nandakamura, Bhavan Centre, LondonRoy Nevitt, Theatre Director, Stantonbury Campus, Milton Keynes


JOINING IN 181Jean Nicholson, Director, Opera and Music Theatre Forum*Keith Nimmo, South West ArtsProfessor George Odam, Bath College of Higher EducationDavid O’Donnell, Project Director, Community Music LondonAndrew P<strong>in</strong>nock, Music Officer, Arts Council of EnglandJan Ponsford, musicianCurtis Price, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, Royal Academy of MusicNick Randall, Director, Youth Arts NetworkPiali Ray, Director, SAMPADStan Reeves, Adult Learn<strong>in</strong>g Project, Ed<strong>in</strong>burghRos Rigby, Co-Director, FolkworksIan Ritchie, music consultantElfed Roberts, Director, Royal National EisteddfodClare Robertson, North Area Cultural Development Officer, City of GlasgowSue Robertson, Director, London Arts BoardJudith Rob<strong>in</strong>son, Education Officer, PhilharmoniaMathew Rooke, Music Director, Scottish Arts CouncilAlison Rushby, music teacher and member of National Association of Music EducatorsSara Scott, Comb<strong>in</strong>ed Arts Officer, Arts Council of EnglandSamantha Seabourne, Adm<strong>in</strong>istrator, Sonic Arts NetworkMaggie Semple, Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Director, Arts Council of EnglandPeter Senior, Director, Arts For HealthGeoff Sims, Director, Midlands Arts CentreAntony Smith, ActivAge Development Officer, Eurol<strong>in</strong>k AgePamela Smith, Music Officer, Arts Council of Northern IrelandPhil Spurr, Estover Community CollegeGlyn Stackhouse, formerly Director of Music, British CouncilDavid Sulk<strong>in</strong>, music consultantJohn Summers, Chief Executive, Northern S<strong>in</strong>foniaRoger Taylor, President, UK Branch, International Association of Music Libraries,Archives and Documentation CentresKatie Tearle, Head of Education, Glyndebourne Opera CompanyChris Thomas, Secretary, Luton Music ClubAlison Tickell, Community Music LondonMary Turner, Artistic Director, Action Space MobileRichard Turner, Arts Council of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau CymruJames Walker, Welsh College of Music and DanceDavid Walters, Director, Music Research InstituteJudith Webster, Head of Education, Royal Philharmonic OrchestraDavid Whelton, Manag<strong>in</strong>g Director, PhilharmoniaJames Whitbourn, Producer, Choral Evensong, Radio 3Susan White, Director, Impact Arts ManagementJac Wilk<strong>in</strong>son, East Midlands ArtsLesley Willis, OvertonesDorothy Wilson, Programme Director, Midlands Arts CentreTrevor Wishart, composerPaul Wright, Education Officer, Sonic Arts NetworkL<strong>in</strong>da Young, Project Co-ord<strong>in</strong>ator, Strathaven Choral Society


182 APPENDICESAPPENDIX THREEUseful books, reports and other documentsThis is by no means a comprehensive list of books and other documents on the subject of participation andmusic. They are simply the most useful ones I encountered dur<strong>in</strong>g the process of my researches. Many areunpublished <strong>text</strong>s from the files of music organisations.Access to Jazz, A series of workshops communicat<strong>in</strong>g through Jazz, Jazz Services Ltd, 1994.Amateur Arts <strong>in</strong> the UK, by Robert Hutchison and Andrew Feist, Policy Studies Institute,London, 1991.Apollo Trust annual reports, 1977-8 to 1981-2.The Arts <strong>in</strong> a Time of Change, pamphlet by Emyr Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, National Eisteddfod of Wales, Neathand District, 1994.Association of British Orchestras, Response to the Arts Council of England ConsultativeDocument on New Lottery Directions, ABO, 1996.Association of British Orchestras, Response to the Arts Council of England Green Paper onPublicly Funded Music <strong>in</strong> England, Strik<strong>in</strong>g a Note, ABO, 1996.Attitudes to Participation <strong>in</strong> the Arts: Heritage, Broadcast<strong>in</strong>g and Sport: a Review of Recent Research,by John Harland, Kay K<strong>in</strong>der, Kate Hartley and Anne Wilk<strong>in</strong>. A report for theDepartment of National Heritage from the National <strong>Foundation</strong> for Educational Research.Bhavan Institute of Indian Culture, UK Centre 1972-92 (a brief history of the Bhavan Centre),London, 1992.Blow<strong>in</strong>g (and Strik<strong>in</strong>g) a New Note, a submission by the British Federation of Brass Bands andthe Brass Band Heritage Trust <strong>in</strong> response to the consultative Green Paper on publiclyfunded music <strong>in</strong> England, May 1996.British Federation of Brass Bands – New Lottery Programmes: the brass band response, June1996.The Cambridgeshire Report on the Teach<strong>in</strong>g of Music, Cambridgeshire Council of MusicalEducation. Cambridge University Press, 1933.The Chang<strong>in</strong>g Nature of the Music Profession, article by Ian Ritchie, based on his speech at theAnnual Sem<strong>in</strong>ar of the Specialist Music Schools and Colleges, Ed<strong>in</strong>burgh, September 1994.Chang<strong>in</strong>g Times, Conference Report of the Association of British Orchestras’ EleventhNational Conference, 1996.Children and Music: a new approach (a project proposal), Richard McNicol, 1977.The Children’s Music Book, by Saville Kushner, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, London,1991.Civil Society and its Future, by Salvador G<strong>in</strong>er, Keynote address, European Round Table of theCIRCLE Network, Budapest, March 1994, International Arts Bureau, London, 1997.Community Education and the Arts: the Estover Experience, by Phil Stevens, Phil Spurr, N<strong>in</strong>aSimpson and Donna-Lee Iffla. The Devon Papers, Devon County Council, 1995.Community Music Wales, annual report 1994-5.Concerts for Children, report of a conference <strong>in</strong> Stavanger, May 1996, StavangerSymfoniorkester.Consultative Green Paper for Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the English Arts Fund<strong>in</strong>g System, ArtsCouncil of England, June 1996.Contemporary Society and the Growth of Leisure, by Kenneth Roberts, Longman, London, 1978.Creat<strong>in</strong>g New Notes, A policy for the support of new music <strong>in</strong> England, Arts Council of England,London, 1996.A Creative Future: The way forward for the arts, crafts and media <strong>in</strong> England, Arts Council of GreatBrita<strong>in</strong>, London, 1991.The Dance and the Drum, by John and Elizabeth Paynter, Universal, 1974.Debussy: His Life and M<strong>in</strong>d, by Edward Lockspeiser, Cassell, London, 1962.Did We Do That? An evaluation of the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>’s Rural Arts Agency Scheme.by Tess Hurson, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, London, 1996.Digital Creativity, by Owen Kelly, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, London, 1996.Dolph<strong>in</strong> Report, Artistic and Educational Aspects (evaluation of Arion and the Dolph<strong>in</strong>, a BaylisProgramme at the English National community opera project), by Rebecca Meitlis, 1994.


JOINING IN 183Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the 21st Century, Department of Education and Science White Paper,HMSO, London, 1991.Elements of Aycliffe, Evaluation of work undertaken by the full Orchestra ... 7-10 March 1995, <strong>in</strong>Newton Aycliffe, Co. Durham, Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia, 1995. Also other evaluationdocumentation.Evaluation of Artists-<strong>in</strong>-Schools Development Projects <strong>in</strong> Gwynedd and Clwyd: a report by Sue Cliveand Chris Burton for the Arts Council of Wales/Cyngor Celfyddydau Cymru.Firebird Trust, Three Year Plan: 1996-9.Future Support for the Arts <strong>in</strong> England and Wales, by Lord Redcliffe-Maud, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, London, 1976.The Globe Music Exchange, May/June 1995, report of a World Circuit Arts project.The Glory of the Garden, The Development of the Arts <strong>in</strong> England, Arts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>,London, 1984.Gorleston-on-Sea-Change (proposal for an outdoor arts event) by Jan Dungey, Great YarmouthBorough Council, December 1995.Help<strong>in</strong>g to Heal, The Arts <strong>in</strong> Health Care, by Peter Senior and Jonathan Croall, <strong>Calouste</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, London, 1993.The Hidden Musicians, Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> an English Town, by Ruth F<strong>in</strong>negan, CambridgeUniversity Press, 1989.How musical is man? by John Black<strong>in</strong>g, Faber and Faber, London, 1976.In from the Marg<strong>in</strong>s, A contribution to the debate on Culture and Development <strong>in</strong> Europe, Council ofEurope, Strasbourg, 1996.In Search of Angels, Glyndebourne Education, the Peterborough Review 6, 1995. Also video, InSearch of Angels, Peterborough Community Opera.In Tune with Heaven, The Report of the Archbishops’ Commission on Church Music, Church HousePublish<strong>in</strong>g and Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1992.Instrumental Teach<strong>in</strong>g and Learn<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Con<strong>text</strong>, Shar<strong>in</strong>g a Curriculum for Music Education, MusicAdvisers’ National Association (now the National Association of Music Educators), MeltonMowbray, 1995.Invest<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Culture, Netherlands Policy Document on Culture 1993-6, M<strong>in</strong>istry of Welfare, Healthand Cultural Affairs, The Hague, The Netherlands.Jazz Services Ltd, Action Programme and F<strong>in</strong>ancial Budgets 1996-7.Jazz Services’ Response to the Arts Council of England’s Consultative Document, New LotteryProgrammes, Jazz Services Ltd, 1996.Jazz Services’ Response to the Arts Council of England’s Consultative Green Paper onEducation and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the English Arts Fund<strong>in</strong>g System, Jazz Services Ltd, 1996.Jazz – the Case for Better Investment, Jazz Services’ Submission to the Arts Council of GreatBrita<strong>in</strong>’s National Review of Jazz, Jazz Services Ltd, 1993.Learn<strong>in</strong>g Improved by Arts Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, by Mart<strong>in</strong> F Gard<strong>in</strong>er, Alan Fox, Faith Knowles and DonnaJeffrey, Nature, vol. 381, 23 May 1996.Lewisham Academy of Music annual report 1995.Live Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Rural Areas – a Dy<strong>in</strong>g or a Flourish<strong>in</strong>g Tradition? a comparative study ofamateur music <strong>in</strong> Sweden and the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom, a Major Project submitted as part of an MA<strong>in</strong> European Cultural Policy and Adm<strong>in</strong>istrations, University of Warwick, by Margaret JillShuker, September 1995.London Arts Board Corporate Plan 1996-7.London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta Education Project <strong>in</strong> F<strong>in</strong>land, Second Phase, Spr<strong>in</strong>g-Autumn 1995, reportby Tuula Yrjö-Kosk<strong>in</strong>en-Smith, London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta Education.London Symphony Orchestra, Discovery Department Policy Statement.Look<strong>in</strong>g Forward to the Year 2000, speech by Ian Ritchie to the Association of CanadianOrchestras, W<strong>in</strong>nipeg, May 1992.Mak<strong>in</strong>g Music <strong>in</strong> Schools – the Musical Imperative, by Andrew Peggie (an unpublished draft of acon<strong>text</strong>ual report on the London Arts Board/Yamaha-Kemble Ltd project, Partnerships <strong>in</strong>the Classroom.Mapp<strong>in</strong>g the Field: A research project on the education work of British orchestras, by Phyllida Shaw,Association of British Orchestras, London, 1996.More than the Sum of its Parts: Cultural Policy and Plann<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Birm<strong>in</strong>gham, by Anthony Sargent,Cultural Policy, Harwood Academic Publishers, vol. 2, no. 2, The Netherlands, 1996.Mov<strong>in</strong>g Culture, an enquiry <strong>in</strong>to the cultural activities of young people, by Paul Willis, <strong>Calouste</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, London, 1990.Music and the Community, (undated pamphlet), Royal Academy of Music.


184 APPENDICESThe Music of the Environment, no. 1 of an occasional journal devoted to Soundscape Studies,edited by R Murray Schafer, Universal Edition, Vienna, 1973.Music Explorer, Video featur<strong>in</strong>g the London Symphony Orchestra with Guidebook by RichardMcNichol, London Symphony Orchestra, 1995.Music Explorer Project Book, by Richard McNicol, Apollo Trust <strong>in</strong> association with OxfordUniversity Press, 1995.Music <strong>in</strong> the Five Towns 1840-1940, a Study of the Social Influence of Music <strong>in</strong> an Industrial District,by R Nettel, Oxford University Press, 1944.Music Improvisation <strong>in</strong> Primary Schools, Access to Music, 1995.Music and the M<strong>in</strong>d, by Paul Robertson, Channel 4 Television, London, 1996.Music and the M<strong>in</strong>d, by Anthony Storr, HarperColl<strong>in</strong>s, London, 1992.Music, M<strong>in</strong>d and Education, by Keith Swanwick, Routledge, London and New York, 1988.Music for Pleasure, by Simon Frith, Polity Press, Cambridge, 1988.Music-Society-Education, by Christopher Small, John Calder, London, 1977.Musical Education <strong>in</strong> Hungary, by Sándor Frigyes, Corv<strong>in</strong>a Press, Budapest, 1966.The Musical Temperament, by Anthony E Kemp, Oxford University Press, 1996.National District Arts Officers Survey, A Survey of Arts Development <strong>in</strong> Local Authorities,August 1995.National Federation Of Music Societies Five Year Development Plan, 1996-2000.National Federation Of Music Societies New Lottery Programmes, a Response from theNFMS, 1996.National Federation Of Music Societies Scotland, Four Year Plan, 1997-8 to 2001-01.The National Lottery – Whatever Next? National Campaign for the Arts and National MusicCouncil, 1996.New Approaches to New Music, a report on the Contemporary Music Network educational activities1980-1, by Andrew Peggie, Arts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, 1981.New Lottery Programmes, Consultative Document, Arts Council of England, June 1996.New Technology <strong>in</strong> the Classroom, by Paul Wright, Musical Times, August 1992.Northern Lights: The Social Impact of the Fèisean (Gaelic Festivals), The Social Impact of the Arts,Work<strong>in</strong>g Paper 6, by François Matarasso, Comedia, Stroud, 1996.Now’s the Time, Community Music East 1989-93, four year report.On Tour – a week of communication Sunderland November 1-5 1994, report by Kathryn Deane ofan Opera North community project.Orchestral Development <strong>in</strong> the UK: a Case of Accelerated Evolution, a speech by Libby MacNamaraat the European Orchestral Convention, Rome, 1995.Our Creative Diversity, Report of the World Commission on Culture and Development, WorldCommission on Culture and Development, Paris, 1996.Out and About, by Stewart, Andrew, Music Teacher, February 1995.Overtones, annual report 1994-5.Paynter, John and Aston, Peter, Sound and Silence, Classroom Projects <strong>in</strong> Creative Music,Cambridge University Press, 1970.Paper by Ben Higham, submitted to ISME CMA Sem<strong>in</strong>ar and the 22nd ISME WorldConference, July 1996.People Tak<strong>in</strong>g Part (a study on access to the arts) Department of National Heritage, 1996.Perception of Music by Infants, by Marcel R Zentner and Jerome Kagan, Nature, vol. 383, 5September 1996.Perform<strong>in</strong>g Right Yearbook 1996-7, Perform<strong>in</strong>g Right Society Ltd, London, 1996.A Policy for the Arts: the first steps, Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, London, 1968.Pop 2000, European Cultural Centre, London, 1995.The Power of Music, by Richard McNicol, Channel 4 Television, 1993.Prospectus, Welsh College of Music and Drama, 1996.Prospectus 1996-7, London College of Music at Thames Valley University.Radical Perspectives <strong>in</strong> the Arts, Pengu<strong>in</strong> Books, Harmondsworth, 1972.The Review of Music <strong>in</strong> the Northern Arts Region, Northern Arts, October 1995.Extract from the Sem<strong>in</strong>ar Report: The Role of Community Music <strong>in</strong> a Chang<strong>in</strong>g World, by Tim Joss,International Society for Music Education/Commission for Community Music Activity, 1994.Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Community and Education Programme Nott<strong>in</strong>ghamshire,1994-5 Report, 1995.Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Community and Education Programme Policy (undated).Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Education Programme, Project Report (f<strong>in</strong>al draft), 1996.Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Halifax Orchestra Now Report, 1996.


JOINING IN 185RSGB Omnibus Arts Survey: Report on a Survey on Arts and Cultural Activities <strong>in</strong> GB, ResearchSurveys of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> Ltd, Arts Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, London, 1991.Search and Reflect, by John Stevens, Community Music London, 1985.S<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Schools Survey – F<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs, British Federation of Youth Choirs, Loughborough, 1991.The Song Sampler, (with cassette tape) by Sandra Kerr, Folkworks, 1994.Sound and Silence, Classroom Projects <strong>in</strong> Creative Music, by John Paynter and Peter Aston,Cambridge University Press, 1970.The Sound<strong>in</strong>g Symbol, by George Odam, Stanley Thornes (Publishers) Ltd, Cheltenham, 1995.Southern Arts Corporate Plan 1996-7.The State We’re In, by Will Hutton, V<strong>in</strong>tage, London, 1996.Street Rhythms 94, report of the Estover Street Rhythms Festival, October 1994, by R WMountjoy, Estover Community College, Plymouth.Strik<strong>in</strong>g a New Note, Jazz Services’ Response to the Arts Council of England’s Green Paper,Strik<strong>in</strong>g a New Note.Tak<strong>in</strong>g Part, Department of National Heritage, London, 1996.Traditional Arts Projects, annual report 1994-5.Traditional Arts Projects Development Plan 1995-8.Turn of the Tide – Report, (report of the ABO’s national education project April 1992-June1993) by Phyllida Shaw, Association of British Orchestras.The Value of Music, National Music Council Report <strong>in</strong>to the Value of the UK Music Industryprepared by the University of Westm<strong>in</strong>ster, London, 1996.The Voice <strong>in</strong> Community Music Sem<strong>in</strong>ar, University of East Anglia, 30 August-2 September 1994, areport, Community Music East, 1995.Voluntary Arts Network Directory 1996, Voluntary Arts Network, Cardiff.Welsh Music Live, Autumn 94 (music resource pack), BBC National Orchestra of Wales.What is Music Anyway? by Paul Wright, Education Officer, Sonic Arts Network.Young People and their Approach to Musical Participation, a report by Adrian Kirkwood for theDanesborough Chorus and the National Federation of Music Societies, June 1996.Among the magaz<strong>in</strong>es I found useful were:ABO News, monthly newsletter produced for Association of British Orchestras memberorchestras.Classical Music, fortnightly magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Rh<strong>in</strong>egold Publish<strong>in</strong>g Ltd, London.COMA Newsletter, quarterly magaz<strong>in</strong>e, COMA, London.Diffusion, quarterly members’ magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Sonic Arts Network.Folkwords, bi-monthly magaz<strong>in</strong>e, Folkworks, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.Journal of Electroacoustic Music, Sonic Arts Network.LCM Magaz<strong>in</strong>e (twice yearly), London College of Music.The Liv<strong>in</strong>g Tradition, (six times a year), Kilmarnock, Ayrshire.NCA News, quarterly magaz<strong>in</strong>e of the National Campaign for the Arts, London.New Notes, published monthly by the Society for the Promotion of New Music, FrancisHouse, Francis Street, London SW1P 1DE.Sound<strong>in</strong>g Board, the quarterly magaz<strong>in</strong>e of Sound Sense, the National Community MusicAssociation, Sound Sense, Rattlesden, Bury St Edmunds.Sound<strong>in</strong>gs, music <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> today, quarterly magaz<strong>in</strong>e, the British Council.


photo: Marcus Tate


JOINING IN 187INDEXAccess to Music 53, 56ActiveAge 90Adult education 41, 60, 74, 75, 85, 97, 156, 163-4Adult Learn<strong>in</strong>g Project, Ed<strong>in</strong>burgh 59-60Africa, musics of 15, 27-8, 47, 49, 75, 88-9, 145African and Caribbean Music Circuit 50-1Afro-Caribbean musics 15, 45, 50-1, 75, 88Age Concern 91, 163, 168ALAAP 87Alvarez, Javier 127Amateur music societies and clubs, situation of 14,39-44, 48, 57, 64, 80, 86, 138, 143, 148, 163,164, 166, 172Amateur music, general statistics 39Amateurism, def<strong>in</strong>ition of 38Anderson, Alistair 58Anderson, Mat 111Apollo Trust 106Ark 94-5Arnold, Malcolm 44Arnold, Matthew 66Arts centres 15, 23, 44, 51-2, 54-5, 75, 82-3,89-90, 94-5, 97-8, 100, 151, 162-4, 168, 172Arts Council Great Brita<strong>in</strong> 75, 84-5, 133, 148,150-2The Glory of the Garden 152, 185Arts Council of England 40, 48, 51, 54, 74, 76, 93,104, 113, 149, 154, 156, 164A Creative Future 133, 182Arts4Everyone 40, 154, 156Creat<strong>in</strong>g New Notes 156 182Music and Disability Audit 93National Lottery 20Arts Council of Northern Ireland 55, 105Arts Council of Wales 41, 46Arts for All 40, 156Asian Dub <strong>Foundation</strong> 87, 143Asian Music Circuit 51Assembly Direct Ltd 54Association for the Development of OpenOpportunity <strong>in</strong> Recreation 94Association of British Orchestras 73, 99, 103-4,107, 136The Turn of the Tide 104, 107-9, 185Association of Irish Musical Societies 39Association of Professional Composers 99Atk<strong>in</strong>s, Robert 88Attenborough Committee of Inquiry <strong>in</strong>to the Artsand Disabled People 92Bagpipe Society 57Baker, Andy 89Bali, music <strong>in</strong> 28Bamford, Richard 128Barnsley College 143Battersea Arts Centre, London 83BBC 21, 53, 57, 59, 65, 118, 120, 141, 154Beckton Music Group 142-3Beecham, Sir Thomas 34, 37, 119Benjam<strong>in</strong>, George 105Benjam<strong>in</strong>, Walter 81Bennett, Arnold 35Berger, John 80-1Bernste<strong>in</strong>, Leonard 27Bhavan Centre 51-2, 176Birm<strong>in</strong>gham City Council 152Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Conservatoire 17, 144-6, 166Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Probation Service 90Black Dyke Mills Band 109Black Warriors 53Black<strong>in</strong>g, John 64, 70, 144Bolton, Eric 67, 71, 125Borda, Deborah 102Boughton, Rutland 108Boulez, Pierre 64, 102-3Bournemouth Orchestras 112Bournemouth S<strong>in</strong>fonietta 89, 112Boys’ Brigade 46, 90Bracknell Arts Centre, South Hill Park 83, 89, 94Braden, Su 81-4Bragg, Melvyn 120Brass Band Heritage Trust 40, 46Bretton Hall 57, 143Brewery, Kendal 83British Academy of Songwriters, Composers andAuthors 99British Association of Barbershop S<strong>in</strong>gers 40British Association of Symphonic Bands and W<strong>in</strong>dEnsembles 40, 176British Bluegrass Music Association 40British Federation of Brass Bands 39-40, 46British Federation of Festivals for Music, Dance andSpeech 47British Federation of Music Festivals 39British Federation of Youth Choirs 40, 176British Music Information Centre 99, 176Britten, Benjam<strong>in</strong> 108Brouhaha Multi-Music Club 87Brown, Sally 59Brown, Tim 50BT Innovation Awards 44-5, 140Cage, John 41Caird, George 144Cambridge City Council 152Cambridgeshire Report on Music <strong>in</strong> Schools 65, 182Carnegie UK Trust 40Carriacou 49Chagr<strong>in</strong>, Francis 141Chartered Institute for Public F<strong>in</strong>ance andAccountancy 152Cheeseman, Peter 36Ch<strong>in</strong>ese Cultural Centre 52Ch<strong>in</strong>ese New Year Festival 52Choral societies, situation of 14, 20-1, 39, 44-5, 64,151Christ Church College, Canterbury 143Church of England, choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the 44-5City of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Symphony Orchestra 45, 109City of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham Tour<strong>in</strong>g Opera 97City of Leeds College of Music 51, 57, 144Classic FM 120, 187


188 INDEXClegg, Alec 66Cleveland Society of Indian Doctors 51Colchester Institute 56Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann 57Commonwealth Institute 51Communications technologies 22, 24, 119, 167Community arts 15, 24, 39, 59, 68, 80-1, 84-5, 88,90, 132, 144, 148-9, 151, 153, 157, 169Community music 12, 14-17, 24, 34, 38-9, 68-71,75-6, 80, 83, 85-9, 94, 96-7, 100, 102, 106,111-2, 114, 124, 126-7, 133-6, 138, 140-5, 149,153-4, 160-1, 163-4, 166-7Workshop practice 15, 83, 140Community Music East 87-8, 96, 136Community Music Wales 87, 127Community Music London 83, 166Community, def<strong>in</strong>ition of 80Composers’ Guild of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> 99Computer Music Research Institute, Stamford,Connecticut 125Contemporary Music-mak<strong>in</strong>g for Amateurs 41, 176Cork, Richard 91Council of Europe 23, 88Council for Music <strong>in</strong> Hospitals 91-2Council for the Encouragement of Music and theArts 148, 150Crosby, B<strong>in</strong>g 121Cultural Co-operation 88Dancer, Jane 71Danesborough Chorus 42Dart<strong>in</strong>gton Arts and International Summer School51, 75Dart<strong>in</strong>gton College of the Arts 145Daswani, Prakash 88Dear<strong>in</strong>g, Sir Ron 64Debussy, Claude 27Department for Education and Employment 72, 98,127, 150, 163, 172Department of Health and Social Security 92Department of National Heritage 48, 149, 162,168, 172, 174Doncaster Youth Jazz Orchestra 53Doors, The 82Dougall, Gordon 95Drake Music Project 94, 127-8Dylan, Bob 82Eal<strong>in</strong>g Jazz Festival 53East London Late Starters Orchestra 41East Midlands Arts 55-6, 177Education Act (1944) 66-7Education Act (1993) 64Education and music 12, 14-5, 17, 22, 31, 34,37-9, 41-3, 51-4, 56, 58-61, 64-77, 80, 83, 85-7,93, 95-100, 102-15, 119-22, 125-9, 132-46, 148,150, 152-6, 162-9, 173-4Psychological research 25, 30Education Reform Act (1988) 64Education (Schools) Act (1992) 64Edwards, Terry 106Eisteddfodau 12, 44, 60, 139Elgar, Sir Edward 36-7, 41, 47, 108Elk<strong>in</strong>, Susan 71English Folk Dance and Song Society 57, 176English Folk Dance Society 57English National Opera 112Baylis Programme 91, 112English S<strong>in</strong>fonia 107Enterprise Music Scotland 40Estover Community College 97-8Estover Percussion Project 97, 120, 168Federation of Music Collectives 39, 55, 176Fèis movement 59Fèisean nan Gàidheal 59, 176Film music 6, 51, 66, 89, 119, 121, 143F<strong>in</strong>negan, Ruth 40Firebird Trust 107Fleischmann, Ernest 102Folk music, revival of 12, 14, 27, 49, 57-9Folk Song Society 57Folk South West 58Folkworks 57-8, 114, 140-1, 163, 176Foxley, Simon 41Free Churches, choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the 45Friere, Paolo 60Fudge, Roland 44Further Education Fund<strong>in</strong>g Council 74-5, 98Gabriel, Peter 89, 127Gaelic traditional musics 12, 14, 39, 59, 85Garner, James 35, 37Gateshead Metropolitan District Council 99, 114-5,163Generator 56Glennie, Evelyn 128Glyndebourne Opera 86, 92Goldsmiths College, University of London 51, 135,145Gosforth High School 58Graham, Gill 145Gra<strong>in</strong>ger, Percy 59Gregory, Sean 111Griffiths, Paul 111Groves, Sir Charles 64Guildhall School of Music and Drama 85, 104,110-11, 144-5<strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> 69, 106, 139, 141Hackney Music Development Trust 96, 163Hallé Orchestra 36, 93Hands On Music 57Harries, Sue 112Harris, Keith 50Harrison, Jonty 123Haver<strong>in</strong>g Borough Council 152Heap, Charles Sw<strong>in</strong>nerton 35-7Heart ’n’ Soul 94-5Henderson, Gav<strong>in</strong> 145Herbert, Paul 97Hertfordshire County Council 152Higham, Ben 88, 136Hodgk<strong>in</strong>s, Chris 54Hoggart, Richard 84-5, 132Holst, Gustav 47, 108Hoult, David 144


JOINING IN 189Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival 41Hunt, Anne 88, 161Incorporated Society of Musicians 73Indian Subcont<strong>in</strong>ent Asian Music Directory 51Interculturalism 15, 88-9International Musical Eisteddfod 60Internet 24, 51, 118, 128-9, 140, 162, 172Irish Arts Council 55Ives, Charles 80Jagger, Mick 48Jammers’ Caribbean Jazz Band 97Jazz 6, 12, 37, 43, 49, 53-4, 57, 87-9, 96-7, 99,102, 106, 108, 114, 118, 120-2, 127, 141, 143,145, 148, 156Jazz Action 54Jazz FM 53, 120Jazz FM North West 53Jazz North West 54Jazz Services 53-4, 96, 99, 120, 127, 148, 176Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, Emyr 41Jenk<strong>in</strong>s, Marcel 56John Moores University 144Joss, Tim 138Keele Philharmonic Society 37Keele, University of 37, 85Kelly, Owen 118, 129Keys, Professor Ivor 118Keynes, Maynard 150-1, 154K<strong>in</strong>g Alfred’s College, W<strong>in</strong>chester 143La<strong>in</strong>g, R D 81Latymer School, Enfield 98Leavis, F R 132Leicestershire County Council 98, 152Lewisham Academy of Music, London 51, 87, 96Ligeti, György 112Littlewood, Joan 57Live Music Now 92Liverpool Community College 143Liverpool Institute of Perform<strong>in</strong>g Arts 143Local education authorities 37, 66-8, 72-3, 75-6,98, 113, 153, 162, 165, 173Local government spend<strong>in</strong>g on the arts 46, 151-3,155London Arts Board 87, 136, 143, 178London College of Music at Thames University 145London Musicians’ Collective 87London S<strong>in</strong>fonietta 91, 93, 102, 105, 107, 112,134, 136London Symphony Orchestra 107Lothian Regional Council 59Luce, Sir Richard 40Luton Music Club 43mac (Midlands Arts Centre) 52, 97, 162, 177MacMillan, James 109MacNamara, Libby 104Maestro Steel Orchestra 97Maisons de la Culture 83Mason, Stuart 66Maxwell Davies, Sir Peter 43, 73, 87, 102, 107-9,124McCartney, Sir Paul 143McColl, Ewan 57McDonald, Irene 48, 153McDowell, Kathryn 107, 109McNicol, Richard 105-8, 112Mecklenburgh Opera 113Millennium Commission 115, 154, 162Montague, Jeremy 27Montague, Stephen 41Moore, Gillian 93, 102, 105-6, 109, 135-6Morris Federation 57Morris R<strong>in</strong>g 57Morrison, Jim 82Mullen, Phil 135Music and disability 12, 48, 85, 92, 93-5, 99,127-8, 142, 156, 161, 164, 168Music and evaluation 17, 34, 48, 76, 83, 93, 132-4,137-40, 166-7, 169, 173Music and new technology 16, 51, 56, 75, 77, 86,94, 97, 105, 121, 123-4, 127-9, 156, 162-3,167-8, 172Music and participation, nature of 13Music and the bra<strong>in</strong> 14Music and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 14, 17, 26, 29, 34, 40, 45-6, 48,50-1, 53, 56, 58-61, 65, 73-7, 82, 84, 86-7,93-9, 103-5, 108-12, 114, 125-6, 135, 141-6,148, 150, 153, 156, 161-2, 164-6, 172-3Music curriculum 15-17, 30, 34, 45, 48, 52, 53,64, 66-73, 76-7, 103, 108-9, 112, 114, 125, 127,137, 142-3, 145, 156, 163-5, 172-3Music <strong>in</strong> health care 91-2, 103, 168Music <strong>in</strong> prisons 91-2, 93, 103, 106, 112-3, 168Music <strong>in</strong> schools 15, 17, 20, 30, 34, 37, 41, 43-8,50-5, 58-61, 64-77, 80-5, 89, 94, 96-100,103-13, 125-9, 134, 137, 142-5, 153, 156, 162-8,172-4Teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 34, 48, 73-4, 77, 164-6, 173Music Research Institute 31Music workshops, critique of 15, 71, 133, 135, 137Music, social uses of 25-8, 70Music, Western classical 12, 14, 17, 24-5, 27-8, 34,38-9, 41-3, 53-4, 68, 71, 75, 82-3, 87, 102-3,105, 107-8, 113, 115, 118, 120, 122, 132, 144-5,163, 169, 174Musicians’ Union 40, 54Musicworks 87Musique concrète 121-2Nandakumara, Dr M 51-2National Association of Choirs 39, 176National Campaign for the Arts 154National Council for Educational Technology 127National Disability and Music Information Service127National Federation of Music Societies 39-43, 45,96, 134, 140-1, 148, 151, 153, 155, 177National Folk Dance Society of Wales 57National <strong>Foundation</strong> for Educational Research 42,54-5, 104National Heritage, Department of 48, 149, 162,168, 172, 174


190 INDEXNational Institute for Adult and Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>gEducation 74National Lottery 6, 18, 20, 40, 61, 75, 96, 98, 115,120, 133, 148-9, 153-4, 156, 166, 168-9, 172,174National Lottery Charities Board 156, 169National Music and Disability Information Service99, 177National Music Day 48, 141National Operatic and Dramatic Association 39, 177National Sound Archive 114National Youth Agency 90National Youth Arts Festival 142National Youth Brass Band of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> 46National Youth Brass Band of Wales 46National Youth Choir of Wales 44Netherlands, music policy <strong>in</strong> 148, 170Nettel, R 36, 80Newcastle-upon-Tyne Metropolitan DistrictCouncil 115Newham, London borough of 142-3Newsom, Peter 66Nicholson, Jean 113NMC Record<strong>in</strong>gs Ltd 99Non-European m<strong>in</strong>orities, musics of 49-52North Devon College Band 112North Staffordshire Symphony Orchestra 37North Staffs Operatic Society 37Northern Arts 55-6, 58, 151, 178Northern Ireland Bands Association 39, 177Northern S<strong>in</strong>fonia 71, 99, 114, 163Northumbrian Pipers’ Society 57Nott<strong>in</strong>g Hill Carnival 49Nott<strong>in</strong>gham Probation Service 111O’Donnell, David 87Odam, George 24, 68-9, 127OFSTED 66Open University 87Opera 6, 12, 26-7, 34, 53, 75-6, 84, 86-8, 92, 94,96-7, 108, 112-4, 120, 133, 148-9, 150, 154Opera and Music Theatre Forum 113Orchestras, education and community outreach 12,71, 85, 94, 102-3, 110-12, 114, 133, 144, 154,166, 173Orchestras, future role of 102, 113Osborne, Nigel 106-112Overtones 86, 96Paynter, John 68, 83, 107, 126Peggie, Andrew 83, 134-5, 137Performance Channel 119Perform<strong>in</strong>g Right Society 118-9Peterborough, community opera at 87, 113Philharmonia 111-12Pilgrim Trust 150Pimlico Opera 92, 113Ponsonby, Robert 154Popular culture, impact of on participatory music22, 36, 49, 119-20, 143, 151, 170Pottery towns, music <strong>in</strong> the 34-7, 39, 41, 47, 80-1Price, Curtis 144Pr<strong>in</strong>ce’s Trust 90Professionalism, def<strong>in</strong>ition of 38Quite Sane 53Radio Télévision Française 121Randall, Nick 90Ravel, Maurice 28, 105Raw Material 50, 86Record<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dustry, statistics 118Redcliffe-Maud, Lord 151-2, 167Reeves, Stan 60Regional Arts Boards 46-7, 50, 55-6, 76, 113,138-9, 148, 151, 155, 162-4, 167-9, 177Regional Music Centre, planned, Gateshead 114,163Renshaw, Peter 85, 104-5, 133, 144Rigby, Ros 57-8, 141Ritchie, Ian 105Robertson, Paul 29-31Rock and pop music 14, 16, 23, 38, 53-6, 61, 64,74, 81-2, 89, 121, 123, 139, 141, 155, 164, 168Roman Catholic Church, choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the 44Royal Academy of Music 144Royal Albert Hall 45-6Royal College of Music 145Royal National Eisteddfod 60Royal Opera House 149Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 110-11, 134Sharp Edge 111Royal Scottish Country Dance Society 57Royal Scottish Pipe Band Association 57, 177Royal Society of Arts 72-3Runswick, Daryl 41SAMPAD 52, 97, 145, 177Schaeffer, Pierre 121Schools Curriculum and Assessment Authority 64,66, 164, 173School of Oriental and African Studies 51Scottish Arts Council 40, 57, 60, 96, 177New Directions 40, 156Scottish Chamber Orchestra 94, 105Scouts 21, 90Senior, Peter 91-2Shapcott, Jo 6-7, 139SHAPE 92Shaw, Phyllida 134Shaw, Sir Roy 75, 84Sidmouth International Folk Arts Festival 48, 58Simon, Paul 89S<strong>in</strong>gh, Dav<strong>in</strong>der 89S<strong>in</strong>gh, Kiranpal 89Skeef, Eugene 112Skye and Lochalsh Young Music Makers 96Small, Christopher 26-7, 68Social trendsConsumption 23-4Individualisation 22, 31, 86Moral relativism 23Society for the Promotion of New Music 46, 99,109, 141, 177Society for the Traditional Instruments of Wales 57Solihull Metropolitan District Council 152


JOINING IN 191Sonic Arts Network 122-3, 126-7, 177Sontag, Susan 148Sound It Out 17, 97, 145-6, 166Sound Sense 85, 89, 96, 99, 127, 135, 140, 177Soundbeam 94, 127-8Sounds of Progress 95South Asian musics 48, 51-2, 64, 88, 97South Bank Centre 45, 52, 91, 102, 122, 135-6South Kesteven District Council 59South Wales Intercultural Community Arts 90South West Arts 58, 178South West Jazz 54Sports Council 6, 57, 59, 162St Magnus Festival 87, 108-9Staffordshire County Music Department 37Stand<strong>in</strong>g Committee for the Arts <strong>in</strong> Prisons 93Stantonbury Campus, Milton Keynes 98Stevens, John 83, 87St<strong>in</strong>g 89Stoke-on-Trent 36-7Storr, Anthony 27Strathaven Choral Society 44Strathclyde Regional Council 94, 109Studio Symphony Orchestra 44Surrey Music Initiative 90Swanwick, Keith 69-70, 83, 132Sweeney, William 109Tanner, Rob<strong>in</strong> 66Thomas, Chris 42Thomas, Phil 112Tickell, Alison 88, 124Tippett, Sir Michael 102, 108Tomorrow’s Warriors 53Tonic Sol-fa notation 35, 65Traditional Arts Projects 58, 89Traditional Music and Song Association of Scotland57, 177TRADS 59Tr<strong>in</strong>ity College of Music 112, 145Turn of the Tide 104, 107-9, 185Ulster Orchestra 105, 107United Nations Declaration of Cultural Rights 21University College, Bretton Hall 57, 143University College, Salford 57, 143University of York 145University of Newcastle 55-8Urdd Eisteddfod 44Vale of Glamorgan Festival 109Vaughan Williams, Sir Ralph 47, 108, 150Vocem Electric Voice Theatre 113Voluntary Arts Network 40Watson, Roger 58, 89Webster, Judith 110Welsh Amateur Music Federation 39-40, 42, 46,177Welsh Jazz Society 54West Country Concert<strong>in</strong>as 57West Cumberland Choral Society 44West Gallery Music Association 57West London Institute of Higher Education 51Weston, Veryan 110Wiegold, Peter 83, 104, 106, 111, 145Wilby, Philip 46Williams, Raymond 80, 150Williams, W E 148Willis, Lesley 86Willis, Paul 54, 132Wilson, Dorothy 97Wishart, Trevor 83, 122-3WOMAD 51, 88Wood, Sir Henry 119Workers’ Educational Association 74, 85World Circuit Arts 51, 88Wright, Paul 122, 124, 126Xango 97Yamaha Kemble 126, 143Year of Opera and Music Theatre 113Yorkshire Fiddle Club 57Young Persons Concerts <strong>Foundation</strong> 99Youth Arts Network 90, 168

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