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10 - ‘Opera Over a Cooking Stove’: Gender Dynamics in the Music Career of Joan Trimble

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2023

Laura Watson
Affiliation:
Maynooth University, Ireland
Ita Beausang
Affiliation:
Technological University, Dublin
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Summary

Joan Trimble (1915–2000) was an accomplished composer and performer, whose compositions reveal deft craftsmanship and skilful orchestration for diverse media, including two pianos, brass band, TV opera, orchestra, incidental music and chamber music. Following her education at the Royal Irish Academy of Music and Trinity College, Dublin, she pursued further studies in composition and piano at the Royal College of Music (RCM), London. A student of Howells and Vaughan Williams, her early compositions won prizes at the RCM and Feis Ceoil, Dublin. Trimble’s music typically assimilated impressionist techniques, with an idiom deeply rooted in her Irish heritage. Yet, Trimble became self-conscious of the ‘Irishness’ and lyricism of her music, later writing that ‘the growing trend for atonal and serial music was undermining the confidence of many established composers – let alone a small figure like myself’. She was also aware of the limited visibility of female composers, a factor that may account for her reticence to compose without the stimulus of a commission or encouragement from a mentor. Furthermore, both Trimble and her music were subject to gender-based criticism. For example, in press notices advertising the forthcoming broadcast of her TV opera Blind Raftery (1957) much was made of Trimble’s domestic role, while there was scant reference to her professional musical credentials. With the exception of two commissions in 1969 and 1990, Trimble ceased composing after Blind Raftery.

This chapter examines the trajectory of Trimble’s music career with reference to the gendered environment noted above, paying particular attention to the ways in which relevant educational and professional infrastructures provided support, or not, to women. The media’s role in stereotyping both Trimble and her music stands as a further theme in this chapter, with a critical focus on reception and aesthetics. Trimble’s domestic responsibilities as mother and housewife were both real and idealised, and these are further critiqued in relation to media coverage of the composer’s TV opera. Trimble’s career may be contextualised within wider sociological and cultural debates. Over forty years ago, Angela Carter astutely observed that ‘the behavioural modes of masculine and feminine […] are culturally defined variables translated in the language of common usage to the status of universals’.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2022

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