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Music, Theosophical spirituality, and empire: the British modernist composers Cyril Scott and John Foulds*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 July 2008
Abstract
This article deals with the life and work of the early twentieth-century British modernist composers Cyril Scott and John Foulds, in the context of British national music and ‘imperial culture’ at large. Through a discussion of their Theosophical spirituality, Indian musical exoticism, and modernist aesthetics (for all of which they became outsiders to the British music establishment), it tentatively investigates their ideas as part of an ‘alternative’ ideological cluster, which equally influenced British ‘imperial culture’. Furthermore, it discusses the role of Theosophists (such as Annie Besant, Margaret Cousins, and Rukmini Devi) in Indian nationalism and the making of modern South Indian music. This situates the cases of Scott and Foulds within Theosophy as a global movement, and illustrates how cosmopolitan radicalism, Western self-questioning, modernist aesthetics, and anti-establishment thinking linked up with the emergence of non-Western anti-imperial nationalism through an intricate network of personal relationships in metropolis and colony.
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References
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22 Partly because of the introductory note, his A yoga in sound (1938) for piano also remains an interesting piece of Theosophical musical exoticism.
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38 Scott, Bone of contention, p. 221.
39 His first autobiography was My years of indiscretion, London: Mills and Boons, 1924.
40 See, for example, Maud Mann (Maud MacCarthy), ‘Some Indian conceptions of music’, Proceedings of the Musical Association, 38th session, 1911–12, pp. 41–65.
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42 Ibid., p. 83. See also John Foulds, Music to-day: its heritage from the past, and legacy to the future, London: Ivor Nicholson and Watson, 1934, pp. 343–6.
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53 Ibid., p. 103; Scott, The philosophy, appendix 1 (‘The occult relationship between sound and colour’).
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55 Foulds, Music to-day, pp. 281–2.
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61 Ibid.; Foulds, Music to-day, pp. 132–9.
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63 Risseeuw, ‘Thinking culture through counter-culture’; van der Veer, Imperial encounters, pp. 64–5, 143–4.
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65 Foulds, Music to-day, pp. 140–51. Cf. Sampsel, Cyril Scott, pp. 133, 136.
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75 Ibid., p. 53; Weidman, Singing the classical, pp. 233–4.
76 Sorrell, ‘A composer’, p. 54.
77 MacDonald, John Foulds, p. 81.
78 Ibid., p. 124; Mann, ‘Some Indian conceptions’, pp. 62–3.
79 Cf. Maurice Delage (1879–1961) and Albert Roussel (1869–1936) and their relationships with India in the French imperial context: Jann Pasler, ‘Race, orientalism, and distinction in the wake of the “yellow peril”’, in Born and Hesmondhalgh, Western music and its others, pp. 86–118.
80 Scott, Bone of contention, p. 12; Foulds, Music to-day, p. 276.
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84 See Richards, Imperialism and music, p. 160.
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87 Jonathan, Harvey, In quest of spirit: thoughts on music, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1999Google Scholar; John, Tavener, The music of silence: a composer’s testament, London: Faber and Faber, 1999.Google Scholar
88 Taylor, Beyond exoticism, pp. 104–5.
89 After more than eighty years, Foulds’ A world requiem was performed on the 11 November 2007 in the Royal Festival Hall, London. It was broadcasted live on BBC radio and released on compact disc. Since the 1990s, in fact, there has been a revival of the music of Scott and Foulds. See http://www.cyrilscott.net and http://www.bluntinstrument.org.uk/foulds (both consulted 30 April 2008).
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