Beyond Britten: The Composer and the Community
By Peter Wiegold (Editor), Ghislaine Kenyon (Editor), Amoret Abis (Contribution by), Christopher Fox (Contribution by), Colin Matthews (Contribution by), Detta Danford (Contribution by), Douglas Mitchell (Contribution by), Eugene Skeef (Contribution by), Ghislaine Kenyon (Contribution by), Gillian Moore (Contribution by), Howard Skempton (Contribution by), James Redwood (Contribution by), John Barber (Contribution by), John Sloboda (Contribution by), Jonathan Reekie (Contribution by), Judith Webster (Contribution by), Katie Tearle (Contribution by), Natasha Zielazinski (Contribution by), Nigel Osborne (Contribution by), Peter Wiegold (Contribution by), Sean Gregory (Contribution by), Tommy Pearson (Contribution by)
Hardcover
$65.00
By Peter Wiegold (Editor), Ghislaine Kenyon (Editor), Amoret Abis (Contribution by), Christopher Fox (Contribution by), Colin Matthews (Contribution by), Detta Danford (Contribution by), Douglas Mitchell (Contribution by), Eugene Skeef (Contribution by), Ghislaine Kenyon (Contribution by), Gillian Moore (Contribution by), Howard Skempton (Contribution by), James Redwood (Contribution by), John Barber (Contribution by), John Sloboda (Contribution by), Jonathan Reekie (Contribution by), Judith Webster (Contribution by), Katie Tearle (Contribution by), Natasha Zielazinski (Contribution by), Nigel Osborne (Contribution by), Peter Wiegold (Contribution by), Sean Gregory (Contribution by), Tommy Pearson (Contribution by)
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Leading composers, producers and writers consider the role of the composer in the community in Britain today and over the last fifty years.
With his Aspen award lecture (1964), Benjamin Britten expressed a unique commitment to community and place. This book revisits this seminal lecture, but then uses it as a starting point of reflection, inviting leading composers, producers and writers to consider the role of the composer in the community in Britain in the last fifty years.
Colin Matthews, ...
With his Aspen award lecture (1964), Benjamin Britten expressed a unique commitment to community and place. This book revisits this seminal lecture, but then uses it as a starting point of reflection, inviting leading composers, producers and writers to consider the role of the composer in the community in Britain in the last fifty years.
Colin Matthews, ...






















