ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Cork University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9781782052869
RRP: £17.95
PUBLICATION DATE:
September 3, 2018
BUY THIS BOOK
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Rebellious Ferment: A Dublin Musical Memoir and Diary
Brian Boydell
Barra Boydell
Brian Boydell (1917 – 2000) was a leading figure in Irish musical life. Composer, performer, broadcaster, agitator for music, and Professor of Music at Trinity College Dublin, he profoundly influenced the development of music and music education in Ireland. In his later years he wrote his memoirs focusing in particular on the 1940s and early 1950s (but extending to the early 1970s) when he was closely involved in what he describes as `that remarkable period in the history of artistic development in Ireland during the Second World War and shortly afterwards’, a period he also refers to as one of `rebellious ferment’ in Irish cultural life.October | 9781782052869 | EURO19.95 GBP17.95 | Hardback | 234 x 156mm| 224 pages ATRIUM an Imprint of Cork University PressBrian Boydell’s memoir, together with extracts from the diary he kept for part of 1950, have been edited by his son Barra Boydell, who established his own career as a prominent musicologist and a professor of music at Maynooth University. Informative, entertaining and written with an engaging combination of passion and elegance, this is a highly readable book. It presents a vivid portrait not only of artistic life (including painting, poetry and theatre as well as music) but also of politics, religion, infrastructure, education and society in mid-twentieth-century Ireland. Brian Boydell presents a captivating account of his engagement with a wide range of often colourful people, including those associated with the White Stag Group in the early 1940s, and the European musicians who settled in Ireland and contributed so much to Irish musical life from the late 1940s. This book presents a fascinating account not only for its autobiographical interest, but also for its value as a first-hand witness of a significant period in Irish musical and cultural history.
Brian Boydell
Brian Boydell (1917-2000) was a central figure in twentieth-century Irish musical life. As one of the leading Irish composers and as a performer, he played a central role in musical composition and practice. As a broadcaster on national radio and television and as a public lecturer, an adjudicator at music festivals, a founding member of the Music Association of Ireland and for many years a member of the Arts Council of Ireland, and as Professor of Music at Trinity College Dublin from 1962 to 1982, he had a profound influence on the development of music and music education in Ireland. His pioneering and wide-ranging research into music in eighteenth-century Dublin resulted in a number of important publications. But he was also a man of wider interests and accomplishments: most notably, before making the decision in the mid-1940s to devote himself wholly to music, he was already establishing a reputation as an artist. Elected a member of Aosdana and recipient of many prestigious awards, he wrote this memoir towards the end of his life, focussing on the `rebellious ferment’ of artistic life in 1940s Dublin.Barra Boydell is Emeritus Professor, Department of Music, Maynooth University