Investigation into the influence of Eastern music on Britten's
composition.
Benjamin Britten's interest in the musical traditions of the Far East
had a far-reaching influence on his compositional style; this book is
the first to investigate the highly original cross-cultural synthesis he
was able to achieve through the use of material borrowed from Balinese,
Japanese and Indian music. Britten's visit to Indonesia and Japan in
1955-6 is reconstructed from archival sources, and shown to have had a
profound impact on his subsequent work: the techniques of Balinese
gamelan music were used in the ballet The Prince of the Pagodas (1957),
and then became an essential feature of Britten's compositional style,
at their most potent in Death in Venice(1973). The No drama and Gagaku
court music of Japan were the inspiration for the trilogy of church
parables Britten composed in the 1960s. The precise nature of these
influences is discussed; Britten's sporadic borrowings from Indian music
are also fully analysed. There is a survey of critical responses to
Britten's cross-cultural experiments.
Dr MERVYN COOKE lectures in music at the University of Nottingham.