So even someone like Cage, in his counter-cultural way, was fundamentally plugged into this constant search for the sacred. And then there was Messiaen, who was famously Catholic. Everything he wrote was shaped by a theology and a personal faith. It is interesting to observe just how uncomfortable many continental commentators are when having to discuss this absolutely core aspect of his work. Many prefer to see it as an eccentric personal foible, almost irrelevant to the music he made. Others, more hostile, accuse him of propaganda, preachiness and anti-Semitism.
And in this country, Benjamin Britten, with his social Anglicanism and troubled spiritual searching, points to a profoundly numinous modernity, a universe away from the cultural denials of Darmstadt and elsewhere. Even with Michael Tippett, who always described himself as an agnostic, one can detect a deep mysticism at the heart of his work. It is fascinating that he chose Saint Augustine as one of his major texts for setting. Again there is another untold story here.
Since the Iron Curtain came down, there's been a whole range of composers whom we've become aware of in the wake of Shostakovich, such as Schnittke and Gubaidulina — profoundly religious composers, embracing Catholicism but also keeping alive an interest in the Eastern Churches, and indeed in Islam as well — Arvo Pärt from Estonia, Georgia's Kanchelli, Gorecki from Poland — it's almost as if there's a constant theme going through the development of modern music, that religion is alive and well, and that the search for the sacred has become part of the mainstream of modernity in music. That is a huge challenge to those people who try to rub it out of history and say that it's not important.
I got a fly-on-the-wall report from an academic board that was planning a book on Music in the Twentieth Century. They were going through a list of headings and volumes — music and nationalism, music and gender of course, music and anti-imperialism, etc. Someone suggested music and religion, and it was completely and immediately rejected — there was nothing to write about! There was no place in the discussion of modern music for religion.
The wider discussion here, though, is more about religion of course, and certainly involves more than a straight comparison between the Anglosphere and "old Europe", as Donald Rumsfeld might have put it. The UK has always been Janus-faced in the way it has been able to absorb ideas and influences from Europe and America. This has given us the power to take what is good and reject what is not from both. However, we do have the facility to do the opposite too. We are in a good position of objectivity and detachment to assess developments and potential in cultural matters.
- Folie à Dieu
- New Poetry
- Adultery?
- Reece Mews
- Robin
- Two New Poems
- Three New Poems
- Freedoms We Risk Losing
- The Legacy of John Maynard Keynes
- Was Crucifixion a Jewish Penalty?
- Sweet Crude
- Four New Poems
- Two New Poems
- My Five Husbands
- Reasons
- Spain (With Apologies to Auden)
- A Ballad of Bo-oz and Ruth
- The True Origins of the Royal Academy
- Three New Poems By Ruth Padel
- A Sequence of Seven Poems by Blake Morrison


















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