News & Notices
- THANK YOU to all the delegates for making the conference such a stimulating two days. Encouraged by their success, Kate Kennedy and Trudi Tate are organising another conference, also related to Ivor Gurney, in 2009:
Literature and Music of the Great War.
- We are pleased to announce that
Professor Dame Gillian Beer, Mr Hugh Wood,
Dr Vivien Noakes, and Ms Alison Hennegan will be chairing panels at the conference.
- SPEAKERS
who wish to use any audio-visual equipment (such as powerpoint,
cd-players etc), please notify the organisers of their requirements by
emailing the technical officer at ivorgurneyconference@gmail.com or click here.
- We would be grateful if DELEGATES ensure that all payments are made by Wednesday 5 September unless prior arrangements have been made with the organisers.
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Keynote
speakers:
Kelsey Thornton (Newcastle University)
Stephen Banfield (Bristol University)
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Ivor Gurney
was born in Gloucestershire, and after an apprenticeship as assistant organist
at Gloucester Cathedral took up a scholarship in 1911 to the Royal College of
Music in London to study composition.There his
illustrious friendship group included Arthur Bliss, Herbert Howells and Arthur
Benjamin; a talented generation taught by Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, Sir
Hubert Parry and Ralph Vaughan Williams.Along with many of his contemporaries, studies were interrupted by war
service, and he served in France from 1915 – 1917, before being
discharged with shellshock, and the lingering effects of a gas attack.He had struggled to maintain mental stability
before the war, suffering from ‘nerves’ and ‘neurasthenia’, and the years
immediately succeeding the armistice saw both prodigious creativity, and
increasing illness; culminating in his committal to an asylum in 1922. He was never to be released from
institutions, but his work continued for a surprising length of time, despite
the dual disabilities of mental deterioration and lack of a critical audience.Some of his best-known war poetry was written
retrospectively from within the asylum, and his mature work is characterised by
his preoccupation with rewriting his war experiences, and his lifelong passion
for the beauty of his home county. Described at the RoyalCollege as ‘the English Schubert’, his
voluminous song settings display a uniquely sensitive relationship to their
texts.His poetry offers highly original,
often idiosyncratic insights into the appreciation of natural beauty, the
experience of war, and the creative interpretation of suffering.
There
remains a wealth of unpublished material by Gurney, about which much remains to
be said. Gurney was almost unique in
writing both poetry and music, and thus provides a rich opportunity for
interdisciplinary discussion. This
conference aims to examine both sides of his output in equal measure,
establishing a dialogue between the two, whilst placing his work against the
backdrop of the early twentieth century, war and the asylum.
The weekend will include papers given by international delegates,
addressing many issues relevant to Gurney's life and work, poetry readings, a formal dinner, and a recital of Gurney and other English song by tenor Andrew Kennedy (Radio 3 New Generation Young Artist and winner BBC Singer of the World Song Prize) including previously unheard and unpublished works by both Gurney and his contemporary W. Denis Browne. The recital will take place in Clare Hall, and all other events and meals take place in Lucy Cavendish College, where accommodation is available.