Percy Grainger: Difference between revisions
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Pioneered use of the Edison wax cylinder recorder in field recordings, notably in [[Lincolnshire]] where the exceptional [[Joseph Taylor]] was amongst the singers recorded by Grainger. | Pioneered use of the Edison wax cylinder recorder in field recordings, notably in [[Lincolnshire]] where the exceptional [[Joseph Taylor]] was amongst the singers recorded by Grainger. | ||
[[Grainger in Gloucestershire]] | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
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*De Val, Dorothy. '''Fresh and Sweet Like Wildflowers': Lucy Broadwood, Percy Grainger, and the Collecting of Folksong''. Journal of Music Research, Issue 22, Spring 2001, p131-140. | *De Val, Dorothy. '''Fresh and Sweet Like Wildflowers': Lucy Broadwood, Percy Grainger, and the Collecting of Folksong''. Journal of Music Research, Issue 22, Spring 2001, p131-140. | ||
[[Category:Collector]] |
Latest revision as of 12:41, 5 October 2020
George Percy Grainger (8 July 1882–20 February 1961), Australian-born pianist, composer, and song collector.
Pioneered use of the Edison wax cylinder recorder in field recordings, notably in Lincolnshire where the exceptional Joseph Taylor was amongst the singers recorded by Grainger.
External links
- Malcolm Gillies, ‘Grainger, Percy Aldridge (1882–1961)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/41081 (Requires an Athens password)
References
- A List of Published References to Percy Grainger’s Folk Song Collecting, especially in Lincolnshire, available in the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. Compiled by Derek Schofield http://www.efdss.org/grainger.htm
- C.J. Bearman. Percy Grainger, the phonograph, and the Folk Song Society. Music and Letters, Vol.84 No.3, August 2003 http://ml.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/84/3/434.pdf
Abstract: "This article is a critical examination of one of the myths of rejection surrounding the career of Percy Grainger — the myth that the Folk Song Society, and specifically Cecil Sharp, discouraged Grainger's use of the phonograph and that this discouragement so dispirited him that he abandoned folk music work in Britain. It also considers Grainger's folk music work in the light of contemporary left-wing and Marxist criticism, particularly that of David Harker."
- De Val, Dorothy. 'Fresh and Sweet Like Wildflowers': Lucy Broadwood, Percy Grainger, and the Collecting of Folksong. Journal of Music Research, Issue 22, Spring 2001, p131-140.