Description
The first broad overview of Welsh music history, examining practices, repertoires, institutions, and the idea of the 'musical nation'.
About the Author
Trevor Herbert has written extensively on the cultural history of instrumental music, especially brass instruments in various periods and social contexts, and co-edited the award-winning Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments (2018). He has also written on the cultural history of music in Wales. He was co-editor of the seven-volume Welsh History and its Sources series. Martin V. Clarke has published widely on the relationships between music, theology and religious practice, including the monograph British Methodist Hymnody: Theology, Heritage, and Experience (2018) and the edited collection Music and Theology in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2012). He was a co-investigator on the AHRC-funded Listening Experience Database project. Helen Barlow researches around the intersections between history, music, literature and visual art. As a member of the Listening Experience Database project, she investigated the history of ordinary people's experiences of music. Her publications include Music and the British Military in the Long Nineteenth Century (2013), co-written with Trevor Herbert.
Reviews
'The book raises a number of questions for those seeking to understand the contextualisation of Methodism in non-English cultures. This book also provides a mine of detailed resources for scholars to work on or for those merely enjoying singing (but not too raucously!) in both religious worship and secular contexts to appreciate the cultural roots of such an expression of identity.' Tim MacQuiban, The Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society
Book Information
ISBN 9781316511060
Author Trevor Herbert
Format Hardback
Page Count 478
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 880g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 158mm * 25mm