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Golding, Rosemary
(2024).
Abstract
The music written for submission to the music degrees of English universities during the nineteenth century forms a significant body of works which, while important, present challenges for the historian, music analyst and performer. Changes to the nature of music degrees, including the compositional exercises, during the nineteenth century received mixed reception which illustrates concerns over the separation of ‘academic’ and ‘aesthetic’ elements of music, as well as deeper anxieties about the state and status of English music and composition. This paper examines in detail a small selection of exercises by William Crotch, F.A.G. Ouseley, and William Pole, considering the contextual and ontological problems raised by the works in light of the changing nature of music histories, narratives and values.