ABSTRACT

Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900) was Victorian Britain’s most celebrated and popular composer, whose music to this day reaches a wider audience than that of any of his contemporaries. Yet the comic operas on which Sullivan’s reputation is chiefly based have been consistently belittled or ignored by the British musicological establishment, while his serious works have until recently remained virtually unknown. The time is thus long overdue for scholarly re-engagement with Sullivan. The present book offers a new appraisal of the music of this most notable nineteenth-century British composer, combining close analytical attention to his music with critical consideration of the wider aesthetic and social context to his work. Focusing on key pieces in all the major genres in which Sullivan composed, it includes accounts of his most important serious works – the music to The Tempest, the ‘Irish’ Symphony, The Golden Legend, Ivanhoe – alongside detailed examination of the celebrated comic operas created with W.S. Gilbert to present a balanced portrayal of Sullivan’s musical achievement.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Reappraising Sullivan

chapter 1|24 pages

Incidental Music

Re-enchanted isle: Sullivan’s music to The Tempest

chapter 2|27 pages

Orchestral Music

Sullivan as instrumental composer: The symphony and orchestral music

chapter 3|24 pages

Song

Sullivan, The Window, and the English song cycle

chapter 4|14 pages

Chamber Music

Domestic Day-Dreams: Sullivan’s piano and instrumental music

chapter 5|38 pages

Comic Opera

Musical design and dramaturgy in the Savoy Operas

chapter 6|34 pages

Cantata

Shining through the ages: Scenes from The Golden Legend

chapter 7|29 pages

Grand Opera

On history and national identity: Sullivan, Scott, and Ivanhoe

chapter 8|20 pages

Choral and Liturgical Music

Aspects of Sullivan’s religious style in the Te Deums