Library and Information Services, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland

Friday, 19 April 2019

Wheesht* in the Whittaker Library

As the final teaching term starts and final exams, performances and recitals are imminent, we appreciate that this can be a busy and stressful time for all. We hope the Library will offer a space to study and reflect in a peaceful and calm environment.

While space is always at a premium, and the Library can be a busy place, readers can help to maintain the Library as a place of learning and study, by using it quietly, and with respect for others.

There are new collaborative areas along in our Alexander Gibson Opera School for readers needing to work in groups, whilst the Silent Study Space in the Library is the best option for those desirous of complete quiet.

Readers' support in this is so appreciated and we wish all our students the best of luck in this final undergrad teaching term.

Many thanks,
The Library Team

*Wheesht! - Scottish word meaning "hush" or "be quiet"

Safety First! No more trailing desk cables in the Library

It was a worry.  All our electricity sockets were in floor boxes, some underneath tables and some in the aisles. When our library was built, no-one had laptops, phone chargers or tablets.  Something had to change!

Allow Twittaker to plug our new plugs! Well, sockets, to be honest.  Sock it to 'em, Twittaker!

Talking of Plugs - RCS has a new music festival also, coincidentally, called Plug, which runs from 3-10 May 2019. It's much more exciting than our sockets - visit our Box Office to find out more!

Monday, 15 April 2019

Performance Anxiety? Complete a Survey, Contribute to Research on this Important Topic!

We noticed this opportunity in the Royal Musical Association Bulletin, and we are forwarding it on behalf of researchers at the Royal College of Music - please do consider helping, if you fit the description of the kind of respondents they need!

"Performance-Related Coping Behaviours in Musicians Study

"Ugne Peistaraite, in association with the Centre for Performance Science at the Royal College of Music, invites members to participate in a short survey. The aim of the study is to investigate the frequency and nature of music in performance-related managing and coping behaviours in amateur, professional, and student musicians, and to examine the association of these behaviours with levels of music-related perfectionism. You can find the survey here, which takes around 20 minutes to complete."

More Information:-

"PERFORMANCE-RELATED COPING BEHAVIOURS IN MUSICIANS:ASSOCIATIONS WITH MUSIC PERFORMANCE ANXIETY AND PERFECTIONISM
 
PARTICIPANT INFORMATION
 
A research study is being conducted at the Royal College of Music by Dr Kate Gee and Dr Martin Anson Canterbury Christ Church University...
To participate in this research you must:
 
  • Have regularly performed music at some point (either recently or in the past)
  • Have performed music in front of an audience in the last two years
  • Be 18 years of age or above 
Survey link 
 

Drama Online gets new Content uploaded!

We received notification of one of Drama Online's regular content uploads.  Too good to keep to ourselves, so we're sharing it.  (The Whittaker Library subscribes for the benefit of all staff and students here at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.)


Core Collection: Annual Update 2018/19 Part 2

 
"Drama Online's Core Collection is updated twice a year. The second of the 2018/19 updates is now live. Core Collection subscribers and perpetual access customers who have purchased the 2018/2019 annual update have immediate access to the plays.
"Methuen Drama: 30 plays from countries around the world including India, Pakistan, Iraq, Egypt, Japan, Korea, and many more. 
"Faber & Faber: Highlights include: Alan Bennett's The Lady in the Van, Enjoy, Habeas Corpus and Forty Years On; 9 Tom Stoppard plays; as well as new plays, Salt and A Very Very Very Dark Matter.  

Monday, 8 April 2019

Best New Play 2019 Olivier Awards


Matthew Lopez's 'The Inheritance' premiered in two parts at the Young Vic Theatre, London, in March 2018 and went on to Noël Coward Theatre in 2019. This play has won the 2019 AMERICAN AIRLINES BEST NEW PLAY at the Olivier Awards, this April. Checkout this play for monologues or duologues for showcase!




"You have to wonder why there isn't a word in the English language for the fireworks that go off in your brain when you finally kiss someone you've wanted for years. Or for the intimacy and tenderness you feel as you hold the hand of a suffering friend. A generation after the height of the AIDS crisis, what is it like to be a young gay man in New York? How many words are there now for the different kinds of pain, the different kinds of love?"

Focus on Theatre Design : Oliver Messel

Oliver Messel (13 January 1904 – 13 July 1978) was an English artist and one of the foremost stage designers of the 20th century. He started his artistic life as a portrait painter and commissions for theatre work soon followed, beginning with his designing the masks for a London production of Serge Diaghilev's ballet Zephyr et Flore (1925). Subsequently, he created masks, costumes, and sets – many of which have been preserved by the V and A Performing Arts Department.




His work as a set designer was also featured in the USA in such Broadway shows as The Country Wife (1936); The Lady's Not For Burning (1950); Romeo and Juliet (1951); House of Flowers (1954), for which he won the Tony Award; and Rashomon (1959), which was nominated for a Tony Award for his costume as well as his set design. He also designed the costumes for Romeo and Juliet; Rashomon; and Gigi (1973), the latter two receiving Tony Award nominations.
 
For film his costume designs include The Private Life of Don Juan (1934); Scarlet Pimpernel (1934); Romeo and Juliet (1936); The Thief of Bagdad (1940); and Caesar and Cleopatra (1945). For Romeo and Juliet he also served as Set Decorator. He was Art Director on Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), On Such a Night (1956) and Production Designer on Suddenly Last Summer (1959), for which he was nominated for the Academy Award.

The library/ Theatre Collection of the University of Bristol acquired his personal archive in 2015 and through project funding have digitised and made accessible a great deal of his documents, which tell a fascinating tale not simply of an artist but also a passionate man, who was well ahead of his time in terms of social concerns and cultural aesthetics.

Click here to visit the Oliver Messel archive online at the University of Bristol

Click here for Oliver Messel exhibition website at University of Bristol

Click here to visit the Oliver Messel pages of the V and A website

Tuesday, 26 March 2019

Female Representation in the Performing Arts


The issue of female representation in the performing arts has been spotlighted by several media sources in the last year – The Stage (the world’s longest running theatre publication) has, in the last few months, published articles which investigate the lack of female directors in Musical Theatre and the strategies being used to redress the balance.

One report highlights information released by the Musicians Union which showed that there were no female musical directors leading pit orchestras in the West End (previous reports also showed that 90% of musicians in the orchestras were men).

The library has a subscription to The Stage and you can find the latest issue in the Print Journal section.

The Guardian have been looking at the under-representation of female composers in concert line-ups. Figures that were compiled by the Donne – Women in Music project and Drama Musica show that 95% of concerts worldwide have music composed solely by men. These figures were taken from the 2018-19 programmes of 15 large orchestras across the world. Campaigners are arguing against those who claim that a male-dominated canon is inescapable.

Classic FM have also written about the absence of female composers in last year’s best score category at the Oscars - even in the shortlist of 141 scores, only five were by female composers.

Is anything changing?

A choreographer in black stands in front of mirror in a dance studio


In this short video from 2017, BBC Stories document the careers of Ruth Brill and Arielle Smith, two female choreographers who have paved the way for women to take leading roles in the performing arts.

The Stage have featured more positive reports of women playwrights who have recently received increased exposure in the West End. They have also credited the Royal Court for an increasingly diverse programme which has featured many more female writers and directors. In November, the RCS staged Troilus and Cressida, their first full-length Shakespeare play with a gender-balanced cast – music by Evelyn Glennie explored and challenged gender conventions within the play.

As a reaction to the current climate of empowerment and equality for women, Glasgow Citizens Theatre has announced a season of work for 2019 showcasing female writers and women working across Scotland. The productions will be directed by women and outreach work will also focus on women in the arts. More information about what is included in the season can be found here: https://www.citz.co.uk/

Within the library we have many female playwrights including Frances Poet, Cora Bissett, Liz Lochhead and also collections such as Contemporary Women Playwrights Into the 21st Century.

The soprano Gabriella Di Laccio has created a website called the Donne project as a space dedicated to female composers both historical and contemporary. The Strad has also reported that the BBC Proms are among more than 100 international festivals that have signed up to the PRS Foundation’s ‘Keychange’ pledge to achieve a 50:50 gender balance by 2022. They have also reported on other initiatives aimed redressing the balance.

You can read issues of The Strad in the library in the Print Journals section. The library also has books which critique the music canon such as De-canonizing music history and Gender and the musical canon.


Friday, 22 March 2019

Sun, Summer, Sparkling Opportunities for Musicians

From time to time we share details of courses and competitions that have arrived in our inbox.  Today, there's a whole summer magazine supplement full of summer schools for musicians.  RCS students, if you haven't tired of school by the end of June, then maybe you're up for further challenges further afield?

Classical Music Magazine's Summer Schools 2019 is in stock at the Whittaker Library now. We have two copies, so borrow one over the weekend and see what appeals to you!

Friday, 15 March 2019

Archives and Collections – Object of the Month

March 2019


This month the Whittaker Library is celebrating Women’s History with a display of books and other materials. You may have spotted inspirational quotes from trailblazing women around the walls of the Library. The Archives and Collections Object of the Month ties in with this theme:






The Glasgow Athenaeum: Forty-fifth Annual Report of the Directors for the Year Ending 31st August, 1892 List of Professors, including Professor Emma Ritter-Bondy





Emma Ritter-Bondy was born in 1838 in Austria. A graduate of the Vienna Conservatoire, Ritter-Bondy later moved to Glasgow. In 1892, The Glasgow Athenaeum (now RCS) made her Professor of Piano. This means that Ritter-Bondy was the first woman to be made a Professor in a Higher Education Institution in the United Kingdom.  This pamphlet, attached to the handwritten book of minutes, shows a list of the names of Professors in the Athenaeum School of Music in 1892, including “Madame Ritter-Bondy”:




Professor Emma Ritter-Bondy: a trailblazing woman and one of our own!

Click below to read a BBC news article on the subject:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-39191297

Tuesday, 12 March 2019

Highlight on James Graham (Playwright)

 

James Graham is a British playwright and screenwriter. His work has been staged throughout the UK and internationally, at theatres including the Bush, Soho Theatre, Clwyd Theatr Cymru and the National Theatre.

Graham grew up in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, and was educated at University of Hull, where he studied drama.

Graham's first professional play Albert's Boy was produced by the Finborough Theatre in London, where Graham became playwright-in-residence. His first major play This House was commissioned by the Royal National Theatre, where it was critically and commercially acclaimed, transferred to the larger Olivier Theatre, and was nominated for the Olivier Award for Best New Play.

In 2018 Graham won his first Olivier Award, for Labour of Love as best new comedy (his other play Ink was nominated for an Olivier in the same year).  He wrote the book for the Broadway musical Finding Neverland, and two of his own plays, Ink and Privacy, transferred to Broadway.

Graham's debut feature film X+Y premiered in 2015, and he has written numerous TV dramas, including the TV films Coalition (which won the Royal Television Society award for Best Single Film) and Brexit: The Uncivil War. Brexit: The Uncivil War aired on Channel 4 on 7 January 2019.

His plays are published by Methuen and we have every published play as part of the Whittaker collection at 822.92 GRA.

In January 2019, Graham's life and work was the subject of an in-depth BBC One documentary as part of the Imagine series. Check out this documentary on one of the UK most interesting young playwrights.

Maybe something form his body of work would make a good audition monologue or a duologue for showcase? "He's so hot right now"!
 
 

Monday, 11 March 2019

Women's History Month: Starring in our E-Resources ....

 
Since March 2019 is Women's History Month, we took a look to see who we could find represented in our electronic resources.  The only difficulty was in picking whom to include in this blogpost!

Alexander Street Press have many different female composers and musicians; visit the Jazz Database, or Classical Music Scores to find these famous names:-
 
 
 
 
DIGITAL THEATRE PLUS has many productions and interviews.  Below is a sample of what you can watch!
 
  • On Costume Cutting (Michal Shyne)
  • Practitioners on Practice: on Stage Management, an interview with Ali Wade 
  • A Blues for Nia (Chino Odemba)
  • Brown Widow (Leah Chillery)
  • Shakespeare's Women Today: Harriet Walter in conversation with Carol Rutter
  • Talking about Plays: London Road, an interview with Alecky Blythe
  • From Stage to Screen: a Lecture given by Phyllida Lloyd with Fiona Shaw
  • Practitioners on Practice ... on Costume Design, an interview with Katrina Lindsay
And there's more!  Drama Online have a whole section on feminist theatre, whilst  Medici TV have documentaries, master classes, interviews and performances of female composers and performers

All these are available to RCS staff and students, via the Library website or by searching Catalogue Plus. Staff are happy to help if you have any difficulty finding resources to suit your interests.

Tuesday, 5 March 2019

Embrace Women's History Month! Awesome, Inspirational Feminist Texts to Challenge You


Carrier Bags and Feminist Citation Theory

 
As it's Women's History Month, we're sharing a couple of academic related feminist texts  that one of our library colleagues has found really influential in his academic pursuits.
 
Ursula K Le Guin: Image from Wikipedia
First comes Ursual K Le Guin’s The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction

Are you tired of the same old stories - Western, patriarchal hero-quests, which start at the beginning and work towards a nice, tidy conclusion? Science fiction writer and feminist academic Ursula K. Le Guin will address your frustrations.

This essay proposes an alternative way of telling stories and experiencing the world -  a cyclical, heterogeneous approach. This alternative works to subvert a male-centric, linear mode which takes its cue from the violent, goal-driven philosophy of a predatory hunter (no thanks!). The carrier bag theory shows us how we might create from a feminist point of view which values collecting different experiences and stories, moving backwards and forwards in time, and not necessarily shooting the bear with the arrow. Whether you are writing music, directing a film, or planning your next performance, this essay might change your whole perspective!

Sarah Ahmed - image from TheOtherMcCain.com
And here is
Making Feminist Points, by Sara Ahmed, dealing with feminist citation theory. 

In Making Feminist Points, Sara Ahmed reflects on her own experiences in order to critique the prevalence of male writers in academic citation and the bias towards male theorists in academia. Her website features a variety of thought-provoking posts on feminist issues in academic institutions, including a striking analysis of the use of ‘diversity’ as a smokescreen to distract from institutional racism.


 

Friday, 1 March 2019

St David's Day Songs - Sentimental, Powerful, Here in the Library Today

 
 

Okay, we may be in Scotland - but hey, we're all Celts together, so let's celebrate St David's Day. We have lots of Welsh songs here in the Whittaker Library.  Here's a tip - if you search for:-
 
Welsh Song*
 
then you get books with "Welsh song" AND "Welsh songs" in the title. Quite a lot of them, as you'll see here!


Twittaker is happy to celebrate St David's Day whilst other things are going on around him in the library - it's changeover day today, and our library colleagues will be taking down our February featured displays.  

February was the Month of Love, centred round Valentines Day.  Watch this space, then you'll see what March's theme is!  All will soon be revealed ...


Thursday, 28 February 2019

The Girl in the Display Case: Innovation Installation - Creative Performance Practice

Last week (Wednesday 20th February 2019), one of our students climbed into our largest library display case for an afternoon.  As you can imagine, this provoked quite a bit of interest, both in the Library, and online!  (You'll remember that we blogged about it at the time, here.)

We asked Anna how she felt it had all gone, and we thought it would be nice to share her comments with you:-

"glad to hear that the installation provoked interest. Here's some thoughts after the installation:-
 What does sustainability mean? That has been one of my main questions during the performance research project that I am currently focusing on. 

Sustainability by the definition of  Bruntland Report for the World Commission on Environment and Development (1992) refers to 'development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.'

As a part of this research I installed objects found in nature alongside myself in a glass display in the Whittaker Library. This durational performance lasted almost six hours. The performance, named Still Life, was a performance of stillness, of plastic and sustainability. The task of being as still as possible soon became the main performance; the limited space of the display restricting my poses made it hard to maintain one for a long period of time. By changing my pose time to time I managed to find sustainable poses that then became the pattern of the movement of the performance. To my surprise I managed to give a fright so couple of people by breaking the stillness I had been maintaining. 'Is that a real person?' was a question I heard many times.
After a couple of hours inside the glass display I started to feel like the glass walls were the polluted atmosphere of the earth, and I represented the overpopulation of the planet, sharing my space with objects that no longer were useful to us and thus were thrown away and forgotten about.

How to live our lives as sustainably as possible? After this experiment I'd say that it takes a lot of re-arranging, re-configuring and re-adjusting to the existing conditions. It is a continuous process of discovering better ways to maintain and preserve what we have. It is an ongoing conversation rather than a question with an answer. We are accustomed to a certain comfort in our lives - which is natural - but when it comes to sustainability there are certain choices we have to make - if not for ourselves then for the future."

 

Wednesday, 27 February 2019

Unfinished Histories 


Check out a new website dedicated to recording the history of Alternative Theatre in the UK (mostly London) in the 1960s, 70s and 80s through interviews and the use of archive materials.

The companies involved were among some of the first Black, Asian, lesbian, gay, women’s, disabled, political, experimental, TIE and community-based theatre groups seen in Britain.
With work ranging from experiments in physical and visual theatre or performance art, to vernacular drama, agit-prop and satire. This website is championing a generation of artists whose work has influenced and shaped present day theatre.


Click Here

Monday, 18 February 2019

Innovation Installation - Creative Performance Practice (Wednesday 20th February 2019)


We're delighted to say that we will be hosting a live installation performance piece in the Library, next Wednesday, 20th February. A third year CPP student will be installing themselves in the entrance way display case for 5 hours, in a piece aimed at understanding how durational performance, sustainability and activism can inform an arts practice.  The performance piece will take place between 12 noon and 6 pm.
 
We are very curious to see what will be done with our display cabinet!!!
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Friday, 8 February 2019

Aspects of Love: February in the Library


Since this is the month of love, the Library are thinking about all the different types of love that are out there - not to mention how we can love ourselves better!

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Let us inspire you!

Come and have a look at our displays including our selection of self-help books, or use our eResources listed below!
 
Drama Online has over 500 plays looking at the theme of love (use advanced search, and you can limit your results by theme).  How about ...
 
A Brief History of Women / Alan Ayckbourn
  
A Brief History of Women charts the life of Anthony Spates: from his first job as an adolescent footman at a country manor house through to his retirement as manager of the hotel the manor house became. Over the course of six decades, the play follows him and the remarkable women he has loved, left and lost over the years.
 
Roles: Male (13) , Female (11) , Neutral (0)
 
Hushabye Mountain / Jonathan Harvey
Danny is a young man, waiting to be let into heaven. There seems to be some difficulty about it, but Judy Garland reassures him as she passes by in a boat full of stars. Away from the dreamlike and unexpected version of the afterlife, the people who were closest to Danny struggle with his death from AIDS. Hushabye Mountain reveals a world full of love, pain, laughter and friendship.
Roles: Male (6) , Female (7) , Neutral (1)

 

 

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Be mindful

We have Mindfulness e-books ... try Mindfulness for Dummies or Mindfulness in the Academy
 

Enjoy a ballet or opera

Watch full length ballets and operas about love by composers who struggled with mental health on Medici TV ...
 
Such as Swan Lake by Nureyev after Petipa, music by Tchaikovsky (performed here by
Amandine Albisson, Mathieu Ganio, François Alu – Corps de Ballet de l'Opéra de Paris)
 
Or Berlioz's Béatrice et Benedict - a whimsical and nostalgic take on Shakespeare’s great comedy Much Ado About Nothing, on the stage of Glyndebourne in 2016.  

Be as kind to yourself as you are to your friends

We've picked a few articles and book chapters looking at mental health and the performing arts - if this interests you, why not use our catalogue plus search to find more?

  

Friday, 1 February 2019

Archival Object of the Month - February in the Whittaker Library

Unrequited Correspondence ...

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February’s Archival Object of the Month showcases a series of letters between the twentieth century composers Kaikhosru Sorabji and Erik Chisholm.  Chisholm was an alumnus of the Conservatoire, a composer, conductor, educator and impresario who founded the Active Society for the Propagation of Contemporary Music in Glasgow in 1930, which was responsible for bringing composers such as Béla Bartók and Paul Hindemith to Scotland to perform and premiere their own works.

Love poems and a lock of hair
 
Around the same time, Chisholm established a correspondence with the Avant-garde composer Kaikhosru Sorabji.  Initially they discussed musical theory and analysis, however soon a bond of friendship developed.  By 1933 the exchange had become more personal and Sorabji’s romantic feelings toward Chisholm began to emerge.  On display in the Whittaker Library are examples of this unrequited correspondence (Chisholm was married), including two love poems written by Sorabji to Chisholm and a lock of Sorabji’s hair.

 In the 1930s homosexuality was illegal in the United Kingdom, and these letters would have been enough to convict Sorabji of indecency as some of the content is particularly revealing.  The complete correspondence from Sorabji to Chisholm is held by our Archives & Collections (archives@rcs.ac.uk). 
 
A complete catalogue of the Chisholm collection can be found here.
 
Stuart A. Harris-Logan
Archives Officer 

Benedict Morris, We're Proud of You!


As you may know, one of our trad musicians, Benedict Morris, has just won the Young Traditional Musician of the Year 2019 award.  We found this clip on YouTube, so we thought we'd share it with you. 

We're proud of you, Benedict!  Congratulations from the Whittaker Library at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.