Library and Information Services, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland

Thursday, 6 June 2019

Musical Pedagogues! Remember ISME

Remember we hosted the ISME conference (International Society for Music Education) here at RCS a few years ago?  Well, this year it's in Helsinki.

We've just received the CFP (Call for Papers), so we thought we'd share it with you:- 


"Welcome to the website for the 34th ISME World Conference.
The call for papers is already out and planning is underway for submissions. The submissions process will open later this month. Note: submissions close on 1 October and there can be no extensions, so start your planning now.
In response to feedback from the previous conference, the call for papers outlines several new opportunities to enable members to interact in different ways and to help members connect and engage even more.
The call for performers is also announced. Submissions will open in the next few weeks and closes on 31 August.
Both the venues - Finlandia Hall and the Music Academy (home of the Sibelius Academy, part of UniArts) -  are very close, almost side by side, so the conference precinct is very walkable. The venues are also accessible."
All you need now is the website, so you can follow up these opportunities!


https://www.isme2020.fi/ 


Monday, 3 June 2019

Are you a Trad Musician, Influenced by English Folk Tradition? A Bursary!

The English Folk Dance and Song Society has just announced a fabulous opportunity. Quoting directly from their tweet, here it is:-

Applications are now open for the Alan James Creative Bursary! If your work is inspired by or draws from traditional English folk music, apply for research and development funding here:

Pianists, Violininsts! International Johannes Brahms Competition

When we receive competition announcements, we share them with our readers!  If you're a violinist or a pianist, this may be right up your street!  (Well, it's in Austria, but you know what we mean ...)
 

http://www.brahmscompetition.org/en/

 26th International Johannes Brahms Competition
1st to 8th September 2019 in Pörtschach/Austria
 
 
All details are on the website - just click on the links.  But here's a quick clip from the organisers:-
 
 
Allgemein
The 26th International Johannes Brahms Competition will be held from 1st to 8th September 2019 in the categories piano, violin, voice and chamber music.
The regulations have changed only slightly compared to the past years.
  • Piano: L.v. Beethoven, Piano Concerto No. 4, G major op. 58 replaces Beethoven, Piano Concerto No. 5 in the finals.    
  • Violin: P.I.Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D major, op. 35 replaces Dvořák, in A minor, op.53in the finals
Registration is possible from March 2019 until July 1, 2019.
The website is currently being redesigned to accommodate this year’s contest.
 

Friday, 31 May 2019

Geddes Peterson Foundation Award Commemorates Colleague

Sharing details of this award, which the Scottish Music Centre announced yesterday.  John Maxwell Geddes was a much-loved colleague at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland - it's great to see him commemorated in this way.

"In memory of our dear friend & colleague composer John Maxwell Geddes, the Geddes Peterson Foundation Award is OPEN for the second year. [...] Please retweet / spread the word for Emerging Classical Composers info at "
Please visit the Scottish Music Centre link above, for full details! 

Monday, 27 May 2019

A Lost Empire!

Why not discover some of Glasgow's lost theatre culture!

Just a 3 min walk from RCS is the former site of Glasgow's most famous theatre. You ever wondered why the 1960s office block on the corner of West Nile and Sauchiehall Street is called ‘Empire House’?  Well this was the site of the world famous Glasgow Empire Theatre a UK mecca for light entertainment and music hall acts.

The Empire was notorious within showbiz circles as "The English comic's grave", if their act was slow or thin. Among those judged this way were Bob Monkhouse, Tommy Cooper, Bernie Winters and Morecambe and Wise. Des O'Connor pretended to faint when the Glasgow audience started jeering his act and was duly dragged off stage.



Glasgow Empire Theatre, known as the Glasgow Palace Empire until the early 1900s, it opened in 1897 on the site of the Gaiety Theatre at 31-35 Sauchiehall Street. It was one of the leading theatres in the UK chain of theatres owned and developed by Moss Empires under the chairmanship of Sir Edward Moss.  It was the largest theatre in the city for many years.

The Empire presented variety, revues, musicals and dance, including Pavlova, winter circus, pantomimes and ice spectaculars especially those produced by Tom Arnold. Over the years many stars appeared including Lilly Langtry, Laurel and Hardy, Sir Harry Lauder, G. H. Elliott, Tommy Lorne, Evelyn Laye, Will Fyffe, Harry Gordon, Robert Wilson, the Logan family and Andy Stewart. Dance bands included Jack Hylton and Joe Loss. Top quality American artistes were greatly welcomed, including the Andrews Sisters and Billy Eckstine. Fats Waller made his European debut in the Empire in 1938. Tony Bennett, Johnnie Ray, Frankie Laine, Connie Francis, Eartha Kitt, Howard Keel, Guy Mitchell, Mel Tormé and Liberace were joined

The Empire presented variety, revues, musicals and dance, including Pavlova, winter circus, pantomimes and ice spectaculars especially those produced by Tom Arnold. Over the years many stars appeared including Lilly Langtry, Laurel and Hardy, Sir Harry Lauder, G. H. Elliott, Tommy Lorne, Evelyn Laye, Will Fyffe, Harry Gordon, Robert Wilson, the Logan family and Andy Stewart. Dance bands included Jack Hylton and Joe Loss. Top quality American artistes were greatly welcomed, including the Andrews Sisters and Billy Eckstine. Fats Waller made his European debut in the Empire in 1938. Tony Bennett, Johnnie Ray, Frankie Laine, Connie Francis, Eartha Kitt, Howard Keel, Guy Mitchell, Mel Tormé and Liberace were joined by Frank Sinatra, Dorothy Lamour, Bob Hope, Judy Garland, Jack Benny and a great favourite Danny Kaye.

Comedian Ken Dodd famously disparaged attempts to psychoanalyse humour with the rebuttal, "The trouble with Sigmund Freud is that he never played second house at the Glasgow Empire after both halves of the Old Firm had just lost!"

The record for the longest running show in the city is held by The Andy Stewart Show, twice-nightly with a change of programme each six weeks, for 26 weeks in 1961 and again in 1962, with 400,000 tickets sold each year.

The final curtain came down on the theatre on 31 March 1963 with a cast that included the Red Army Choir, Duncan Macrae, Robert Wilson, Iain Cuthbertson, Albert Finney, Rikki Fulton and Andy Stewart. This city lost its most famous theatrical landmark the following year. So next time you pass the Empire house you can imagine the screams and tears of performers as they failed to entertain the Glasgow public.
For more information visit this website below.

Click here

Wednesday, 22 May 2019

An Indelible Impression?

Archives and Collections – Object of the Month – May 2019


The RCS Archives and Collections contain a wonderland of fascinating and unusual objects. These include a visitor book signed by Charles Dickens and various musical instruments that have survived centuries of use. However, some comparatively recent artefacts are fading into the mist of time much more quickly. One such item is the Archives and Collections Object of the Month, for May 2019.

Dr Tommy Smith (now Head of Jazz at RCS) commissioned the acclaimed Scottish poet Edwin Morgan to write a set of poems about famous figures from Scottish history, which Dr Smith then set to music in a song cycle called The Sons and Daughters of Alba. Morgan faxed the poems to Smith, and these original (if that’s the right word) faxed copies now reside in the RCS Archive. It is one of these works, ‘Mary Queen of Scots’ which is on display in the Whittaker Library. You may need to step in close to read it, but it will be worth the extra effort! The poem describes the eventful life of Mary Stuart, from her childhood to her infamous execution.



There is an irony in a poem about a woman who left a profound mark on Scottish identity and culture being presented on a medium which is rapidly erasing itself. Early fax machines often used thermal (heat transfer) printers when receiving and reproducing information, with rolls of thermal paper as their printing medium.  This meant that whatever was reconstituted as a fax (facsimile or copy) could only be in black and white, but it also meant that whatever was printed would fade over time, and eventually become unreadable. It’s almost as if the words are being swallowed by the “Swirling mist on Inchmahome” described in the poem.

While it is still visible, why not pop over to the Whittaker Library to take a look at this rare work from one of the most prolific and accomplished Scottish poets of all time.


Want to know more?

Contact: archives@rcs.ac.uk

Monday, 20 May 2019

Endangered! The ability to empathise?

How do you feel? How well can we tell?  

According to a 2010 study from the University of Michigan, the ability to empathise declined by 40% over the past three decades.  Is this important? Should we be concerned?

This month's featured e-resource is The Moral Dimensions of Empathy.  It outlines the ways in which empathy is important in meeting the demands of morality. RCS staff and students can read the whole book online at www.springer.com.  

You can look for the book on the library website using the "Search Catalogue Plus" option.

NB if you're not using a library PC, use the "login via Shibboleth" option and use your RCS username and password to access.


Thursday, 16 May 2019

Glenda Jackson as Lear! Discover Shakespeare Unlimited podcasts!


Glenda Jackson as Lear

 

Glenda Jackson as King Lear in King Lear, 2019. Photo by Brigitte Lacombe.

 


Discover the Folger Shakespeare Library podcasts. One such podcast is to be found on the latest episode of Shakespeare Unlimited, the Tony-, Emmy-, and Academy Award-winning actress Glenda Jackson talks about the intricacies of her performance as the title character in the new Broadway production of King Lear directed by Sam Gold. 

Click here to listen to the Podcast

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

International Workshop for Actors and Performers!

Ever wanted to do an international performance workshop with some of the best directors and artists there are?

Between 22 July – 5 August 2019, in Venice, this is such an opportunity.

Biennale College – Theatre is a selected group of performers/actors who will undertake a series of workshops leading to a performance.
 Biennale College – Theatre 
The Biennale College – Theatre project is a true factory of ideas that explores the potential of theatre in terms of languages, codes, techniques, and technology in the theatre sciences. These workshops are led by key figures in European theatre/performance and technical experts from around the world. You are too late to apply for this year but you could pop it in your diary to apply for next year with a deadline in April. Please note, if you are selected for this you would need to be self funding in terms of travel and accommodation.

Click here for website

ARJ

Behind the Scenes : BBC Radio 4

A very good series of short audio documentaries about international contemporary stage directors whos work can be seen in the UK. This week 15/05/19 the work of British director Robert Icke is looked at.  Icke is famous for his re-invention of the classics texts. This documentary follows him while working on productions in London and Basel.

Black Men Walking by Dawn Walton
The series investigates the work of other such directors such as Miroslow Balka, Robert Lepage, Akram Kahn and David Grieg. The programme is broadcast on Wednesday's mornings at 09.00 or 21.30.  You can also access all the series on BBC Sounds.

Click here for BBC Sounds

ARJ

Tuesday, 7 May 2019

Blethers

Blethers - a Scottish term meaning "chatters"

Shared by a colleague on the Traditional Music course, our trad music musos will be glad to see that TRACS (Traditional Arts & Culture Scotland) publishes their "Blethers"  newsletter online in spring and autumn.  It aims to showcase projects and initiatives by traditional artists across Scotland and further afield.

Read it here:- 



Because we're kind and generous folk at the Whittaker Library, we've also put the link on our library portal so that RCS staff and students will be able to find it again when they need it!  Visit the library pages, and look for Subject Gateways > Music.

(The RCS portal is only accessible to our staff and students, and is password protected.)

Monday, 6 May 2019

Theatre Portraits Exhibition V&A (Behind the Curtain)


Check out this new exhibition..
 
Behind the Curtain photo
 
You'll spot some very familiar faces in this collection of portraits by artist Francis Hamel. His sitters have all held the position of the Cameron Mackintosh Chair of Contemporary Theatre at Oxford University and RCS President. This prestigious visiting professorship has previously been held by actors, writers, directors, and producers including Arthur Miller, Ian Mckellen and now Deborah Warner. The post was founded to promote the interest, study and practice of contemporary theatre. Now open at the V&A museum, London.
 

Friday, 19 April 2019

Musicals! We all Love Them!

 
This month, the Library is exploring the world of musicals. We're also looking at vocal health and injury prevention - important for any singer!
 

Musical Theatre eResources

DIGITAL THEATRE PLUS has musical productions and interviews. Below is a sample of what you can watch.
 
 
 
 
 
This is by no means everything!  How about Practitioners on Practice, with Tarek Merchant, or A Musical Director's Perspective, with Tom Attwood?
 
Meanwhile, Drama Online has eBooks about Musical Theatre.  Try these:-
  • British Musical Theatre since 1950 / Robert Gordon et al
  • Broadway Swings: Covering the Ensemble in Musical Theatre / J Austin Eyer and Lyndy Franklin Smith
  • The Disney Musical on Stage and Screen : Critical Approaches from 'Snow White' to 'Frozen'by George Rodosthenous
  • Musical Theatre, a History / John Kenrick
- you'll find all these by searching Catalogue Plus.  (Click the Catalogue Plus button before doing this search!)

 
Trouble accessing offsite? Try looking at our guides on the portal.
.

Vocal Health & Injury Prevention eResources

Articles and book chapters available include these:-

.
Try these e-books, too!
 
 
 
 
 
 

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.