The
composer Douglas Lilburn, musical tradition, and I
Michael
Brown, the Curator of the music collection at the Turnbull Library
gave an interesting talk about Douglas
Lilburn and his musical tradition. Lilburn said in
his lecture, A
Search for a Language [p.72]
'I was not born into a musical family and had no proper musical
training before a late age of 17'. Michael Brown disputed this claim.
The Lilburns, were a Scottish family, they often sang Scottish songs,
Douglas Lilburn was steeped in traditional Scottish melodies. This
Scottish heritage is reflected in his music, pentatonic melodies,
dotted rhythms, pedal notes echoing bagpipes, and melodies developing
within a limited compass. So why did he saiy that he was not born
into a musical family? Why did he belittle his Scottish musical
heritage? To understand this we have to see Lilburn in context as one
of the New Zealand artists who worked on forging a New Zealand
tradition, a breakaway from the prevailing British tradition. These
artists included the poets Allen Curnow, Dennis Glover and their
contemporaries, the painters Rita Angus and Toss Wollaston and others
who all worked within a general climate nascent nationalism. They
looked down on those who preceded them, and their contemporaries who
worked within an older, perhaps Edwardian idiom. They did not
consider that they excluded from such a New Zealand tradition
composers such as Richard Fuchs and Georg Tintner, artists like
Frederick Ost, and writers like Karl Wolfskehl, and indeed they
excluded people like me and all others who are in every respect New
Zealanders, but carry their own personal cultural baggage, including
in my case Hungarian gypsy and café music as well as a wealth of
classical music. I don't hold this against Douglas Lilburn; he grew
up in a different time, when New Zealand was much more mono-cultural,
if we ignore Maoris, Dalmatians, Chinese and other minorities who had
lived in New Zealand as long as British settlers. He lived at a time
when New Zealand culture, with all its limitations, blossomed. And
personally, I had great respect for Douglas Lilburn. He and I marched
side by side, along with hundreds of others, from the Wellington Town
Hall to Parliament to protest against the Vietnam War. We talked, had
a conversation, but to my regret I can't remember what we talked
about, I only recall the pride I took in being in the company of such
a celebrated yet modest composer.
Lilburn,
Douglas, A Seartch for Tradition & A Search for a Language,
2011, Wellington
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