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Travel in Space, Travel in Time: Michael Morrow's Approach to Performing Medieval Music in the 1960s

from II - Medievalist Visions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2016

Edward Breen
Affiliation:
King's College London
Catherine A. M. Clarke
Affiliation:
Professor of English, University of Southampton
Louise D'Arcens
Affiliation:
Australian Research Council Future Fellow - Macquarie University, NSW
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Summary

Thurston Dart's dictum “travel in space: travel in time” serves as a moniker for Michael Morrow's London-based early music ensemble, Musica Reservata. Morrow developed a hard-edged performance style for medieval and Renaissance music throughout the 1960s and 1970s that baffled many critics. In particular, Morrow demanded “bite and attack” from singers to promote a congruent sound with period instruments. By using folk models for this philosophy, Morrow's medievalism also displayed aspects of an orientalist approach.

The other then-major performing ensemble for medieval music in Britain was David Munrow's Early Music Consort of London. Munrow took a different approach to performance, an approach driven by his belief that early instruments attempted to imitate the human voice. Both ensembles were regularly broadcast on BBC radio, and their interviews and scripts make it possible to contrast their convictions.

Taking Johan Huizinga's notion of medieval contrast as a starting point, this essay traces several themes of medieval performance through the middle decades of the twentieth century to suggest ways in which such constructs of space and time are made manifest in Morrow's 1969 recording of Landini's yearning love-song Questa fanciulla. This striking performance is contrasted with another, made just days later, by David Munrow.

Huizingian Transpositions

During the twentieth century one particular study, as Christopher Page pointed out, exerted a strong and lasting influence on the perception of the Middle Ages. Consider the opening paragraph of Johan Huizinga's The Waning of the Middle Ages:

To the world when it was half a thousand years younger, the outline of all things seemed more clearly marked than to us. The contrast between suffering and joy, between adversity and happiness, appeared more striking. All experience had yet to the minds of men the directness and absoluteness of the pleasure and pain of child-life.

Histories such as Huizinga's have had a profound influence, merging into a subtle but persuasive medievalism that feeds public taste for what Page once called a “rumbustuous” Middle Ages.

Huizinga can help us to understand changing views of the Middle Ages and the medieval through the twentieth century because, as Page points out, he influenced what the many pioneers of the early music revival did when they approached questions of medieval performance practice: they, too, focused on contrasts.

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Studies in Medievalism XXV
Medievalism and Modernity
, pp. 89 - 114
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2016

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