Description

Book Synopsis
The first regional history of music in England. Music in the West Country is the first regional history of music in England. Ranging over seven hundred years, from the minstrels, waits, and cathedral choristers of the fourteenth century to the Bristol Sound of the late twentieth, the book explores the region's soundscape, from its gateway cities of Bristol and Salisbury in the east to the Isles of Scilly in the west, and examines music-making in tiny villages as well as conditions in important centres such as Bath, Exeter, Plymouth, and Bournemouth. What emerges is both a study of the typical - musical practices which would apply to any English region - and a portrait of the unique - features born of the region's physicalisolation and charm, among them the growth of festival culture, the mythologising of folk music, the late survival of parish psalmody and nonconformist carolling, and the unique continuance, today, of a professional resort orchestra, the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Banfield's vividly written and extremely readable history of music in the west country considers an array of subjects, firmly centred on people's stories: musical inventions and theidea of tradition, music as cultural capital, the economics of musical employment and the demographics of musicianship, musical networks, the relationship of the hinterlands to the metropolis, the influence of topography, the importance of institutions and events, and the question of how to measure value. A study in prosopography, it shows how people went about their lives with music and explores how things changed for them - or did not. STEPHENBANFIELD is Emeritus Professor of Music at the University of Bristol.

Trade Review
It shows how Devon situates itself within the greater regional soundscape...'non-music' historians ought not to leave this book on the shelf for it contains absolute gems where individuals, families, towns, villages and institutions are concerned. * THE DEVON HISTORIAN *
[An] impressive book...offering valuable insights into the social and cultural 'musicking' of the West Country. * JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE *
Banfield's monograph is finely written and teeming with information. . . . Within each chapter, Banfield's mastery of the subject matter comes to the fore. . . . [It is] an expansive, thought-provoking, deeply researched consideration of the varieties of musicking in the West Country from the fourteenth century to the present day. . . . [T]his book [is] perfectly suited for scholars of English music and culture. . . . One hopes it will become a framework that future scholars will build upon. -- Timothy M. Love * NINETEENTH-CENTURY MUSIC REVIEW *
A major contribution to the study of music in Devon and the rest of the West Country...will long stand as an essential reference for anybody embarking on further work...Highly readable. * REPORT AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE DEVONSHIRE ASSOCIATION *
Scrupulously researched and beautifully written. * JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY *
Stephen Banfield has written a wonderful book. Drawing connections between place and music, he finds new ways of interpreting both as he guides the reader over nearly 8,000 square miles and more than 600 years of West Country 'musicking'. * MUSIC & LETTERS *
A useful resource...[offers a] vast prosopography of west country people who made their living from music.from networks of patronage, family and marriage, to musical servants, townwaits, tutors and apprentices, and from instrument makers and repairers to music dealers, any of these groupings offer avenues for fruitful further research. * SOCIAL HISTORY *
A huge, impressive study. * POPULAR MUSIC *
There is certainly plenty in relation to folk song...Banfield highlights the importance of the West Country. * FOLK MUSIC JOURNAL *
There is much to be enjoyed in this book...it is well-written with a great deal of social history woven into the musical story, making it an excellent read for both the historian as well as the musician. * OLD CORNWALL, THE JOURNAL OF THE FEDERATION OF OLD CORNWALL SOCIETIES *
A very readable account tracing the way in which amateur and professional performers, players and composers of music went about their business in the past...You are going to meet an awful lot of fascinating, weird and wonderful people along the way. * BRISTOL POST *
With an acute instinct for social history, Banfield uncovers many curiosities...[in] this cornucopia of fascinating information. * MUSICAL OPINION QUARTERLY *

Table of Contents
Preface and acknowledgements Landscapes and soundscapes Musical authority: organs Musical incorporation: bands and choirs Musical livings I: the prosopography Musical livings II: individual case studies Musical capitalisation I: events and inventions Musical capitalisation II: institutions Epilogue

Music in the West Country: Social and Cultural

    Product form

    £38.00

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £40.00 – you save £2.00 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 1 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Stephen Banfield

    10 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Music in the West Country: Social and Cultural by Stephen Banfield

      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 16/02/2018
      ISBN13: 9781783272730, 978-1783272730
      ISBN10: 1783272732
      Also in:
      History of music

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The first regional history of music in England. Music in the West Country is the first regional history of music in England. Ranging over seven hundred years, from the minstrels, waits, and cathedral choristers of the fourteenth century to the Bristol Sound of the late twentieth, the book explores the region's soundscape, from its gateway cities of Bristol and Salisbury in the east to the Isles of Scilly in the west, and examines music-making in tiny villages as well as conditions in important centres such as Bath, Exeter, Plymouth, and Bournemouth. What emerges is both a study of the typical - musical practices which would apply to any English region - and a portrait of the unique - features born of the region's physicalisolation and charm, among them the growth of festival culture, the mythologising of folk music, the late survival of parish psalmody and nonconformist carolling, and the unique continuance, today, of a professional resort orchestra, the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Banfield's vividly written and extremely readable history of music in the west country considers an array of subjects, firmly centred on people's stories: musical inventions and theidea of tradition, music as cultural capital, the economics of musical employment and the demographics of musicianship, musical networks, the relationship of the hinterlands to the metropolis, the influence of topography, the importance of institutions and events, and the question of how to measure value. A study in prosopography, it shows how people went about their lives with music and explores how things changed for them - or did not. STEPHENBANFIELD is Emeritus Professor of Music at the University of Bristol.

      Trade Review
      It shows how Devon situates itself within the greater regional soundscape...'non-music' historians ought not to leave this book on the shelf for it contains absolute gems where individuals, families, towns, villages and institutions are concerned. * THE DEVON HISTORIAN *
      [An] impressive book...offering valuable insights into the social and cultural 'musicking' of the West Country. * JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE *
      Banfield's monograph is finely written and teeming with information. . . . Within each chapter, Banfield's mastery of the subject matter comes to the fore. . . . [It is] an expansive, thought-provoking, deeply researched consideration of the varieties of musicking in the West Country from the fourteenth century to the present day. . . . [T]his book [is] perfectly suited for scholars of English music and culture. . . . One hopes it will become a framework that future scholars will build upon. -- Timothy M. Love * NINETEENTH-CENTURY MUSIC REVIEW *
      A major contribution to the study of music in Devon and the rest of the West Country...will long stand as an essential reference for anybody embarking on further work...Highly readable. * REPORT AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE DEVONSHIRE ASSOCIATION *
      Scrupulously researched and beautifully written. * JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY *
      Stephen Banfield has written a wonderful book. Drawing connections between place and music, he finds new ways of interpreting both as he guides the reader over nearly 8,000 square miles and more than 600 years of West Country 'musicking'. * MUSIC & LETTERS *
      A useful resource...[offers a] vast prosopography of west country people who made their living from music.from networks of patronage, family and marriage, to musical servants, townwaits, tutors and apprentices, and from instrument makers and repairers to music dealers, any of these groupings offer avenues for fruitful further research. * SOCIAL HISTORY *
      A huge, impressive study. * POPULAR MUSIC *
      There is certainly plenty in relation to folk song...Banfield highlights the importance of the West Country. * FOLK MUSIC JOURNAL *
      There is much to be enjoyed in this book...it is well-written with a great deal of social history woven into the musical story, making it an excellent read for both the historian as well as the musician. * OLD CORNWALL, THE JOURNAL OF THE FEDERATION OF OLD CORNWALL SOCIETIES *
      A very readable account tracing the way in which amateur and professional performers, players and composers of music went about their business in the past...You are going to meet an awful lot of fascinating, weird and wonderful people along the way. * BRISTOL POST *
      With an acute instinct for social history, Banfield uncovers many curiosities...[in] this cornucopia of fascinating information. * MUSICAL OPINION QUARTERLY *

      Table of Contents
      Preface and acknowledgements Landscapes and soundscapes Musical authority: organs Musical incorporation: bands and choirs Musical livings I: the prosopography Musical livings II: individual case studies Musical capitalisation I: events and inventions Musical capitalisation II: institutions Epilogue

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account