The Herald - The Herald Magazine

‘There is no right version of history. Each age uses its past to suit it’

Composer Andrew Gant on the story of Western music, from Bach to The Beatles to Bowie and beyond

- TEDDY JAMIESON

YOU’RE not allowed to ask who my favourite composer is.” Andrew Gant is making a pretence of being offended. “It’s like asking, ‘who is your favourite child?’” I’ve just enquired if, in his case, the answer is Mozart. Because anyone who reads Gant’s new history of Western music, Five Straight Lines, can read between them and reckon the way he writes about Wolfgang Amadeus is a declaratio­n of love. Well, isn’t it, Andrew?

“You are right. The coincidenc­e of talent with the manner and style of his age has not been done more perfectly than this particular person with his combinatio­n of abilities and background and upbringing.”

Once he starts talking about Mozart it’s like turning a tap on. The enthusiasm pours forth

“And he’s just an amazingly wonderful, loveable, quixotic, childish, funny character,” Gant continues.

“His letters are just amazing. They’re just so entertaini­ng. I hope that this book, if it does anything, will inspire people to go and read Mozart’s letters. They’re so funny, but also so revealing.

“He moves very quickly from details of musical style. How he works and how other people work, which is fascinatin­g. It’s him talking in real time about writing an aria and going off to rehearse it. And then he moves to smutty jokes with his latest girlfriend or talking about somebody’s piano practice and it’s just wonderful, really lively.”

Rather like Gant’s book, you might say. Five Straight Lines may be an epic of Wagnerian proportion­s that takes us from 40,000BC (though Gant speculates on what might have been going on musically before even that) to the music of the 21st century, but it skips along like a scherzo, travelling from Bach to Bowie, medieval choirs to the Spice Girls and even finds time to mention the theme tune to 1970s sitcom Are You Being Served?

“Well, that’s another thing that I’ve tried to do in telling this story,” Gant explains when I bring the latter up, “to try and do away with artificial boundaries.

“The boundaries between pop and classical are much more fluid than you think. Are You Being Served? begins with the sound of an old-fashioned till. Now, using some extra musical sound like that in a piece of music was an idea that was explored by serious composers like John Cage at the same time. The whole thing about electronic music … The Beatles and Doctor Who and Stockhause­n, they were all doing the same thing at the same time. So, when you start to look at it these boundaries seem to melt away.”

Gant, one-time profession­al tenor and former organist, choirmaste­r and composer at Her Majesty’s Chapel Royal and currently Lecturer in Music at St Peter’s College, University of Oxford, is the best kind of enthusiast. Open, engaged, willing to listen (particular­ly useful given his subject matter) and eloquent in sharing his knowledge.

Five Straight Lines has taken five years to write (“I’ve done other things in that time,” he points out) and is an attempt to tell the story of Western music as, he says (quoting German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt), a “living whole” rather than a “dead aggregate”.

“One of the things I tried to do a bit differentl­y is let the story be a story.

So, you will find chapters in here about Beethoven and Mozart. But, also, you will find informatio­n about composers you’ve probably heard of but maybe don’t value enough because they tend to be a bit overshadow­ed.

“I think Antonio Salieri is a good example of that. He is known for being in Vienna at the same time as Mozart basically, which is a tough gig for anybody. But he was a tremendous­ly influentia­l person, very generous, very helpful, taught a huge range of people across the late 18th and early 19th centuries, a really big character.

“And, also, a very good composer. He wrote some fantastic operas and some very nice church music.”

One of the book’s strengths is Gant’s eye for the amusing and enlighteni­ng detail. At one point we find Casanova, no less, talking to Cardinal Richelieu during a regal hunting trip, discussing the comparativ­e merits of French and Italian Recitative in relation to the opera company whom the King has brought along. (The merits of the actresses’ legs were also appraised.)

To what extent is Wagner culpable for the Nazis? He certainly gave them a playbook

“We make music because we have to,” Gant writes as he casts back and forth through musical history, spelling out the links between medieval composers and their 20th-century equivalent­s in their interest in mathematic­s and chance.

“Another advantage of trying to do the whole of musical history in one book is you can treat historical time as a continuum,” Gant explains.

“You can find links and themes that run through and recur and one of those themes is history itself, how each age looks at its past.

“The idea that there is a correct version of history is just a myth. Each age uses its past and its inheritanc­e in the way that suits it.”

Musical reputation­s ebb and flow. Our tastes reflect the culture we live in. Mozart now feels a much more contempora­ry figure, for example, than, say, Wagner, I suggest.

“Gosh, when I got to the chapter about Wagner you have to take a deep breath,” Gant admits. “A genius of quite colossal proportion, but one who comes with so much baggage and you just can’t ignore it. You have to write about anti-Semitism and German supremacy and the pretty foul way he treated a lot of people to create these monumental works of art.

“And then you have the added complicati­on that is the use that future ages put his music to; most of all, of course, the Nazis. And to what extent is he culpable? He certainly gave them a playbook. There’s no question about that.”

Music doesn’t float above the culture it comes from. It emerges from within. The very first named composer in the book is the 12th-century German mystic Hildegard of

Bingen. It is a reflection of the inequaliti­es of society that until the 20th century she is one of the few women music-makers who appear in the book’s pages.

“At the same time in every age it is not true to say there were none,” Gant points out.

“If you look, there they are. it’s often to do with particular local circumstan­ces. In Venice, for example, in the 17th century there were a number of very successful female composers like Barbara Strozzi and Francesca Caccini, because Venice was always a bit different, a bit more democratic and also because they happened to be members of wellestabl­ished families, both musically and politicall­y.”

Reading the final chapters of the book it is clear that of all the 20th-century forms of music that have emerged, minimalism may not be Gant’s favourite.

“I let my prejudices show there a little bit,” he admits.

“I think John Adams is an amazingly interestin­g and inventive composer, but minimalism … The whole point of the style is that it pares music back to its basic essentials and clearly if you do that there is a danger that what you end up with is repetitive by definition. And not all of its exponents have overcome that.”

INEVITABLY the real story of 20th-century music is the interface between classical and popular. The obvious question to ask an Oxford scholar is did the Beatles knock down all the barriers between the two?

“There’s no question about how much progress has been made just in recent years. If you want to look at the curriculum right here in Oxford University, there are papers on jazz and pop music and women in pop which would have been unthinkabl­e 20 years ago and that’s really good.

“But I think where the change really comes, actually, is if you talk to young people. I teach students and to them these barriers are just not there.

“I was talking about the music of Messiaen and his use of a particular kind of scale and a student said, ‘Oh yeah, there’s a song by Radiohead that does that.’ And he got his phone out and he played it.

“It doesn’t help to think this is a serious piece of classical music and that’s a pop song or a musical. They’re all trying to do the same thing, which is use music to communicat­e something interestin­g.”

Which is just what he has done. We write music, or in Gant’s case musical history, because we have to.

Five Straight Lines by Andrew Gant is published by Profile

Books on Thursday, £30

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from far left: David Bowie; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and author Andrew Gant
Clockwise from far left: David Bowie; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and author Andrew Gant

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