https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/sep/30/environmental-destruction-is-part-of-liz-trusss-plan
30 September 2022
27 September 2022
An open letter to our new culture secretary from a lighting designer
Dear Ms Donelan,
Please allow me, through these pages, to welcome you to your new
job of secretary of state for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
Many people have filled your role; you’re the 14th since 2007.
In that period there have been just seven chancellors, five prime ministers
and, until the other sad day, one monarch. The average time in your job is just
over a year. There are individual shows that take longer than that to get on to
the stage; it doesn’t feel long enough to figure out what everyone’s doing, let
alone start making meaningful decisions.
Ask it, and your own civil service will tell you that the
sectors you oversee account for 13% of the UK economy, with the creative
industries among the fastest growing. Despite what your government often seems
to believe, this is a massively important area.
Narrow down the focus a bit to my world, the production side –
the work of delivering live shows, events, television productions and films –
and you’ll find a highly skilled, talented and serious workforce delivering
big, complex projects bang on schedule. When was the last time you went to see
a show and it wasn’t there ready for you? While you were there, did you wonder
about the complexity of the scenery, costumes, props, lighting and sound in
front of you – to say nothing of the tonnes of equipment hanging safely above
you?
This is no longer the clichéd world of roadies pushing boxes.
This is a world of high-level design, engineering and technology, often
advancing the limits of what technology allows. Practitioners and suppliers
from this country are in demand everywhere, their work acclaimed around the
world. Just one example: four of the five nominees for best sound design for a
musical in this year’s Tony Awards were British.
All these talents deserve the fullest support and encouragement
from government, not to be ignored, dismissed and, in the worst case, told they
should retrain. They need practical help with today’s challenges, including the
ongoing recovery from the pandemic, the complications from Brexit and the
looming catastrophe of energy prices and inflation. In that perfect storm, a
number of long-established British suppliers in this field have been taken over
by foreign companies. Has anyone in your department noticed that? Do you even
know how many of these skilled individuals work in this field you now oversee?
It feels like you should.
Without culture, the UK would be an entirely different country,
and a much less appealing one. But culture is not really a thing in itself,
it’s the result of the people and organisations who make it.
Please, be bold on our behalf. Long-term bold, not just the
sound-bites of electioneering. We need commitment. We need support. We need, as
we used to have back in times when those leading the arts loved the arts and
stuck around, an ally.
02 September 2022
Scottish violinist Daphne Godson has died aged 90
The musician and teacher performed in several ensembles and taught at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music
The Strad, 2 September 2022
One of Scotland’s most
accomplished violinists, Daphne Godson has died aged 90. Over her long playing
career she was associated with ensembles such as the Scottish Baroque Ensemble,
the Berenicia Ensemble, the Pegasus Trio, Merlyn Trio and the Scottish Early
Music Consort.
Born in 1932 in Edinburgh,
Godson attended George Watson’s Ladies’ College and the Waddell School of
Music. One of her earliest notices appeared in The Scotsman in March 1950 when she was only 18, following a
Saltire Society recital at Gladstone’s Land in Edinburgh. The concert also featured
the counter-tenor George Rizza (later prominent in the world of music
publishing). The reviewer noted that Godson ‘had, besides her beautiful tone, a
confidence and a maturity about her playing that was quite exceptional’. A solo
piece by Kreisler was ‘a tour de force, but it was her grasp of the
implications of [Dowland’s] “Go, nightly cares” which was the more remarkable’.
On the same page of the same issue a review of the Waddell Junior Orchestra
remarks that Daphne Godson, among others, ‘revealed more than latent
musicianship’.
She attended the Royal Academy
of Music in London and, after being awarded a Belgian State Scholarship in 1954,
went on to study at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels with the Hungarian-born
violinist André Gertler (who also taught André Rieu). In 1957 she won first prize in the
international violin competition held during the Darmstadt Festival of Contemporary
Music.
The following
year, 1958, she won a consolation prize of 2,000 Zloty in the third
International Henryk Wieniawski Violin Competition in Poznań, Poland, one of
five candidates representing Britain. Among the judges were David Oistrakh, Max
Rostal and Gioconda de Vito.
Returning to
Scotland she was active as a solo violinist and as a member of Edinburgh
Barock, the Merlyn Trio, the Pegasus Trio and the Bernicia Ensemble, recording Rameau’s Pièces de Clavecin en Concert for Saga in 1966 and contributing to
the 18th-century volume (‘Baroque and Classical Scotland’) of the LP series A History of Scottish Music (Scottish
Records, 1972) with fellow violinist Leonard Friedman. There were also
performances and recordings with the Scottish Baroque Ensemble – directed by
Friedman – and with the Scottish Early Music Consort (Mary's Music: Songs and
Dances from the Time of Mary, Queen of Scots; Chandos, 1984). In 1997
she was violinist and leader on the CD The
Big Birl (Lismore Recordings), original compositions by Robert Mathieson,
Pipe Major of the Shotts and Dykehead Caledonia Pipe Band.
After a recital in Glasgow with her pianist partner Audrey Innes in
April 1962, Anthony Hedges commented in the Musical
Times that they, ‘both as a team and as individuals, deserve to be widely
heard outside Scotland. Each couples a great sense of artistry with admirable
technical accomplishment; each has an ardent musical personality that
communicates enthusiasm and enjoyment to the listener.’ In May 1962 she
appeared at London’s Wigmore Hall in one of the Incorporated Society of
Musicians’ Young Artists’ Recitals.
Daphne Godson was also principal of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra (1974–76)
and leader of the Edinburgh Bach Players, and appeared as a soloist with the
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, the Scottish National Orchestra and the
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. From
1964 she also taught at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and at the
Broughton High School Special Music Unit.
An
interest in early music (she was also an accomplished rebec player) did not
preclude composers of other periods, including Hans Gál,
whose Concertino for violin and strings
she played at Gateshead in 1963 (‘in which she showed technical mastery, beauty
of tone, and maturity of interpretation’, according to the composer Arthur
Milner, who reviewed it in the Newcastle
Journal), Schoenberg’s Pierrot
Lunaire (with the Bernicia Ensemble, Aberdeen, 1968), and Kenneth Leighton,
at whose memorial concert she played in 1989 – the penultimate of 18 appearances
she made at the Edinburgh University Reid Concerts series between 1959 and
1999. She also played in the University of Glasgow’s McEwen Memorial Concerts
of Scottish Chamber Music.
There
were more than 25 radio broadcasts between 1959 and 2004, including music by
Hans Gál, Kenneth Leighton,
Robin Orr and John Casken; and she was the violinist in a broadcast of David
Greig’s play, Dr Korczak’s Example,
first broadcast in 2004 and repeated as recently as this year on BBC Radio 4
Extra.
Among her avocations were hillwalking, reading and
dressmaking. She could have had an international career, but said she was
‘perfectly happy in Scotland’.
© GARRY HUMPHREYS, 2022
Edith
Muriel Daphne Godson, violinist and teacher; born Edinburgh, 16 March 1932;
died Edinburgh 15 August 2022