Light music is a less-serious form of Western classical music, which originated in the 18th and 19th centuries and continues today. Its heyday was in the mid‑20th century.Geoffrey Self, Light Music in Britain Since 1870: A Survey (Ashgate, 2001)Lamb, Andrew (2002). British light music: sound good, feel good, Gramophone November 2002, pp.34–38, accessed 12 September 2011. The style is through-composed, usually shorter orchestral pieces and suites designed to appeal to a wider context and audience than more sophisticated forms such as the concerto, the symphony and the opera.
Light music was especially popular during the formative years of radio broadcasting, with stations such as the BBC Light Programme (1945–1967) playing almost exclusively "light" compositions.
Occasionally also known as mood music and concert music, light music is often grouped with the easy listening genre. Light music was popular in the United Kingdom, the United States and in continental Europe, and many compositions in the genre remain familiar through their use as themes in film, radio and television series.
In the UK, the light-music genre has its origin in the seaside and theatrical orchestras that flourished in Britain during the 19th and early 20th century.Jenkins, Lyndon. Notes to British Light Music (EMI compilation CD, 1997)Ernest Tomlinson. Foreword to Philip L Scowcroft, British Light Music (2013), p.5 These played a wide repertoire of music, from classical music to arrangements of popular songs and of the time.Kenneth Young. Music's Great Days in the Spas and Watering-places (1968) From this tradition came many specially written shorter orchestral pieces designed to appeal to a wider audience.Ian C. Brad. Water Music: Making Music in the Spas of Europe and North America (2010)
Composers such as Sir Edward Elgar wrote a number of popular works in this medium, such as the "Salut d'Amour", the Nursery Suite, and Chanson de Matin. The conductor Sir Thomas Beecham became famous for concluding his otherwise serious orchestral concerts with what he termed "lollipops", meaning less serious, short or amusing works chosen as a crowd-pleasing encore.EMI CD CDM 7 63412 2, published in 1991. Influenced by the earlier "promenade concerts" held in London pleasure gardens, a similar spirit embued many of Henry Wood's early Queen's Hall The Proms concerts, especially the "Last Night of the Proms". Proms 2010: Last Night of the Proms 1910 Style, accessed 18 November 2010
With the introduction of radio broadcasting by the BBC in the 1920s the style found an ideal outlet. This increased after the launch of the BBC Light Programme in 1945, featuring programmes such as Friday Night is Music Night and Music While You Work.Brian Kay: "Music Everywhere" (2005 BBC Television programme)
In the United States, "pops orchestra" such as the famous Boston Pops Orchestra began to emerge in the 19th century. The Boston Pops was founded in 1885 as a second, popular identity of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO), founded four years earlier. They commissioned light pieces by composers such as Leroy Anderson, Ferde Grofé, and George Gershwin to write original works, along with theatre music, film music and arrangements of popular music and show tunes.
David Ades suggests that "it is generally agreed that it occupies a position between classical and popular music, yet its boundaries are often blurred".David Ades, notes to The Great British Light Experience, EMI, 1997 (724356667624), p.4 He goes on to cite broadcaster Denis Norden who said that light music was "not just tuneful round the outside, but tuneful right through."
Often, the pieces represent a mood, place, person or object, for example Farnon's "Portrait of a Flirt", Albert Ketèlbey's In a Monastery Garden or Edward White's "Runaway Rocking Horse". "Edward White: The Runaway Rocking Horse", Land of Lost Content, accessed 15 November 2010 The genre's other popular title "mood music" is a reference to pieces such as Charles Williams' A Quiet Stroll, which is written at an andante pace and has a jaunty, cheery feel. Charles Williams , Robert Farnon Society, accessed 15 November 2010 Light music pieces are usually presented individually or as movements within a suite, and are often given individual descriptive titles. These titles can sometimes be unusual or idiosyncratic, such as Frederic Curzon's "Dance of the Ostracised Imp". Dance of the Ostracized Imp , Classical Midi, accessed 15 November 2010
In keeping with this tradition of levity, pieces can also feature musical jokes at the expense of more "serious" works, such as Eric Fenby's overture Rossini on Ilkla Moor Fenby: Rossini on Ilkla Moor, http://thompsonian.info/fenby.html, accessed 15 November 2010 or Arthur Wilkinson's Beatlecracker Suite, which arranges songs by The Beatles in the style of Tchaikovsky's ballet The Nutcracker. Beatlecracker Suite, Music Makes Me, accessed 15 November 2010
It can also sometimes be grouped with the background music, beautiful music and elevator music created for commercial background music players such as the Seeburg 1000 by Seeburg Corporation or Cantata 700 (3M) as well as the works of Muzak Orchestra (Muzak as a company): back in the 1950s, the 1960s and the 1970s, the background music were light orchestral arrangements of popular music played in shops, hotels and airlines.
In Japan, "light music" is used to translate the Japanese term (Hepburn: keiongaku), also abbreviated "K-On" or "LM" in roman characters, which is a calque of the English term "light music" into Japanese that has been a broad term for non-classical popular music (e.g. jazz, rock) since the NHK began using the term in 1938.
Eric Coates' marches in particular were popular choices as theme music. The "Dambusters March", possibly his most famous work, was used as the title theme to the 1954 film and has become synonymous with the film and the mission itself. Other Coates works used as theme music include "Calling All Workers" for Music While You Work, "Knightsbridge" for In Town Tonight and "Halcyon Days" as the theme to The Forsyte Saga.
Coates was also commissioned to write original marches for television stations including the "BBC Television March", ATV's "Sound and Vision March" and Associated Rediffusion's "Music Everywhere". Other noteworthy television startup themes include William Walton's Granada Preludes, Call Signs and End Music for Granada Television, Robert Farnon's Derby Day for Radiotelevisão Portuguesa, Richard Addinsell's Southern Rhapsody for Southern Television, Ron Goodwin's Westward Ho! for Westward Television and John Dankworth's Widespread World for Rediffusion London.Roddy Buxton, " Tiptoe through the Startups ", Transdiffusion
Music for television test card transmissions was also a significant outlet for light music in the UK, from the mid-1950s into the 1980s.
Several pieces of light music are used as themes on BBC Radio 4 to the present day, with Eric Coates's "By the Sleepy Lagoon" being the theme of Desert Island Discs, Arthur Wood's "Barwick Green" the theme of The Archers and Ronald Binge's "Sailing By" preceding the late-night shipping forecast.
Many orchestras specialising in playing light music were disbanded. Small palm court orchestras, once common in hotels, seaside resorts and theatres were gradually lost in favour of recorded music. The BBC began to discard its archive of light music, much of which was saved by composer Ernest Tomlinson and is now kept at his Library of Light Orchestral Music. However, the genre was kept in the public consciousness by its use in advertisements and television programmes, often used as a nostalgic evocation of the 1940s and 1950s.
During the 1990s, the genre began to be re-discovered and original remastered recordings by orchestras such as the Queen's Hall Light Orchestra were issued on compact disc for the first time. This was followed by new recordings of light music by orchestras such as the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, the New London Orchestra and the BBC Concert Orchestra, as well as continued public concerts by orchestras such as the Cambridge Concert Orchestra, the Scarborough Spa Orchestra and Vancouver Island's Palm Court Light Orchestra. The style also found a new home on BBC Radio 3 on Brian Kay's Light Programme, although this programme was discontinued in February 2007. "Brian Kay's Light Programme" website, a former light music programme on BBC Radio 3. In 2007, BBC Four broadcast an evening of light music as part of a themed evening celebrating British culture between 1945 and 1955, which included Brian Kay's documentary Music for Everybody and a televised version of Friday Night is Music Night.
In the UK, US and Canada, light music can still be heard on some of the radio channels that specialise in classical music: for example Classic FM in the UK, and XHLNC-FM in Mexico. A nationwide participatory festival of light music called "Light Fantastic" was organised by BBC Radio 3 in June 2011 as part of the 60th anniversary celebrations of the 1951 Festival of Britain. This included events in London, Manchester, Cardiff and Glasgow, from both professional and amateur ensembles, including a live revival of Music While You Work from a factory in Irlam near Manchester, several light music concerts from the Southbank Centre and a number of documentaries about the genre.
Style
Associated genres
As film, radio and television themes
Decline and resurgence
Thematic use
Notable composers
See also
External links
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