The sound of silence: why aren't Australia's female composers being heard?
- Written by The Conversation Contributor
Since 1987, 47 composers have been commissioned to write for the Australia Ensemble – the nation’s leading chamber music ensemble. Forty one of them were men.
Meanwhile, only 10% of Australia’s government-funded Ensemble Offspring’s 2016 programs feature music by women composers. Similarly, The Bendigo International Festival of Exploratory Music featured only 10 women among the 63 composers in its 2015 program.
Perhaps there just aren’t enough women composers. Yet according to a report from the Victorian Women’s Trust in May this year, 25 to 29% of composition students in Australia are women.
Women’s new music, it seems, is sidelined in professional Australian concert programs. In 2013, for instance, women’s music represented only 11% of the works performed at new music concerts.
A different picture emerges, however, in the listening project Making Waves. Established through crowd funding in 2015, it airs 60-minute playlists from invited Australian composers and specifically asks for an equal mix of men and women. Curated by composers Lisa Cheney and Peggy Polias, male and female composers are heard in equal measure.
Explaining the disparity
Why is there such disparity between Making Waves and the paltry number of women represented in concert programs and commissions? Harriet Langley, in Gender Discrimination in the Classical World (2013) attributes rampant discrimination in the classical world to a reluctance to let go of tradition.
New music is important because it’s written here and now. In the last decade, the number of women studying and working in classical music has risen steadily. Yet bias remains, particularly in composition and conducting. Russian conductor Yuri Temirkanov came under fire in 2013 for saying,
the essence of the conductor’s profession is strength. The essence of a woman is weakness. The important thing is, a woman should be beautiful, likeable, attractive. Musicians will look at her and be distracted from the music.
The biological argument has been around for centuries. In 1880, music critic George P Upton wrote that,
women will never originate music in its fullest and grandest forms … there is little hope that she will be a creator.
Pychologist Carl E Seashore agreed. In 1940, Seashore blamed biology for the lack of great women composers. Women, he said, have a fundamental urge to be “beautiful, loved and adored.”
In 2015, a journalist in England responded to a 17-year-old girl’s petition to include women composers in the A-level music syllabus. The journalist commended the girl’s good intentions but went on to disparage the proposed women composers. These included Dame Judith Weir, a highly regarded 21st century composer. On “great women composers”, he wrote:
There may be some in the future, though I’m not sure whether ‘greatness’ is achievable.
Tellingly, the journalist gave no evidence to support his pronouncements. He showed no understanding that he was subscribing to a deeply entrenched culture of sexism.
Authors: The Conversation Contributor