How did tape loops, recycled everyday sounds and countless
other weapons of the avant-garde find their way into school music
lessons during the 1960s? That's the challenge for Ian McMillan as he
sets out on the trail of one of music education's more unexpected byways.
It
begins in an attic. Jonny Trunk is a collector of music's less
travelled pathways, amongst them LPs of school children from the 1960s
performing the most ambitious musical works imaginable. They have titles
like 'Music for Cymbals', 'An Aleatory Game' and 'Don't Drink and
Drive'.
So where did this all come from? Ian McMillan sets out to rediscover the creators of these musical curiosities, both
the educators who conceived them and also the pupils themselves. Now in
their 50s, what might the former pupils of the likes of Burnt Yates
School and Hessington Primary make of those experiences from their
youth?
Eventually Ian's travels take him to a
dark place. A very dark place. In a cavern complex near Pateley Bridge
he retreads footsteps taken by children not just for a recording project
but also one of those schools documentaries we love to chuckle over at
the distance of five decades. Only now can we discover what the class of
'69 really thought of these ground-breaking musical adventures.
Missed this back in August, but finally caught up with it, and well worth the wait.
To hear this superb Radio 4 programme go to here