This course celebrates the guitar and the music that has been made with it.
Musicians, composers and songwriters have used the guitar to express themselves in a huge variety of ways. What qualities of the instrument shape its music? How does guitar music contrast with that of the piano, for example? How do songwriters use it? Why did the guitar dominate popular music for much of the post-war era?
We will survey the history and development of the guitar from its antecedents in the Elizabethan lute and vihuela to the nylon-string classical which in modern times becomes a concert hall presence as composers write new music for it.
We will see how in the 20th century the steel-strung acoustic was taken up in folk and blues music, and how amplification enabled the jazz guitarist to become a soloist instead of just an accompanist. The contemporary styling of new solid body guitars and electric basses ensured they would be the foundation for the popular music of the 1960s and 1970s.
Examples of the guitar and its music will be demonstrated in class. No prior knowledge of the guitar or music is needed.
This course is part of The Oxford Experience summer school, held at Christ Church.