
Contents
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Longleat Hospital and the Lyre in Context Longleat Hospital and the Lyre in Context
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Performers at Longleat Performers at Longleat
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Repertoire, Transnationalism, and Class Connotations Repertoire, Transnationalism, and Class Connotations
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Music and Community at Longleat and Beyond Music and Community at Longleat and Beyond
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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6 Tommy Critics, an Unlikely Musical Community, and the Longleat Lyre during World War I
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Published:October 2019
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Abstract
Longleat, a stately home in Wiltshire, England, served as a hospital for British and allied troops in World War I. As reported in the Longleat Lyre, music provided entertainment and relief to recovering soldiers and built a community that transcended boundaries of class and culture. Longleat housed no officers, and soldiers from lower ranks intermingled in musical performances with the aristocrats of the Thynne family and with Reverend Cocks, the chaplain, and his wife. Repertoire was transnational, with American music and styles a staple ingredient, but also with the semi-classical music favored by upper social classes. Longleat built community through music within its environs, throughout the region, and in parallel with music produced and experienced by troops in the trenches.
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