The History of Street Performance: 'Music by handle' and the Silencing of Street Musicians in the Metropolis
Gresham College Lectures
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Gresham College Lectures
The History of Street Performance: 'Music by handle' and the Silencing of Street Musicians in the Metropolis
Jul 09, 2015
Gresham College
A discussion of the history of busking and street music in the City of London: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/the-history-of-street-performance

Drawing on a range of historic sources - including selections from Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor and Charles Babbage's Passages in the Life of a Philosopher - particular focus will be given to the way in which various residents of the City responded to the 'street music problem' of Victorian London. This is by far the most heavily documented period in the history of busking and street music in the City. The street music 'problem' emerged in light of the growing middle and literary classes and the disruption the presence such street musicians caused to the quiet tenor of their home-working lives.

The debates that occurred here - which involved notable figures such as Charles Dickens, Charles Leech, and Charles Babbage - resulted in the development of the Street Music Act of 1864 and paved the way for much of the subsequent legislative control of street musicians in the City. The debates about street performances in London in this period shed light on the present-day situation of busking and street music in the City.

This lecture will be delivered as a part of the 2015 City of London Festival.

The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/the-history-of-street-performance

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