Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-l4dxg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-01-23T16:52:37.548Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Dent Medal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2025

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Dent Medal Citation
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Musical Association

The Dent Medal, struck in memory of the distinguished scholar and musician Edward J. Dent (1876–1957), has been awarded by the Royal Musical Association annually since 1961 to recipients selected for their outstanding contribution to musicology. A list of candidates is drawn up by the Council of the Association and the Directorium of the International Musicological Society.

The Dent Medal for 2022 is awarded to MARK BURFORD.

Mark Burford completed his PhD at Columbia University in 2005 and is now R.P. Wollenberg Professor of Music at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. He is currently the Sheila Biddle Ford Foundation Fellow at Harvard’s Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. His research is distinctive and broad reaching in its implications for the field, melding music’s sonic aspects and political valences, linking histories of music to the history of complex ideas, and writing in a highly engaging manner.

Burford’s research focused initially on Brahms and the intellectual history of music in the German-speaking lands during the nineteenth century, and includes the landmark publication in 19th-Century Music, ‘Hanslick’s Idealist Materialism’ (2006), which effectively rehabilitated Hanslick’s On the Beautiful in Music by engaging with the philosophical currents of its day. He has continued to publish in this field, notably illuminating the formative turn in Brahms’s historical thinking in the mid-1850s in ‘Brahms’s Sybel: The Politics and Practice of Prussian Nationalist History’, which appeared in Nineteenth-Century Music Review (2019).

Burford’s main focus in the last ten years, however, has shifted to Black popular music studies. He has opened up a new field, offering Black objects of study as a legitimate and productive focus for musicological enquiry. This shift began with a prize-winning article in the Journal of the American Musicological Society, ‘Sam Cooke as Pop Album Artist – A Reinvention in Three Songs’ (2012), which reveals how Cooke navigated the political lines of ethnicity, race, and sexuality. The article both exposes and overcomes the significant methodological challenges posed by Black music studies, with meticulous attention to archival and musical detail. It received the Society for American Music’s 2012 Irving Lowens Award for the outstanding article on American music. Further articles in American Music Review and The Musical Quarterly led to the ambitious and ground-breaking monograph Mahalia Jackson and the Black Gospel Field (Oxford University Press, 2019). The book received the Otto Kinkeldey Award from the American Musicological Society for the outstanding book in musicology by a senior scholar, the Society’s highest honour; the Woody Guthrie Award for the most outstanding book on popular music from the US branch of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music; the Award for Excellence for the best history book in the category of historical research in blues, soul, gospel or R&B from the Association for Recorded Sound Collections; and was selected as a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title. The companion Mahalia Jackson Reader (Oxford University Press, 2020) is a valuable and well-curated anthology. Burford’s research in this field is notable for the attention paid to the interaction of sonic detail with socially attributed meanings, including the racialized forces that shaped (and were shaped by) the performances of Black performers, and for its theoretical breadth and rigour. He also considers sounding music from the perspectives of multiple listeners, and so musical meaning is understood as collectively produced and determined. His wider contribution to musicology is a compassionate demonstration of how we might productively rethink the racializations of the discipline’s past.

Burford’s scholarly achievements are complemented by his dedication to the wider academic community. He has served on committees of the American Musicological Society and as a member of the Board of Directors, demonstrating collegiality and citizenship.

The Dent Medal for 2023 is awarded to CATHERINE A. BRADLEY.

Catherine A. Bradley completed her undergraduate degree at Oxford and her PhD in Cambridge. She has held positions at the University of Oxford, Stony Brook University, and the University of Oslo, where she is now Full Professor since 2020. For 2020–25 she gained a European Research Council Consolidator Grant for a project on the Benedicamus Domino, for which she selected and leads a team of doctoral and postdoctoral researchers in Oslo. She has served the profession by being active as a peer reviewer, journal co-editor, member of editorial boards, PhD examiner, and expert evaluator.

Bradley’s work ranges from the earliest written traces of the motet repertory into the fourteenth century, and cuts right across a major historiographical ‘boundary’ in scholarship, c.1300, a period of major musical change, taking in several related genres. In addition, she employs a wide range of methodologies to explore this material: palaeographical (notational), music-analytical, historical, and critical. There is thus generic, chronological, and methodological breadth in her published output. The musical materials of this period, in particular the Ars Antiqua motet, are exceptionally complex in their material and compositional aspects, and Bradley has contributed exceptionally to an understanding of the relationship between surviving pieces and the attendant processes of production, composition, and adaptation. Her work is thus highly specialized, showing intimate and intense engagement with the musical materials (analytical work) and their material traces (manuscript work), but also communicates well with broader issues.

Her 2018 monograph, Polyphony in Medieval Paris: The Art of Composing with Plainchant (Cambridge University Press), won the American Musicological Society Early Music Award. Also in 2018, she edited with Karen Desmond the fruits of a co-organized 2014 conference: The Montpellier Codex: The Final Fascicle. Contents, Contexts, Chronologies (Boydell). A second monograph was published in 2022: Authorship and Identity in Late Thirteenth-Century Motets, Royal Musical Association Monographs 39 (Routledge).

Previous winners of the Dent Medal have been:

1961 Gilbert Reaney Great Britain
1962 Solange Corbin France
1963 Dénes Bartha Hungary
1964 Pierre Pidoux Switzerland
1965 Barry S. Brook USA
1966 F. Alberto Gallo Italy
1967 William W. Austin USA
1968 Heinrich Hüschen West Germany
1969 Willem Elders Holland
1970 Daniel Heartz USA
1971 Klaus Wolfgang Niemöller West Germany
1972 Jozef Robijns Belgium
1973 Max Lütolf Switzerland
1974 Andrew McCredie Australia
1975 Martin Staehelin West Germany
1976
1977 Reinhard Strohm Great Britain
1978 Christoph Wolff USA
1979 Margaret Bent Great Britain
1980 Craig Wright USA
1981 Anthony Newcomb USA
1982 David Fallows Great Britain
1983 Lorenzo Bianconi Italy
1984 Iain Fenlon Great Britain
1985 Curtis A. Price USA
1986 Silke Leopold West Germany
1987 Richard F. Taruskin USA
1988 Jean-Jacques Nattiez Canada
1989 Paolo Fabbri Italy
1990 Christopher Page Great Britain
1991 Roger Parker Great Britain
1992 Kofi Agawu Ghana
1993 Carolyn Abbate USA
1994 Lorenz Welker Germany
1995 Susan Rankin Great Britain
1996 Ulrich Konrad Germany
1997 Philip V. Bohlman USA
1998 Rob C. Wegman USA
1999 Gianmario Borio Italy
2000 Philippe Vendrix Belgium
2001 Martha Feldman USA
2002 Laurenz Lütteken Switzerland
2003 John Butt Great Britain
2004 Daniel Chua Great Britain
2005 Julian Johnson Great Britain
2006 Mary Ann Smart USA
2007 Georgina Born Great Britain
2008 Anselm Gerhard Germany
2009 W. Dean Sutcliffe New Zealand
2010 Martin Stokes Great Britain
2011 Annegret Fauser USA
2012 Michel Duchesneau Canada
2013 Elizabeth Eva Leach Great Britain
2014 Alexander Rehding USA
2015 Marina Frolova-Walker Great Britain
2016 Mark Katz USA
2017 Alejandro L. Madrid USA
2018 Inga Mai Groote Switzerland
2019 Gundula Kreuzer USA
2020 Eric Drott USA
2021 Laura Tunbridge Great Britain