School of Music
Dr Clive McClelland
Principal Teaching Fellow
0113 343 2582
PhD, MMus, BMus, PGCE
After graduating from Birmingham University in 1981, Clive was a schoolteacher for several years, and has taught in a comprehensive school in Essex, a girl's boarding school in Harrogate and a sixth form college in Leeds. He taught part-time at Leeds University from 1994 and has been full-time since 1999. Interests outside music include cricket (slow bowler and slow batsman), wine, walking and chess. Clive is married with two children (and a cat) and lives in Harrogate.
- Music in Elizabethan/Jacobean England
- Schubert Lieder
- Opera up to 1830
- Choral music
- Analysis
Clive has always had a strong interest in analysis, particulary of music in the 18th and early 19th centuries. He continues to pursue research in ombra music, and is interested in looking at how the style was an important trend after 1800. His activities in early music have given rise to some research on expressivity in the English Madrigal. The field is not unrelated to ombra, in that both subjects involve the exploration of how composers introduce elements of discontinuity into the prevailing musical language. Most recently, Clive has made a very exciting discovery about the possible source of Elgar's Enigma theme, which has recently appeared in the Musical Times, and has generated much press interest..
Current Modules
- MUSI 1220 Language and Theory of Music (teaching of harmony & counterpoint)
- MUSI 1120 Study Skills (lectures)
- MUSI 1020 Music in History and Culture (lectures)
- MUSI 1320 Practical Skills (early vocal and instrumental ensembles)
- MUSI 2020 Introduction to Analysis (lectures)
- MUSI 2722 and MUSC 3071 Texts and Contexts: The Supernatural in Opera (seminars)
- MUSI 3021 Analysis and Criticism of Symphonic Repertoire (lectures & seminars)
Module Coordinator for
- MUSI 1220 Language and Theory of Music
- MUSI 2020 Introduction to Analysis
- MUSI 3021 Analysis and Criticism of Symphonic Repertoire
Other Teaching
- MUSI 2721/2 and 3070/1 Texts and Contexts: Vienna 1780-1830 (seminars)
- MUSI 2310/3320 Projects in Performance: Chorus (director), Gamelan (assessor and participant)
- MUSI 7093 MA Music & Liturgy (lectures)
- Undergraduate Admissions Tutor: Responsible for the recruitment of undergraduate students, organizing School Open Days and assisting potential applicants through the UCAS process.
- BA Programme Manager
- Joint Honours Arts Tutor
- Undergraduate Admissions Tutor (2001-2004)
- MA Music and Education Programme Manager (2003-2005)
Contributions to books and conference proceedings
- 'Death and the Composer: The context of Schubert's Supernatural Lieder' in ed. Newbould Schubert the Progressive: History, Performance Practice and Analysis (Aldershot 2003)
Periodical articles
- 'Haydn and the Elements: Symbolic references in the oratorios' Haydn Society Journal 15 (1995) pp18-27
- 'New Light on Elgar's 'dark saying'' Musical Times (Winter 2007) Vol 148 No 1901 pp 43-48
Contributions to encyclopaedias
- 'Ombra' entry in Revised New Grove (London 2000) Vol 18 pp 407-8
Conference papers (oral)
- 'Those cares that do arise from painful melancholy Depicting disaffection in the English madrigal', paper for the Music and Melancholy Conference (Princeton 2002)
Abstract
Ombra Music in the Eighteenth Century: Context, Style and Signification (Leeds, 2001)
Ombra is a term which has been used for an operatic scene involving the appearance of an oracle or demons, witches or ghosts. Such scenes can be traced back to the early days of opera and were commonplace in the seventeenth century in Italy and France. Operas based on the legends of Orpheus, Iphigenia and Alcestis provide numerous examples, extending well into the eighteenth century, including works by Jommelli and Gluck. Hermann Abert applied the term to certain accompanied recitatives by Hasse and Jommelli.
Ombra scenes proved popular with audiences not only because of the special stage effects employed but also because of the increasing use of awe-inspiring musical effects. By the end of the eighteenth century they had come to be associated with an elaborate set of musical features including slow sustained writing (reminiscent of church music), the use of flat keys (especially in the minor), angular melodic lines, chromaticism and dissonance, dotted rhythms and syncopation, pauses, tremolando effects, sudden dynamic contrasts, unexpected harmonic progressions and unusual instrumentation, especially involving trombones. Parallels can be drawn between these features and Edmund Burke's 'sublime of terror', thus placing ombra music in an important position in the context of eighteenth-century aesthetic theory.
Music incorporating ombra elements gradually began to appear outside opera, such as in oratorios, in parts of mass settings (especially requiems) and in instrumental music, most frequently in slow introductions to symphonies. Ombra therefore provides a source for topical references for many composers. Mozart especially used the ombra style in his operas (e.g. the Oracle in Idomeneo, the Statue in Don Giovanni) and his instrumental writing (the slow introduction to the 'Prague' Symphony K504). Haydn's 'Representation of Chaos' in The Creation incorporates several ombra characteristics, as do the introductions to symphonies by Krommer and J.M. Kraus, among others.
- University Subject Representative for York St John University
- Member of the Affiliated Institutions Learning and Teaching Committee for Leeds College of Music
- Mentor on PGLTHE programme
- A-Level Music Revision Event (March 2002) a study day in the School of Music for 6th-form music students
Other WP related activities
- Liaison with Central Conservatoire for Music, Beijing
- Directing and participating in workshops for the North East Early Music Forum
Other EKT related activities
- Early Music vocal projects at the RNCM
- Pre-concert talks for the Leeds International Concert Season
- Lectures for WEA
- Guest speaker at charitable functions
- Active as a solo and choral tenor
- Chorus Master of Leeds Baroque Choir
- Director of Harrogate Chamber Singers (1987-2001)
- Leeds Baroque
- Leeds University Liturgical Choir
- Deputy Lay Clerk at Ripon Cathedral

