The Rake

Letter from the Editor

Imitation is a funny old thing — the sincerest form of flattery, they say. As it happens, I agree; I indulge in it often. My only party trick is half-decent impressions, which people seem to find relatively amusing, and it’s useful around the dinner table when conversation runs dry and everyone is a few glasses of plonk in.

Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote that music’s purpose was to “imitate the spiritual”, and what is so extraordinary about so much of to the , is that it is hard to know if, as John Fuller Maitland put it, “one is listening to something very old, or very new”. This is intentional. His time spent analysing folk music and Elizabethan composers in order to create a sound that defined all things English and pastoral meant that it was always going to have a timelessness to it — but it was, nevertheless, mimicry of a kind.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Rake

The Rake7 min read
Invest
The phrase ‘if you can’t beat them, join them’ springs to mind when it comes to the nicknames the watch community applies to iconic timepieces. One would think the marketing bods at Rolex would shy away from anything that conflicts with the house’s m
The Rake6 min read
The Vine Of Beauty
As a self-employed oenophile, I admit I do my fair share of work from bed. It turns out I am in great company, as the late Baron Philippe de Rothschild agreed to a collaboration with Robert Mondavi from bed in 1978. It was a collaboration that brough
The Rake1 min read
Subscribe To the Rake
Subscribe to The Rake and receive your regular consignment of artisanal luxury and elegant, classic men’s style. Visit www.TheRake.com ■

Related Books & Audiobooks