By

Published: Wednesday, 25 September 2024 at 14:16 PM


A visionary poet, painter and printmaker, William Blake produced bold and mysterious works that have gone on to inspire countless musicians, from Vaughan Williams to Stockhausen to Bob Dylan

What is the most famous William Blake poem set to music?

Thanks to Hubert Parry’s stirring anthem Jerusalem, Blake’s poetry is woven deep into Britain’s national consciousness. In 1935, while planning a Jubilee concert at the Royal Albert Hall, King George V reportedly declared: ‘We must have Jerusalem. If we don’t, I shall go down to the platform myself and whistle it’. Even now, over 100 years since its composition, Parry’s hymn continues to resound at weddings and funerals, on sports fields and in school halls.

But Blake’s legacy in music reaches far beyond Parry’s rousing setting, and he remains as complex, relevant and challenging a figure today as during his chequered lifetime.

‘Blake has come to represent the idea of inner vision, where the artist expresses this vision not in the service of a patron,’ explains art historian and Tate Gallery curator Martin Myrone, ‘and this is why it remains important to think about him. Blake is creative freedom crystallised.’