This is a repeat from 2012
Intro: In Freezing Winter Night, Britten
Intro: In Freezing Winter Night, Britten
This is Classical Break, on Somer Valley FM and I’m
Rupert Kirkham. Today’s programme is of winter music and was researched and
written by Mike Burrows We have just heard In Freezing Winter Night from
A Ceremony of Carols for three--part treble voices and harp by Benjamin
Britten. This is Winter standing all about one: everywhere one looks, the frost
bareness, a merciless beauty. Our earth is cold; yet the Christmas story of
birth and rebirth in love warms deep in one’s soul; we need never lose it.
Wonder is in the frost whiteness as in the white fire of remote stars. Is this
one’s everyday world? In awe, two boys’ voices move in canon, a third moving
with the frost-feeling accompaniment. This music was written in a cabin on a
neutral Swedish freighter crossing the Atlantic, as Britten returned tardily to
Britain from the United States in 1942. Minus its generator-hum, a nearby
refrigeration compartment perhaps aided his imagination... The stiller and
sparer it becomes, the more brittle the human mind is made by winter: and yet,
we have the Christmas story; this time of seeming frozen stasis is the
illusion. If much sleeps or shivers, Spring is gathering its force under it
all, merely in wait. From John Playford’s English Dancing Master of 1651, and
words written later for broadsheet-sale, here’s All Hail To The Days (To
Drive The Cold Winter Away).
Track Two: All Hail To The Days (To
Drive The Cold Winter Away) Trad
This is Classical Break, on Somer Valley FM and I’m
Rupert Kirkham. Today’s programme was written by Mike Burrows. Its theme is
Winter.
Gian-Francesco Malipiero was a lonely figure among
the Generation of The Eighties - 1880s, that is. His style was personal: he was
capable of close musical reasoning, a brilliant sense of instrumental colour in
combination, but held to no one system of any aspect of music, save instinct.
His music harks back to pastoral and courtly Italy, and forward into regions
that are not for nostalgia or the musically faint-hearted.
It can be frankly illustrative of early music,
birdsong, bells - or harsh, terse and distorted, and working progressions of
thought through regardless of who can follow. Here is the fourth partita
of his Sinfonia Dello Zodiaco, which begins in chant and strict,
four-part canon! It is in three movements, for this Sinfonia is in
twelve subdivisions - one each for the zodiacal signs - and divided equally
into four ‘Partite’ - Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter... The composer
denied us the crutch of a detailed programme: what programme there was was, he
said, not to be told. The Sinfonia was written in 1951. For its social
context, the postwar period in Italy was a time of great bitterness, of the
settlings of scores arising from the Fascist regime and its ruinous involvement
in the Axis cause, an era of poverty, unemployment and the Marshall Plan.
American aid in funds and food-parcels had as much to do with support for the
Left in Italy as with the privations and sufferings of a defeated nation. In
the 69 year-old Malipiero’s complex vision of Winter, there appears to be no
place for hope, though there are moments of fleeting beauty and consonance. It
The Partita and Sinfonia end in cruel, growling discord. Perhaps, as Thomas
Hardy put it,
“If a way to the better there be, it
exacts a full look at the worst.’
Tracks Three to Five: Sinfonia Dello
Zodiaco, Winter, Malipiero
A near-contemporary of Caplet and Ravel, and taught
by Vincent D’Indy at the Schola Cantorum in Paris, Deodat De Severac was a
composer of the Languedoc in Southern France. His output was largely of
character--pieces descriptive of everyday life in this distinct region named
after 1the language of its people, Oc. Here is a movement from his Georgic
Suite, Le Chant De La Terre, or The Song of The Land. Les Semailles, The
Sowings - of seed. In Winter, we think of - and look forward to - Spring.
Track Six: Le Chant De La Terre. Les
Semailles, de Severac
To see a light moving on the ground in winter
darkness is to wonder who carries it, where And why. It is one of the memorable
images from long winter nights, when wits are sharpened and curiosity excited
that much more strongly, or when we are tired and reflective, the cold slowing
our minds so that we take time to watch and think. There can be thoughts of
threat; who would be walking abroad on a night like this?
For the Jesuit poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, the lantern that moves along the night and that interests our eyes is the light of soul. In his late choral and orchestral work based on Hopkins' poetry, Inscape, Edmund Rubbra set this idiosyncratic sonnet in a nocturne of some gravity.
“Men go by me whom either beauty bright
In mould or mind or whatnot else makes rare.
They rain against our much -thick and marsh air
Rich beams, till death or distance buys them quite...”
They rain against our much -thick and marsh air
Rich beams, till death or distance buys them quite...”
Hopkins cannot help them, ultimately
as out of sight is out of mind; but Christ minds,
“Their ransom, their rescue, and
first, last, fast friend.”
Rubbra’s setting seems, aptly, to grow out of
chant; the harp has an important, though sparely speaking role, heard bell-like
and intermittently against other sombre colours of accompaniment.
Track Seven: Inscape, 2nd Movt,
Rubbra
A song by Ivor Gurney, now, I will Go With My
Father A-Ploughing. The words are by the Irish poet, Joseph Campbell. There
is a wild quality to melody and harmonies - in Gurney’s musical vocabulary,
they could be Celtic or Northern: a similar quality informs his songs On
Black Stitchel (a poem with Northumbrian setting), and The Fiddler of
Dooney (setting Yeats). This song has a tragic significance. Gurney’s
Father, a Gloucester tailor, was his hero, and had lately died; Dad, of all his
relatives, had understood and admired his musical talent and ambition: he had
died during Gurney’s troubles after discharge from the Army, before he had so
much as seen his son’s music in print...
Track Eight: I Will Go With My Father
A-Ploughing
The poor are always with us, as the scriptures have
it. For some, there is a simple explanation. However unwelcome their
attentions, however greedy and cruel they become in pursuit of other people’s
fair shares; however many lives are broken or ended to provide that last
refinement of power and luxury - the rich, too, are always with us. A folksong
now, a carol: Cold Winter is Come. Let’s not tolerate its message. ‘A
time to remember the poor’ is an institution in default of refusing at any
time to regard poverty as social justice. The person or persons who
composed it have earned no posthumous fame, owing to his or their class. An
enlightened professional recorded it in 1891, before it, too, could die.
Track Nine: Cold Winter Is Come, Trad
Here’s a sonnet on Winter, written
and read by Mike Burrows:
Winter
What comes down on the world is not held
back
By words, and protests remind of
others –
Others when mankind was less far off-
Others when mankind was less far off-
track,
That were demeaning enough. Earth
That were demeaning enough. Earth
mothers
The dead as well as she does the living –
If anything, hugs the dead with more ease,
The uncomplaining dead to whom giving
And taking go deep beneath clay and
The dead as well as she does the living –
If anything, hugs the dead with more ease,
The uncomplaining dead to whom giving
And taking go deep beneath clay and
freeze.
Below the living root they have to lie:
The poor man lies below the conduit
Of available wealth, and his sad sigh
Or rage is a matter of unspirit
To the soulless for whom those sacrificed
Are dwarfed by wealth as by the tree of
Below the living root they have to lie:
The poor man lies below the conduit
Of available wealth, and his sad sigh
Or rage is a matter of unspirit
To the soulless for whom those sacrificed
Are dwarfed by wealth as by the tree of
Christ.
© Mike Burrows, February 2012
That last sprinkle of gold dust on a one-k-snifter
as the world goes bust is a particular pleasure and acquired taste. Local
charity replaces the Welfare State,the poor have no cultural ambitions nor
skills, no worthy hopes in life, only the dignity of work that they don’t
choose. Off waltz public amenities and common humanity and the rich do rather
well - 60 Billion last year alone added to the assets of a thousand people now
‘worth’ between them nearly £400 Billion... Those who cut, close and sell off
our inheritance at will, and those who cost the country over £100 Billion
pounds in lost tax-revenues each year, and Billions more in
expropriation-contracts, evidently think winter smiles on local charity and
‘austerity’... The relevance to music in this is who writes, performs,
criticizes and broadcasts the art-music of tomorrow? Who grows up sufficiently
in this atmosphere of falsehood and denial to create or assist creation in a
rich tradition of a thousand years, the phenomenon of mankind’s musical
communicativeness? As music-charities scrabble for a scatter of pennies,
children from less well-off backgrounds, it seems, have no entree and need not
apply, as most outlets and institutions concerned in musical development close
or raise their fees and we return to the days of the common man’s carol we have
just heard - of two nations, two musics. A composer once watched
people as they took their seats in one of our opera-houses and said, “Music starves,
but the wealthy could live for months on the fat between their ears.” Let’s
hear Winter Wakeneth All My Care from John Rutter’s choral song-cycle
with orchestral accompaniment, When Icicles Hang.
Track Ten: Winter Wakeneth All My Care, Rutter
Born into a highly musical family in Whitchurch in
Shropshire, Edward German began as a composer mainly of symphonic and
orchestral works and incidental music for the theatre, but in middle life
became a successful tunesmith in light opera, regarded as a successor to
Sullivan at the Savoy Theatre. Rather dead-headed criticism by George Bernard
Shaw and other commentators had deterred him from more ambitious work,
suggesting that his style was too theatrical! The tragedy of German is
very English. ‘Successful’, he wound up confessing, “To tell the truth, I’m
afraid to write anymore, they would only laugh at me...” A scrap of paper
found among his last effects stated, “I die a disappointed man because my
serious works have not been recognised...” To put his real talents into
perspective, it’s believed that Elgar enjoyed his music more than that
of any other contemporary. The trick is to listen to what German composed: it
is obvious that he was a progenitor of most of our tradition of ‘British Light
Music’ in the 20th Century, but if the imitations are discounted, he can be
heard as Elgar heard him, as a fresh, cosmopolitan voice influenced by French
and Russian rather than Teutonic models. His sound owes something to his Welsh
blood (and the Welsh hymn-tradition), and the Marchlands in which he grew up,
but nothing to the music of British academicians. Written for the Leeds
Festival in 1899, The Suite, The Seasons, is a Symphony in all but name.
The finale, Winter, is written in sonata--form, and is a stirring juxtaposition
of a solemn hymn and brilliant tarantella, developed and combined at the close
with Tchaikovskian fervour; the movement’s qualities are not a million miles
from those of early Sibelius.
This was Classical Break, on Somer Valley FM. I’m
Rupert Kirkham. Today’s programme was researched and written by Mike Burrows.
We hope you enjoyed it and will join us again soon. Thanks go to associate
producer, Miss Suvi Burrows, aged eight, who requested the Edward German!
Goodbye!
Track Twelve: Winter from The
Seasons, German