CB
The Sea 2
Track
1: Whiskey Johnny, Trad
This
is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM and I'm Rupert Kirkham. This
week's programme was researched and written by Mike Burrows, and
showcases music inspired by the sea, the ships that sail on it, and
the men who work them. You've just heard the shanty or work-song,
Whiskey
Johnny.
It would have accompanied concerted efforts of hauling on deck: in
the days of sailing-ships, the common toil was sufficient almost to
blind the sailor to the dangers of being on the open sea: led by one
voice, the responses are from the watch; the result seems almost like
unholy liturgy.
Next,
Alan Rawsthorne's characteristic music for the 1953 film, The
Cruel Sea, based on the novel by
Monserrat. This combines fanfare-motives in portrayal of the
bravery of the men who undertook convoy-escort-duties in the Atlantic
and Mediterranean throughout the last War, and impressionistic washes
in which those fanfares are made to sound gaunt and hollow – washes
both beautiful and delicate and menacing born of chill fogs and mists
of broken scoring and strings divisi. The harmonies are bitter and
subduing, filled with multiple downward steps, discord and false
relations, shifting unexpectedly to undercut the more certain,
recognizably consonant moments; the fanfaring favours angular fourths
and fifths, Waltonian or Hindemithian in their sardonic edge, and
dissolved in the sea's fluid chromaticism... Still, however laconic
and ironic the music appears at first, it discloses considerable
hypnotic, evocative power. This an affecting elegy for the “many
good ships and good men” lost to German bombs and torpedoes, and to
the common enemy – the sea, whose moods have a strange, deceptive
and cruel beauty.
Track2:
The Cruel Sea, Rawsthorne
A
tone-poem by a Scottish composer, now, The Ship O'The Fiend, by
Hamish MacCunn. Born in the ship-building city of Greenock in 1868,
and known more as a conductor than as a composer in his later years,
MacCunn in fact began as a composer, and wrote many impressive
orchestral works in the last decades of the
19th
Century. His career as a concert-composer began with the superb
Overture, The
Land of Mountain And
Flood, when he was still a
teenager. His style is an interesting blend of Scots folkishness,
Mendelssohn and Wagner, economically scored, avoiding excess in
either mood or manner., but bold in contrasts. His tone-poems evoke
Scots ballads and the epic poetry of Sir Walter Scott. He is equally
at home writing for the brass, woodwind or strings. His percussion
often capped by cymbal clashes that punctuate themes portraying the
dashing courage, triumphs and disasters of his heroes and heroines.
This mannerism is devoid of toe-curling Lisztian bravado. His
orchestration is mixed well, to permit the sections to share and
share alike the spotlight. A theme that begins softly in an
introduction on horn, oboe or strings will perhaps become
a strident chant dominated by trumpets at the climax.
The
Ship O'The Fiend is a ballad
that tells of how a captain returns to his sweetheart, carries her
on-board with him. In the course of several stanzas it is borne in
upon the sweetheart and reader that the ship is a ghost-ship with
ghost-crew and ghost-captain, heading for hell... The music acquires
hollow, Wagnerian brass (trombones prominent), and a clock-like
jog-trot in the lower strings, where until now the fullest mingling
statement of the thematic material in duet – oboe and horn standing
for girl and man - and ardent conversation
ending in outright passion - has lured us into thinking only of love.
Trumpets and cymbals over stormy seas of string-rushes render as
climax the theme of the demon-lover, now an elemental force beyond
belief. All subsides as it must. A hushed few rippling and then
pityingly quiet moments on the strings – are ended by quiet held
notes on horn answered by what sounds like muted brass and strings,
and a single loud, curt last, trumpets-and-cymbal-capped chord. No
trace remains of the Ship O''The Fiend.
Galway
Bay is the Atlantic at its roughest. For centuries, the men-folk of
the Aran Islands had left their rocky shores in light craft to fish
and hunt basking--shark for a living, and to supply their communities
with food and oil, when the nationalist musician, playwright and
poet, John Millington Synge visited, studied their people's Irish
dialect, gathered their legends and customs. He returned to the
mainland with enough knowledge and experience to write a book of
reminiscences and stories and a short but powerful play, Riders To
The Sea, inventing an English that followed the local
speech-rhythms for the characters of the latter to speak.
Vaughan
Williams once notated the preaching of a Scottish minister,
interested in the element of song in the man's speaking voice. When
he composed his One-act opera to Synge's text, he made no attempt to
celticize his music; evocative as it is of sea, human courage, death
and grief, there was no need... As Synge wrote a play that follows
Aristotelian principles of unity of time and place, and death takes
place off-stage, Vaughan Williams very likely saw in this piece a
universal, Englished Greek-style tragedy, Irish speech-rhythms – to
which he remains sensitive - and all. The final soliloquy in the
spartan, through--composed opera is typical of the work as a whole:
the main character, Maurya sitting in her thin-walled cottage with
the relics of her lost ones, and white coffin-boards prepared for the
penultimate lost son, sings of the last of her children and menfolk's
being gone now – all dead, all drowned in the sea. The sea can do
no more to her.
Ghosts and presages of other Vaughan Williams works
haunt the piece: a later work in Dona Nobis Pacem – a
protest against War; an earlier in Flos Campi, based on
The Song of Songs!; the symphonic works and film music of the
late period. One of the notable features is the use of soprano
voices keening Irishly, an elemental, menacing sound like but not
like the screaming of the wind (a wind-machine is also called-for in
this opera): this device was later to recur in the music for the
film, Scott of The Antarctic. Synge's words have a beautiful
simple dignity, and are the stuff of tragedy in the face of the sea.
“No
man at all can be living forever, and we must be satisfied.”
Track
4: They Are All Gone Now, Riders To The Sea, Vaughan Williams
Highly
successful before the turn of the century with his song-cycle, Sea
Pictures, Sir Edward Elgar approached the life of seamen some
years later, via the verses of Kipling.
In
The Fringes of The Fleet, the
true, unofficial poet laureate had published a tribute in poems and
prose to Britain's seamen at the end of 1915, a kind of seaman's
eye-view of the War at sea. Elgar seized on the verses and wrote a
cycle of four songs for performance in revue at the London Coliseum
Theatre. He did ask Kipling's permission, but was not to know that
Kipling had lost his adopted son, John, an athletic but acutely
short-sighted youth, during the Battle of Loos, a matter of weeks
before the booklet's first publication. Last seen wandering on the
battlefield with his lower jaw shot away, John had no known grave.
In Elgar's “best bloomin' beggar”
style – as Stanford might have called it - and 'broad,
saltwater style” as he himself
did call it -
well-sung by chosen singers, the songs proved an instant hit at the
Coliseum. Thereafter they received a number of performances at
theatres around the country – until Kipling stepped in to end the
tour.
The
songs are good of their kind, highly effective in all aspects, and
form a cycle that expresses the experiences of many men who served at
sea during the Great War - experiences at the hands of the Navy –
and the sea itself.
The
very effectiveness of the songs perhaps damned them in the poet's
eyes. He was sick of war: later, the man who had written of “the
Hun at the gate”, popularizing
the cause of the Imperial armed forces in this war to save Western
civilization, would publish a couplet:
“If
any question why we died,
Tell
them, because our fathers lied.”
There
is, in fact, an astringency to the verses Elgar set, a weariness, a
cynicism, yet determination to do one's duty and carry on, side by
side with the stoicism of the men, that Elgar would have understood
well.
To
complete the work, a fortnight after the beginning of the show's run,
Elgar added a fifth song, setting Sir Gilbert Parker's poem, Inside
The Bar. Most sea-shanty-like of the songs it is a song of home,
men free ashore, and fickle sweethearts...
The
performance you will hear is from an acoustical recording made on the
21st of July, 1917, by the original soloists – without
the benefit of costumes or a set portraying the yard outside a
dock-side pub - and their highly professional band, conducted by the
composer in the first four songs only. The star of the show and
recording was – and is - the gifted young baritone, Charles Mott,
an excellent singer and actor who lost his life on the Western Front
in the following year. Kipling ended the progress of the show in the
theatre only after the recordings had been made, and the resultant
album of records remained a hugely popular staple of the HMV
catalogue for many years.
A
loud, susurrating sound-effect heard during the 3rd song,
the deep and murky Submarines, was achieved by the use of
blocks of wood surfaced with sandpaper!
The
five songs are entitled, The Lowestoft Boat; Fate's Discourtesy;
Submarines; The Sweepers; Inside The Bar.
Here
is the song-cycle, The Fringes of The Fleet, by Edward Elgar.
Tracks
5-9: The Fringes Of The Fleet, Elgar
This
was Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I'm Rupert Kirkham;
today's programme was researched and written by Mike Burrows. We
hope you enjoyed it and will tune in again soon. Goodbye!