Friday, 8 March 2013

9 & 10 March

CB97  Railways and Locomotives

Intro:  The Little Train of Calpeira - Villa-Lobos  

Hullo, this is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Mike Burrows. We have just heard Bachianas Brasileiras Number 2, The Little Train of The Calpeira, a postcard-like vignette by the prolific Brazilian composer, Heitor Villa--Lobos. Legend has it, that it was written in the space of a trip on this very train.

Today’s music has to do with a great symbol of logistic power and the power to bring a little freedom into people’s lives, a once-great resource of the state and business in real partnership, heavily subsidized and thus kept within the means of a population’s pockets, whilst also employing hundreds of thousands of people throughout the length and breadth of the country, to maintain a network that drew almost every district, every village, close together, enabled a prompt mail and trade-service and expedite travel to one’s place of work, close links between family members; created a pre-holiday adventure of convenience and speed, and was latterly never appreciated by those who had no need of national systems: the railways.

We all know the people who cause the erection of buffers everywhere and who leave ghosts to stand or wander nowhere: the people who cut and cut at life in a bid for what they call efficiency - that is, low cost to themselves and their few friends, and the chance to make funny or rapine money; the people who create efficiency by destroying effectiveness, or by causing system and equal outcome to vanish into thin air. How clever it is to solve unreal problems by closing things down. By making tough - ie, impossibly stupid - decisions, choosing between unalike things, one creates endless new illogical provisions made logical by continued erosion of what holds us all together, safeguards personal freedoms and prevents dictatorship.
 
Take a moment to remember what railways are: the excitement of purpose as burdens of material goods and wishes are most durably, powerfully and speedily borne where perhaps the car or coach - or forty-ton juggernaut - isn’t master. Remember how Victorian adults and children could at last break out of the parish-bound existence that destroyed the initiative and individualism of most of our forebears for centuries, and latterly created hellish urban living conditions and inescapable sickness. For once, the needs of trade and the well-being and liberty of our people coincided. Remember how better-paid engineering and administrative skills became a wide-spread opportunity, jobs offering a graduating, steadily incremented salary were created for a multitude, and there need be less sense of toil and aimlessness at any level, given the mission that every person in the system shared, that of keeping a socially developing nation on the move. Let’s hear music that celebrates this spirit: Coronation Scot, by Vivian Ellis, a composer of light music and musicals. This fine piece has not only a good, easily modulatable tune of smooth length and considerable idealism, but also instantly recognizable moments of onomatapoeia. The changes of key and repeated climaxes follow a cycle that conveys sense of ever-changing landscape and of a destination - the excitement of a predestined journey over unfamiliar but easily-crossed terrain by virtue of well-resourced, co-operative system, in fact. The power in hand of a fired-up locomotive is conveyed by brass and percussion in harsh discord, the super-athletic ease of movement humming with constant figuration and a fine melody led by the strings, violins singing like one’s happiness-stimulated nerves, warmth coming from horns and woodwind. The orchestra stands for common purpose - railway-staff and passengers in union, the miles speeding by, our machine a tended servant, our track cleared ahead and points changing smoothly, all happening by numbers.

Sadly, we seem not to have a composer who can do equal justice to modern rail-travel.

Track One:  Vivian Ellis:  Coronation Scot

 
British Rail existed long before nationalization, a reliable, integrated strategic service that covered most parts of the country, not a patchwork of fiefdoms embroidered by competing financial sollipsists who owned no track but only rolling-stock, or who didn’t own rolling-stock, but found maintaining track beyond their pockets while charging rolling-stock companies what they felt like charging for the use of it.  That the Victorians could build the world’s first national railway with private capital; enable the nation to avail themselves of the service with stable and fair pricing and constant technological innovation, and create and protect jobs in spite of ever-more ergonomic work-practices, companies’ different natures and policies converging in co-operation - once a free-booting period of unwise, even fraudulent speculation was got over - is a reproach to those who know only how to hand subsidized, profiteering or non-existent costs onto the customer and give him an ever-more restricted service in return, year on year.    

A film that dealt with the problems of coexistence of public and private on our railways was The Titfield Thunderbolt, one of the most popular Ealing comedies, and made in 1952. Film-attitudes to trade unions apart it is a sensible if quaint take on the contrast between two forms of organization and vested interests. The road-lobby in the form of a coach-company wishes to see the back of a Ministry-doomed branch-line, railway enthusiasts who volunteer to fund and run it don’t, the road lobby stoops to sabotage, destroying the only engine and carriage before the all-important inspection by a man from the Ministry. The Titfield Thunderbolt, an early locomotive is taken from a museum, a retired carriage, the home of a retired engine-driver, is spruced up, and with several mishaps and much public co-operation, the inspection goes well, though gravity and brute muscular strength are both required to assist progress: the payoff being that they travelled almost swiftly enough not to qualify as a light railway; they will have to be more careful in future... Georges Auric, the French composer, one of the famous group, Les Six, wrote often for Ealing Studios, and here, composed a memorable, neo-classical score, though possibly one that owes a shade too much to French folk-music to be entirely idiomatic. Its brusque but quirky style is fittingly motoric, the engine’s every puff and sneeze portrayed, the exhilaration of running at full speed, the excitement of joint-endeavour lending rudimentary machinery wings, a certain blague adding to its smile-worthiness, and somehow, in spite of the French demotic, he caught the spirit of this very English, conflictingly cynical, but soft--headed film.

 Let’s hear Titles, The Triumph of The Titfield Thunderbolt and End-titles.

 Track Two:  The Titfield Thunderbolt Suite - Georges Auric.   
 

This is Classical Break on Somer Valley Radio, and I’m Mike Burrows.  Today’s topic is music about railways.

 
For our next piece, we turn to the great symphonist among The Six, Arthur Honegger. He takes his inspiration from a far grander locomotive than Vivian Ellis’ Coronation Scot - in fact, from an American express, Pacific 231 - for his eponymous symphonic poem of 1923. It is arguable that symphonic form as early as Mozart headed towards prophetic portrayal of mechanical high velocity in its allegro movements, the growth in slow introductions and contrast between quick or aggressive first and slower, more lyrical second subjects during the romantic period giving one the sense of energy pent-up and released, steaming-up and setting out, and of more sentimental thoughts arising during ease of travel, and thus irresistibly giving a full depiction of journey by steam, the development of subjects that had been adumbrated in the introduction a partly fugal working-out at full head of steam having the inherent impatience of that ease and leading to one’s destination. Pacific 231 has the expectancy, almost ghostly in its hollow impersonality, and the beginning slow instability of rhythm settles on a growing pattern punctuated by brass fanfaring and drum, subtlely gathering speed, the woodwind and violins soon beginning to add some air and space, the brass working against that, the music dropping to string ostinato before brass builds up again on its own terms over the teeming notes of speed; the inhumanity is in dissonance and a searching rather than grand theme - the whole ends in a final chord, brass-dominated that is the last word. Do we remember what we saw out of the carriage-windows? Is there the sense of a journey, is the last word a destination? Honegger himself felt that “musically speaking,” he had “composed a grand and varied chorale, interwoven with counterpoint in the manner of JS Bach.” This is music with intellectual muscle, of a mechanistic age, as such, absolute in its own terms. Remember the Fascist boast that Mussolini caused the trains to run on time. The dehumanizing influence of technology was supposed to have superceded sentimentality and the softer emotions for the unsparing, but scientifically rational and therefore preferable, better.



Track Three: Pacific 231 - Arthur Honegger

 
When Naples gained its funicular railway, one on which cars run drawn by a cable, it gained possibly its most famous song, taken up the world over as characteristic. The Vesuvius funicular railway opened in 1880, and this occasional piece gained a life of its own; to this day, many have no idea what it is about, but relish its apparent zest. It was quoted in the young Richard Strauss’ tone poem, Aus Italien, as a folksong. Funicula Funiculi, in which a young man invites his girl to accompany him in a trip on the latest public service, was in fact written by an otherwise forgotten composer, Luigi Denza. From the summit, not only can the couple see the fiery crater, they can look outward to see the island of Procida, France and even Spain: or they can look into eachother’s eyes and see love. So hurry!

Track Four:  Funiculi Funicula - Luigi Denza

William Blezard’s Battersea Park Suite ends with a short piece Miniature Railway. It could be almost a movement from the orchestral version of the Children’s Corner Suite of Debussy, characterized as it is by an open-air, melodious quality, aided by the composer’s neat orchestral scoring. The clarinet at opening starts us off into a lazy tune; and so things continue, with a stop to pick up further young passengers. The oboe has its moment of sad uncertainty before the ride ends all too soon.

 
Track Five: Battersea Park Suite - Miniature Railway - William Blezard
 
To the Denmark of the mid-19th Century now. Hans Christian Lumbye is often seen as a Danish Strauss. Inspired by Strauss, from the age of twenty-nine, he composed waltzes, polkas, galops and mood-pictures calculated to appeal to fashionable society. From the age of thirty-three, for thirty years, he directed music at the Tivoli Gardens, his orchestra establishing a fine tradition of light music there. The Kobenhavn Steam Railway Galop was written to celebrate the opening of Cobenhavn’s first railway station and Denmark’s first railway.

The Galop describes a short train journey of the pioneer-days from beginning to end, with an array of whistles and percussion, besides the usual orchestral ensemble. The tune is a good one, when travelling, swift, vivacious and light-hearted, giving the lie that in the early days of rail-gloom as to how the human body could stand up to speed was taken seriously. The sound-effects must have seemed riotous when heard first, but are vividly apt and well--matched by the pace of the score from slow start to slow end, with subtle gradations along the way. It is as if the last foot leaves the ground just in time, but no-one wants to set foot on the platform at the end, as the guard shouts that they have arrived!

Track Six: Kobenhavn Steam Railway Galop - HC Lumbye

Aaron Copland (1900-1990) was possibly the only American composer to begin in modernism inculcated by Nadia Boulanger in the Paris of the 1920s and regarded as an enfant terrible - his Organ Symphony caused a colleague to say that it was the work of a young man who could now go on to commit murder - to become thoroughly popular for his national music, often based on folksong in a style that is de rigeur in films of the last quarter of a century precisely because its Rooseveltian context is dead - and then track off into serialism, some of which out-barbs Schoenberg, but all of which is fascinating; he was a composer of real integrity, authority and conviction. Through a career of nearly seventy years, his talent as a composer and conductor developed, and he remained what he had always been, a man who concentrated on bettering himself and encouraging others, seen as a liberal, left-wing figure who interested himself in many enlightened causes. He was the man who stated that when non-musicians wrote two words on music, one of them would be wrong, but for the most part, he spared the world his asperity, save when musical expression called for it.Let’s hear his ‘song’ based on the negro ballad about a track-layer and rock-crusher, John Henry, killed in competing against a steam-hammer. A Railroad Ballad For Small Orchestra was revized in 1952. It is conducted by the composer.

Track Seven:  John Henry, A Railroad Ballad - Copland

Charles Valentin Alkan (1813-88), was possibly the greatest musical recluse of his generation or even century. His professional name was a pseudonym. A noted piano-virtuoso in an age of virtuosi, he numbered Liszt amongst his admirers but back-pedalled from the limelight to compose some of the most accomplished and complex piano works of his era. Born the son of a piano teacher, Charles Valentin Morhange was brought up in the Marais, the Jewish quarter of a strongly anti-semitic Paris. He became a child-prodigy, attended the Conservatoire, taught by the teachers of Georges Bizet and Cesar Franck, attracted aristocratic Russian patrons, became a private teacher and soloist and lived comfortably on his earnings. Chopin, an equally shy man and not a willing sharer of fame, performed in at least one concert with him, and Alkan's progress towards settled eminence seemed assured. But it was at this time of his greatest fame that his appearances in public became fleeting; he was passed over for a professorship and possibly fathered a love-child on a married lady-admirer; worse than professional disappointment or scandal, he begun to suffer from nervous illness - dread of ill-health. He withdrew into himself, musical composition and the study and translation of the Hebrew scriptures. Towards the end of his life, he reappeared for a series of concerts on behalf of Érard, makers of pianos favoured by many composers; these continued on Mondays and Thursdays until he died.

Reputedly, his death came when reaching down a volume in his cluttered study. As he pulled on it, the high, haphazardly-weighted bookcase in which it stood toppled onto him.

Le Chemin de Fer, of 1844, is a tone-poem for piano, describing a railway journey.  

Track Eight:  Le Chemin de Fer - Charles Valentin Alkan

Underground railways have their portrayals in music. Most are surprizingly up-beat and cheerful. Our next piece, which dates from 1961, evokes a rather grimmer reality - Subway Jam. Its sinister concrete-jungle rhythms on percussion and brass with interspersed, softer grey tones from woodwind, were intended to accompany a sequence from a film set in New York - Carline’s Something Wild. About this piece there is the inhumanity of scale and an alienation whose ends have been lost in all-powerful mechanical means; it exhibits a harsher, harder-hitting development of Honegger’s impersonal vision and style, perhaps, the sentimental ‘machinism’ left a nightmare. The ‘Sixties were very distant from the ‘Twenties, thanks to the Second World War, the growth in technology, intense urban development and, side by side with wealth, grinding poverty untouched by any social programme to build on gains of the pre-war New Deal. The piece was revized by its composer for concert as the third number of the Suite Music For A Great City (1963-4). The composer? Aaron Copland. It is an example of his gritty, later work. Here it is conducted by Copland himself.

Track Nine:  Subway Jam - Music For A Great City - Copland 

For our last piece, Charles Williams’ Rhythm on Rails, from 1943, a typical example of orchestral and lyrical finesse from him, and some onomatapeia. Its optimism brings our short journey to a close. This was Classical Break, I’m Mike Burrows, hoping that you have enjoyed the trip and that I’ll have your company again, soon. Mind the doors!

Track Ten:  Rhythm on Rails - Charles Williams    

Friday, 1 March 2013

2 & 3 March

Classical Break America 2

 

Intro:    Mardi Gras, Mississippi Suite, Ferde Grofé

 

Hullo, this is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s programme has been researched and written by Mike Burrows, and presents an anthology of American music.  We have just heard Mardi Gras from Mississippi Suite, by Ferde Grofé (1892-1972), a New Yorker, pianist in the Paul Whiteman band, popular composer and master-arranger whose best-known work was in the field of ‘tone-painting’ descriptive of America; he was not perhaps a great composer, so much as one who had a gift for melody, effective harmony and lively, frankly colouristic scoring.  An American Straussian, he was of German extraction and studied for a short time in Leipzig.  Given his orchestral expertise, one should not be surprized that he accepted a friend’s challenge and wrote two pieces descriptive of a bicycle-pump, one entitled, Theme and Variations On Noises From A Garage.

 

Ned Rorem has combined a free-wheeling, frankly diarized private life with a career of composition, performance and teaching.  His short piece for strings, Pilgrims dates back to 1958 and takes as its inspiration a French novel Le Voyageur sur la Terre, about the suicide of an alienated teenager.  Its North-Western-trained composer wrote it in a day at the Macdowell Colony.  Its elegiac style is tonal, lyrical, easy to follow, austerely-scored but expressive, and fits its purpose, its scenario, perfectly - and poignantly.  Adolescent feelings run deep, and however naive, their sentiments deserve to be taken seriously by those who can no longer think uncompromized, but who respect their earnestness!  There are curious, fleeting after-echoes of the opening of Dvorak’s American Suite, and also, one may be reminded of the music of Aaron Copland.  Rorem was born in 1923 and has written many fine, accessible pieces for orchestra and chamber ensemble, but is best-known for his art-songs.  Like many American musicians, he spent time in Paris and something of Gallic expressiveness is found in his music - lightness is in no way to be regarded as flippancy or glibness.  Similar comes from the pen of a Dutilleux or Francaix.  We were all pilgrims.  For some, Earth, is the shrine.

 

Track One:  Pilgrims, Ned Rorem

 

This is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, I’m Rupert Kirkham and today’s programme is of American music.

 

Now, from New England, and from rural New England’s greatest composer, Charles Ives, comes a short piece of musical mayhem, the Overture And March 1776.  Originally written for theatre band, it is here performed in an arrangement for military band.  It is a devastating display of ‘taking off’ small town music - rhythmical disjunctness, mistaken notes and fragments of popular tunes, some anachronistic to the War of Independence, but de rigeur at celebrations of the epoch. It does as it should, ‘stretch the ears’.  Ives’ own father was town bandmaster and loved country music-making, wrong notes and all; in his experience, wrong notes, collision in the parts and late or early entries must have been an essential ingredient in performance!  Making music was the thing, and note-perfectness had nothing to do with it.  Fourth of July celebrations are not that polite!  Ives is not poking fun at bad musicians; he is sharing his experience of community-music with us - the absurdity is in our rigidly limited expectations of players and of music’s being, its life in itself.  We should remember that stereotypical performance of stereotypical music can be deadening, and that Washington’s was largely an army of amateurs but great fighters! 

 

Track Two:  Overture and March, 1776, Charles Ives

 

Samuel Barber (1910-81) was the composer of Symphonic, concertante, orchestral, chamber music and many songs.  He was one of the latest of late romantics and was not a follower of any school, preferring to permit the work of the moment to determine the style employed.  He is remembered today for one piece, his Adagio, originally a movement from a string quartet, but later arranged for string orchestra and for unaccompanied choir.  He did not enjoy the popularity of the Adagio:  typical of composers of one popular piece, his attitude was that it was not characteristic of his best and most deeply-felt work.  In his defence, the Adagio is a well-written, affecting piece and has come to represent America in mourning or America feeling the Pity of War, but it can sound deeply bogus.  Whether or not it is more characteristic of him than the Adagio, let’s hear the haunting Canzone for flute and piano, his own arrangement for flute and piano of the first section and coda of the slow movement of his Pulitzer-prize-winning Piano concerto of 1962.

 

Track Three: Canzone for flute and piano, Barber

 

The Founding Father, Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) was a gifted amateur musician.  He played the violin, guitar and harp and invented a variety of glass harmonica.  Here is a short work attributed to him - a String Quartet.  In five movements, Intrada Alla Breve, Menuetto, Capriccio, Menuetto, Siciliana, it is an object example of Eighteeth Century American chamber-music; like all but the most fashionable furniture of the time, this was characterful and rudimentary to a degree and often echoed European models of a pre-Classical era.  Throughout this brief suite of movements - for it is nothing more - the rasp and tang of the instruments - played on open strings - seem palpable, but the music is playful if unadventurous on the tonic and must have been (simple) fun to play.

 

Track Four-to-Nine:  String Quartet, Benjamin Franklin

 

A song commemorating an unknown soldier of the American Civil War, now.  From 1911, The Old Sword On the Wall, by HW Fairbank, was dedicated to the Union General, George H Thomas.

 

Track Ten:  The Old Sword On The Wall

 

The opera, Porgy and Bess, was the largest-scale work of the great George Gershwin, whose talents enabled him to accomplish art-music admired by Schoenberg, Ravel and others, his career having begun as a plugger or song-demonstrator in tin--pan alley.  A fine pianist as a boy, he enjoyed a career as a Broadway-composer, collaborating most successfully with his versifier-brother Ira, and did more than anyone to create non--improvized, orchestral jazz.  Porgy and Bess was his masterpiece, and grew out of musical theatre.  It burns with the same inspired, seemingly instinctive flame as his concert-music.  Cat-fish Row, where lame Porgy falls in love with Bess, kills a murderer for love of her; finds on being released from jail that she has left for New York, and sets out for the city, is no place for blacked up faces:  its mixture of numbers and recitative holds together elements of negro-music, work-songs, gospel, rag, lushly chromatic late-Romantic harmony and harsh dissonance.  Its first performance was given on Broadway, but its ambitions were very different.  For example,  Summertime is sung by a mother as the men play crap.  The character Sportin’ Life - one of his songs is It Aint Necessarily so - is a drug--dealer.  Sportin’ Life entices Bess to a life of drugs as well as the boat for New York.    Let’s hear Porgy’s Lament, Oh, Where’s My Bess, and the Finale of the opera - Oh, Lord, I’m On My Way.  

 

Track Eleven:  Porgy’s Lament and Finale, Gershwin  

 

God and Melville created whales.  Hollywood created the Western.  Jerome Moross created the Big Country.  There are many good film-scores for the films in which the United States took on outlaws, indians, Civil War renegades, Mexican bandidos, and won, latterly While being drenched in tomato ketchup, but, earlier, wearing corporate-style hairdos and streamlined Nineteen Fifties cowboy-garb, when a .45 slug hit home like heart-burn.  The Big Country, from 1958, boasted a big theme.  There is nothing to beat its impetus, its agog excitement and exhilarating orchestral sweep, with slowly swinging, striding bass and sectional, violin-unison-led melody developing by statement and reply.  The scoring is Russian and bold, the melody and harmonies could be those of a revivalist hymn.    

 

Track Twelve:  The Big Country, Moross

 

Only one composer wrote a Mount Saint Helens Symphony when the volcano exploded on the 19th May, 1980.  Alan Hovhaness (1911--2000) was an American of Scottish and Armenian extraction.  Immensely prolific, he wrote well over sixty symphonies, numerous concertante and large choral pieces. His work is characterized by strong, often chant-like melody, rich, modal or chromatic harmony and counterpoint, often on a massive scale.  His writing for hieratic brass and sonorous strings is matched by enchanting use of woodwind and pitched percussion.  One wonders where but in America his perspective, sense of space and large spirit might have grown.  Music flowed from him, occasioned by historical and even geophysical events, topography and the environment, the songs of the whale, the folk--musics, poetries and religions of East Asia, and polyphony of medieval and Reformation Europe. Its flavour is of ancientness, mystery, and worship of the sublime.  He was not universally admired by critics, and must have learned some synonyms for the words naive, fool and misguided, but his work seems to be gaining ground on the listening public’s regard. 

 

We hope to play the Mount St Helens Symphony some other time soon.  Today’s music by Hovhaness consists of the slow movement and scherzo of his Symphony Number 22, Opus 236, City of Light.  He said of this work, “I was thinking of a million lights, an imaginary city...”  The Largo is subtitled Angel of Light, a reference to a Christmas childhood experience of the composer’s.  The Allegretto Grazioso is based on themes from an opera that he had written while in high school, ‘Lotus--blossom’.  The work was commissioned for the centenary of the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra of Alabama in 1971.

 

Tracks Thirteen and Fourteen:  Largo and Allegretto Grazioso, Symphony No 22, City of Light, Hovhaness
 

We can journey inside a whale thanks to Thomas Newman, a scion of the Newman dynasty of Hollywood film-composers.

This is his piece Haiku, drawn from his music for the Disney film, Finding Nemo, of 2003.  It exemplifies the minimalist style much used in Hollywood these days, but is beautiful in its trance-like lyricism.  Its roots are recognizably like those of Copland and Hovhaness.

The strings chant in flattened common chords and accompanied by more complex drum off-beats. 

Mysterious, comforting, it is like music of the womb.

This is Classical Break, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s script was written and researched by Mike Burrows.  We hope that you enjoyed our time in the Big Country and will join us again soon.  Goodbye!

Track Fifteen:  Haiku from Finding Nemo, Thomas Newman

 

Postscript On HW Fairbank

Henry Waterman Fairbank was born on the 18/04/52 at Linden, Michigan, given his father’s names and mother, Harriet Waterman’s, maiden name.  He took a degree in music at Michigan State University and married in 1874.  He and his wife lived in Detroit throughout the 1880s and he was listed in census as a seller of instruments.  By the turn of the century, he had moved to the Chicago area and was a composer of Baptist hymns, patriotic pieces, songs, character-pieces for piano (such as a Mazourka Elegante dedicated ‘In Remembrance’ to Miss Mollie Bush of Newtown Pennsylvania), a highly respected choirmaster with the Chicago South Side Sunday Schools, and head of music at Chicago’s Normal College (a Ladies Teacher-training College).  As a choirmaster, he was capable of conducting choirs of 2-3000 girls and boys, his concerts attracting anything up to 4,000 listeners.  There is that about the informal journalistic descriptions of such concerts that one wishes one might have ‘been there’.  Hymns, patriotic songs, displays of virtuosity on the cornet or organ (on the organ, a Suppe overture, perhaps), and even a song-performance by a  4 yr old boy .  As a teacher, Fairbank became a much-loved figure, as one can tell from his obituary in the Normal College’s annual Year-book, the Emblem, 1925 Issue, given with portrait below.  He published his  work, such as The Old Sword on The Wall, through his own publishing company.  He died on 11/01/25, aged almost 73. As noticed in the Chicago Tribune, his wife took his body back to Linden for burial. 

 

My view of Fairbank has changed considerably through this information, got chiefly from kind friends of a friend on Facebook.  At first, I visualized a grizzled man in shirt-sleeves, trilby on back of head, cigar butt causing a more-than ordinary twist to sardonic lips and the near-permanent closure of one eye as he pounded out songs for Vaudeville – once in a while, this hard case had a rush of blood to the head and hopeful feeling in the wallet while perpetrating a commemorative song dedicated to Victims of The Late Disaster (whatever it was).  Somehow, this man had achieved The Old Sword on The Wall, certainly the best self-published song I have ever heard.  Maybe, he had stolen it from a brilliant young plugger who had come to less than nothing as a result.

 

After seeing utterly anomalous cuttings from a friend of a friend, I found The Emblem, 1919, on the Net.  This began with pages of portraits of some 70 teachers, which gives an idea of the scale of the very Gothic and sylvan-seeming  Normal College (quite a lovely Teutonic-Attican academy).  The first sight of HW Fairbank was dispiriting.  Could this phlegmatic, chubby-faced man be the composer?  I didn’t find it easy to believe, though I thought that he might have been confident, intelligent and energetic enough to conduct 1000s of youngsters in a concert – he looked so truly unSchumannian in physiognomy that I thought he would be a muscular enough Christian, too.

 

Then I noticed that the top corner of Fairbank’s page was missing, some of the Science-tutor’s title showing.  I flipped back the page.  Yes.  Head of Science. 

 

A fearsome face glared out from further down the Fairbank page next to a female tutor’s name and title.  Could Fairbank’s portrait have been displaced to rest there?  What a cruel joke for an unmissish teacher to endure down decades.   This bespectacled baleful scholar of lean jaw, thin, pursed lips and frown-marks might be intense enough to be a creative artist.  He was clean-shaven, his longer-on-top, slightly wavy hair well-brushed but mildly electric-looking.  This man could be a crusty don-like teacher, born in the same year of Professor Charles Villiers Stanford of Cambridge and the Royal College of Music and outliving the Irish academic basilisk by a short time. 

 

No. The fearsome face glared out through a hole.  Flipping back one or two pages, I found that the intense pedant was, in fact, Head of Geography.
 
I tried the Emblem of 1925 and found this:

 

 
 
  

This is the man who wrote a song of remembrance and reconciliation to an Unknown Officer fallen during  the war that had riven the United States in his boyhood.

 

I have to say that I like this portrait and the affectionate tribute more than any of my imaginative  leaps that fell flat.  I’d add that this looks like a composer and man who devoted his life not only to music but to people; for forty years fostering through integrity and humour not only learning and proficiency in his art, but also the happiness of his fellow man.  As such, he deserves respect over and above regard for a song, the only song of his that I have heard.  It is an inspired song, a real song for humanity however, and I so wish that someone out there would enable the public to hear many more of the works of this peculiarly modest artist, HW Fairbank:  I suspect that it would be worth their while to record, and worth ours, at last, to listen.  

 

Thanks, once again, to my informants!

 

Mike Burrows

Friday, 22 February 2013

23 & 24 February


Please note: Due to programming schedule pressure at Somer Valley FM and the introduction of the 'Listen Again' service (see opposite), this will be the last Sunday, 3pm transmission of Classical Break.

The programme will continue to be broadcast on Saturday mornings at 0900 and Sunday mornings at 0800, online and on air. If you miss one or you still want to listen at 3pm, you can get it at any time on the Somer Valley FM Listen Again service up to 3 weeks after the original broadcast on Saturday mornings at 9am.



Gurney

Below is the original script to this programme with slight additions.  Sadly, the opening and closing songs, Cotswold Choice and Goodnight To The Meadow had to be omitted on grounds of time. 

 Track 1:  Cotswold Choice, Sanders


This is Classical Break, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s programme, researched and written by Mike Burrows, takes its name from the song we have just heard, Cotswold Choice.  Evocation of  the Gloucestershire countryside is at its  heart, as at the hearts of its composers.

The song itself, written by John Sanders to a poem by Frank Mansell, is little more than a litany of Gloucestershire place-names.  Sanders was organist and choir-master at Gloucester Cathedral from 1967-1994.  His style here is what might be now described as ‘accessible’.  His strophic song’s melody may remind of the old tune, beloved of renaissance and later composers of passacaglie, La Folia.  The piano’s restraint in accompaniment heightens an impression of unworldly nostalgia.


 Now, an orchestral piece written in a spirit of Arts and Crafts pastoralism during the Nineteen Twenties by the young Gerald Finzi, Severn Rhapsody.  Inspired by the generation of artists that fought and in many cases died in the Great War – his own first teacher, Ernest Farrar, a pupil of Stanford, was killed in the Autumn of 1918 – Finzi avoided music college by – as he himself put it - picking the brains of composers and teachers such as Vaughan Williams and RO Morris.  After hearing his song, Sleep, he idolized but never met the greatest contemporary influence on him, the Gloucester poet and composer, Ivor Gurney.  Of independent means, in 1923, after a spell in London, he settled in Painswick, near Cheltenham, and waited for fitful inspiration to call by.


Named for the West Midlands’ great tidal river, Severn Rhapsody is headed by a superscription from the Cambridge-set Grantchester, by Rupert Brooke:  “...Oh, yet/ Stands the church clock at ten to three/And is there honey still for tea?  It is a richly scored piece whose arch-structure owes much to the example of George Butterworth’s pre-War Shropshire Lad Rhapsody and  folk-song based  Idylls.   In one sense it is literally a tribute to Gurney, as  it seems based on one of his songs.  The Severn Meadows-like main theme is developed with resource but an almost Quakerish severity beyond Finzi’s years.  He was only 22 when it was written; he believed on sincerity and inspiration and counterpoint-generated form.  The cor anglais lends its reedy tone, and there is much doubling of woodwind, misalliances of higher and lower registers creating a deep, solid, yet elegiac sound.  The strings, particularly violins and violas, help create their effects, but when the  violins rise, they have a keen edge.  This is music whose slow-growing web entraps the mind.  In spite of the ironic-sounding superscription, its beauties are profound.  The work was dedicated to an artist, the aptly named Vera Somerfield.  It won its composer publication in the Carnegie Collection of British Music, an honour  shared by his hero.

Track 2:  Severn Rhapsody, Finzi  


On the death of Ivor Gurney’s violinist-friend and testatrix, Marion Scott,  his manuscripts reverted to his brother Ronald.  As the son who had taken over his father’s business of gentleman’s tailor whilst Ivor had been getting above himself, and who had not gone  mad from fear of radio-waves, he had no time for the ‘artistic’ productions of an utterly misguided lunatic:  all along, Ivor had lacked self-discipline and failed to hold down a job.   Gurney’s champions, now headed by Gerald Finzi as song-editor-in-chief, feared for the very survival of Ivor’s legacy.  Eventually, Ronald was prevailed upon to release the precious notebooks and scores, a huge corpus of poetry and music.  Joy, Gerald’s wife, carried them from the baffled brother’s home in a wheel-barrow.  There were hundreds of poems and songs, at least one choral work, two orchestral scores, at least 3 string quartets, several violin sonatas and piano sonatas all now kept in the Gurney Collection at Gloucester Central library.


It was long believed that Gurney was a disorganized miniaturist of almost accidental brilliance, a song- or piano-prelude-writer incapable of working on the larger scale owing to haphazard method and mental instability.  It had taken years to win acceptance for his songs, incidentally, although a few had been published in his lifetime, and he had won two Carnegie Awards with his song-cycles based on poetry by AE Housman, Ludlow and Teme and The Western Playland.  That he was brilliant should not be doubted.  Let’s hear a song written whilst on active service on the Western Front, to verses by his best friend, FW Harvey, and immortalizing his love of the Cotswolds, In Flanders.


Track 3:  In Flanders, Gurney

Committed to Barnwood Asylum outside Gloucester in September, 1922, then, after escape-attempts, to Dartford Mental Hospital in Kent, Gurney, though prey to many terrifying phobias, delusions and sullen despair at his institutionalization,  had gone on writing with clarity until 1926. In  his next to last book of poems, the defiantly entitled  Best Poems, he  may have referred directly to the main work  in our programme today, a violin sonata in E Flat.     

From the poem Sounds, inscribed in Best Poems:


Dear to the heart

Violin and piano sound a note apart,

The heart

Catches them, one alone on the high hills

And happy is known.

One note

Out of the limestone or rot

Of leaves,

When Autumn grieves –

The chalk,

Or tranquil meadows where the Abbey shows.

Out of these comes

The one note of Romance.

The single

Tone which sounds alone

The true secret

The heart’s thought with nothing does ever mingle.

Gloucester sounds third,

Chilterns has a word

Of Midland truth

In her beech woods smooth

Of trunk, leaves yet unstirred...


Let’s hear the Gurney Violin Sonata in E Flat; a work never performed publically in the composer’s lifetime and which has just been issued on CD.  It was begun at the Napsbury Hospital at St Albans, where Ivor was receiving treatment for what was described as Delayed Shell-shock.  He was delighted to find the next best thing to a cathedral nearby –St Albans Abbey.  Work began furiously in September 1918.  The piece was revised the following year.

It could not begin more insouciantly – and artfully.  A bells-like motif on piano is entered upon by a lyrical arabesque that leads in turn into a quicker  up-and-down passage of Brahmsian or Schumannian to-ing and fro-ing between violin and piano – the duo exchanging  imitative figures and wavering between major and minor; further rhythmical motifs are introduced, including a brief fanfare-like figure – a quiet rising scale on piano brings stillness:  a far vision, the sound of a quieter more distant ring of bells – seems to draw one away from the here and now, and in a development, the various fragments in the exposition are modified in abstract pitch-transformations and canons, a certain amount of baroque-like passagework.  The dutifulness of the procedures is actually fitting – and the bells return suddenly with a greater sense of mystery and the open air, the suggestion of a passing bell.  Is this the recapitulation?  The arabesque steals in and is followed by the quicker answering principle:  there is the sense that there is no traditional sonata-form resolution to their conversational  tussles.  The piano has its quiet ascending scale of tranquillity:  the bells return, again imaginatively altered – but as though nothing had interposed; with piano trill, a working up to the coda builds, the piano’s oppositional rising chords burning, retrospectively like a kind of carefully laid powder train.  There is no explosion, but logic has been served.  The bells console and the violin has a rising semitonal cadence.  This is a dry account of a piece of Sibelius-like plasticity of manner, complex instincts and feeling skill.  It is mysterious music, withholding secrets but not random, nor slack-minded.  A powerful intelligence and, indeed, charm are at work.    


Track 4:  Violin Sonata in E Flat, l Piu Allegro, Gurney

The second movement continues the evolution most delightfully – a private world of quiet happiness.  The piano proposes bell-like changes and then melody;  the violin continues the figuration pizzicato.  A Brahmsian broadening and deepening of things revives something of the first movement but leads back to the opening melody and figuration, and a brief close.   A snapshot of contented solitude, an inner song, scarcely 3 minutes in duration.  Gurney’s capacity for happiness, like that of many troubled people, was enviable and his by the way gift for expression means that we can share it.  Like Schumann, he was a man of charming warmth and sincerity, and understood the higher purpose of music to share the best of life with others.   Also, like Schumann, he recognised two forms of logic – equally valid – the formal logic of thematic development and the related logic of song or axiom, that finds its own shape on the moment – the moment caught on the wind, so to speak, and fixed by the universal effectiveness of outright, unique personal expression.  Thematically it is related to the matter of the previous movement and advances argument about in a form of sudden apercu owing to changed mood.  It is almost by the way in itself, yet a further delight is its place further along the road.  Gurney the  poet made frequent use of parentheses!

Track 5:  ll Scherzo, Andante Con Moto


The slow movement moves further.  It is the heart of the work, a lyrical meditation of subtle expressiveness, perhaps haunted faintly by Gurney’s own song, Sleep.  It is an arioso of Brahmsian formal integrity and shadowy mood – its chief motif questioning, an English Beethoven’s, “Must it be so?”  Sombre and halting measures bring us to tersely arpeggiated sequences of deeper pathos – achingly regretful, it seems, the piano accompanying the violin – or is it vice-versa?  A pianist, Gurney was capable of being an adept, unselfish chamber-music player, and knows how to divide his material.  The violin climbs higher and, over lugubrious piano-chords, seeks its angular way to resolution.  More luminous moments bring us back to where we began, and further elaborations.  Eventually, we are left with a final statement, dusk and – perhaps - the bells of the first movement. 

Track 6:  lll Lento

The questioning mood and its material continue into the finale as an introduction.  A free-wheeling rondo taken entirely on the wing in the style of Franck or, indeed, of Elgar in his slightly earlier-written Violin Sonata, is not Gurney’s way; the road is more tortuous, more  modulatory and in short periods worked together involutedly, with a possible cheeky reference to the Elgar in the midst of much else.  The piano provides much of the momentum, but not obtrusively.  There are moments of turbidity and keen held notes from the violin – references to the slow movement and earlier; when at last, the sorrows come down on us again, the impression of the sound of bells returns, with imitation,  and  is not halted-for long.  Again, violin and piano are equal and corresponding partners.  The movement works its way to the close, which is commendably curt – with something in the nature of a call-sign or Bachian four-note final statement on the violin, clinching the tonal plan; the piano is given the tonic note.  This figure, with tonic note, sounded on violin near the outset of the movement-proper and recurred – and, with all the joy of inspiration and musical logic, may seem to have evolved from its opening.  In fact, it occured in its final form, as regards pitch, 'by the way' in a brighter moment of the slow movement.  After a few listens, it may put one in mind of a persistent memory of birdsong – a memory that gees one up, to which storm or stress has no answer.

Track 7:  lV Introduction (Lento) – Allegro)


There’s an intensity of detail and yet something of the dynamism of landscape in the piece as a whole:  not a romantic nor far-fetched idea:  Gurney’s love of Brahms found room for an appreciation of the Autumnal colours and horizontal shape of the German master’s music – which reminded him often of Cotswold country.  A piece by his friend Herbert Howells called forth a similar response.  To Gurney, as to many hypersensitive musicians, the play of treble, alto and bass on the down or up signified light and darkness, colours and land-contours.  

The writing for the violin is grateful but not trilling nor self-consciously florid; the piano is a wonderful partner, with all the arrestingly strong or melting tone-colours one would expect of this composer.  With one point in three of the four movements - 2-4 - where it must double-stop, the violin, if no prima-donna, should be satisfied! 

Tonally, the movements are pitched in keys that form a single triad of C-minor; with room for a sense of travel in key and providing a source of satisfying tautness to the work as a whole.  The only movement to be pitched in C Minor, the relative minor in a work in E Flat, is the third, the heart of the work.  The second movement is in G Major, a third up from the E Flat-major of the first, the third movement a third down.  The second and third movements a strong perfect fifth apart from eachother; certainly they seem different in character, yet also to follow.  The return to E-Flat in the finale seems close but unlaboured.  This kind of tonal pattern may be Brahmsian.  In a piece filled with chromatic harmonic complexity, tonal certainties are like subliminal sign-posts to the listener.  

You can say that the Violin Sonata in E Flat doesn’t sound entirely characteristic of anyone you know; a more rewarding thought may be that no one else wrote a Violin Sonata quite like Ivor Gurney’s.  It is formally most impressive, but also displays a command second-to-none of the expressive side of the musical language.  It is mature; for a young composer, doubly so.  In another programme, we urged our listeners to prize the superb qualities of the Hamilton Harty Piano Quintet.  This work is finer, if anything.  It is a piece in which four movements discover endless shades of meaning in motifs and their horizontal and vertical possibilities in question, answer and combination, and in which inspiration, skill and pluck provide their possessor with the authority to personalize his approach to form.

He was appreciative of Sibelius and enjoyed the Finn’s String Quartet, Voces Intimae, Intimate Voices:  here, like Sibelius, at a difficult period in his life, he may have written an Intimate Voices of his own – those of the church-bells that had resounded throughout his childhood in Gloucester, perhaps.  The work was begun within earshot of the bells of St Albans Abbey.           


This was Classical Break, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s programme was researched and written by Mike Burrows.  We’ll leave you with another song by Ivor Gurney, setting Robert Graves, Goodnight To The Meadow.


Goodbye!



Track Eight:  Goodnight To The Meadow, Gurney


©  Mike Burrows and Rupert Kirkham, February 2013