Friday, 2 March 2012

3rd & 4th March

CB  The North of England

Track One:  The Path Across The Moors, Arthur Butterworth (6.42 min)

This is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s programme, researched and written by Mike Burrows, celebrates Northern England in music - with two Mediterranean asides!  We have just heard The Path Across The Moors, an orchestral piece by the veteran symphonist, Arthur Butterworth; a Northerner like George, but no relation, he played the trumpet in the Halle orchestra for many years, but has produced a large number of works of scope, often inspired by Northern landscapes. 

He is now nearing his nineties and still writing and conducting new pieces. The Path Across The Moors was composed in October 1958, when he was in his mid-thirties.  The subdued tones of the scoring, favouring the alto- and bass-register, are dark but various owing to the use of many blendings-together of woodwind and strings, reinforced more or less recessedly by brass - particularly horns and trombones - and timpani.  The quirky theme passes through shiftings of tonal light and shade like a walker who has much on his mind but is not oblivious to nature about him. 



The music for the 1937 film, South Riding was provided by Richard Addinsell.  Based on a novel by Winifred Holtby, South Riding is typical of its time, and its derivative plot has been replayed hundreds of times since in the world of the Twentieth Century subliterary Northern Novel.  Rich versus poor, education versus blind wealth and poverty. In the early years of the last century, social attitudes are changing.  Go--ahead, newly-appointed headmistress enlightens preoccupied landowner whose wife has been certified and must be kept in an expensive private asylum; evil machinations of housing money-grubbers who oppress the workers are frustrated, the mad wife dies, and landowner and headmistress fall in love, presumably to the future advantage of the poor.  There is no South Riding, the true setting of the novel is in fact the East Riding, taking in the coast.  The Prelude billows Irishry, brass, sweeping violin unisons, airy woodwind, scintilating harp and piano; the deeper tones of the orchestra contributing the swell.  Moments of tension are lyrical or of an order of abrupt, more arbitrary sinisterness usually reserved for thirties--to-mid-century film-evocations of madness or panic.

Track Two:  South Riding - Prelude, Addinsell (5.44 min)

Now, Hanley Male Voice Choir and the Sellers Engineering Band, conducted by the cornettist, Philip McCann, its founder, perform Song of Yorkshire, written by Gordon Langford to words by Agnes Wright.  Langford has composed a great deal of commissioned work, including arrangements of folktunes for brass band.  One thing that may be said for his music in general is its effective brass-writing:  here, he seeks to evoke the various moods of Yorkshire as described in Agnes Wright’s verse.  With customary flourish at the opening, more thoughtful moments build to an ending strongly accompanied by brass and bells.  The idiom is post-Waltonian, with little of that composer’s corrective astringency! The Sellars Engineering Band came into being at Huddersfield Technical College in 1986.  The British brass--band tradition has always flourished where bands were supported by employers; the outgoings on instruments being high; who else can find the money or grant sufficient rehearsal-time?  Nowhere was this truer than in the North of England.  The tradition, along with the formation of choirs by local churches and working-men’s clubs, enabled the proletariat to be artistic in any sense whatever, the professional and cathedral musical world being closed--off to it. For many, the brass band is the music of ‘oop North’.  The snob finds this proof of the earthbound collective soul of Northern people, the listener enjoys good music and musicianship wherever they happen.

Track Three:  Song of Yorkshire, Langford (6.00 min)

The Hanley Choir is a 19th Century institution hailing from North Staffordshire in the Midlands.  Under Swinnerton Heap, its forebear, and other forces of the North Staffordshire Festival, premiered Elgar’s Scenes From The Saga of King Olaf, as his fame spread through the Midlands and the North.  The Festival Committee at Leeds commissioned another cantata in 1898, Caractacus, on the strength of both this work and a short oratorio, Lux Christi, as Elgar’s Jubilee works, Imperial March and The Banner of St George made little headway elsewhere.. Like a pretender to the throne, Elgar mustered support in the provinces of the North and Midlands and in time, marched on London...!  He always had the highest respect for the professionals, semi-professionals and amateurs of the Northern and Midlands choral and orchestral societies, believing the musical heart of Britain was to be found somewhere to the North of London!

Every major city or town had its philharmonic societies, its choirs and orchestras, its bands and glee clubs, its festivals and competitions; these rarely shied away from performing new works, as well as Handel, Mendelssohn, Stainer, Sullivan and other staple repertoire.  Let’s hear the incongruous but hair-raisingly fervent closing chorus of Caractacus, The Clang of Arms Is O’er, in which the triumphant Romans, having pardoned the titular ‘king’ and his family for resisting conquest of their country by the Imperial legions, salute the ever--increasing extent of British Empire of the future!  The cantata was written in the seclusion of a cottage in woods on a Malvern hillside.  Elgar worked by day in an Indian Army bell-tent - running up a flag when he wished not to be disturbed.  A friend wrote him just before the premiere. 

After ‘advertising’ a new line in  Elgar Musical Cooking-Stoves, which “plays airs out of the celebrated composer’s works while the kettle boils,” he said, “Aren’t you fearfully excited about Caractacus, supposing it doesn’t sound right or you have made a mistake somewhere.”  Critics were not entirely sold on Caractacus, but for the rest, it hit most listeners between wind and water.

Track Four:  The Clang of Arms is O’er, Caractacus, Elgar (4.25 min)

A song of Northumberland, now, Black Stitchel, for tenor and piano, by John Jeffreys.  The words are by the Northumbrian poet, Wilfred Gibson.  The Black Stitchel is a high hill:  on it, when the wind is coming from the South, the man thinks of his love’s laughter; when the wind is from the West, he thinks of the quiet of her breast; when it is from the North, he thinks of countries black with wrath; when it is from the east, he thinks no more for pity of man and beast...  The poem is taken from Whin, a collection published in 1918.

 Born in 1927, Jeffreys’ style is pitched somewhere between those of Peter Warlock and Benjamin Britten, lyrical, richly harmonic and respectful of the sense and rhythmic flow of verses.  Black Stitchel in particular achieves a natural folkish quality.  The hardening of tone in the penultimate verse is spare and telling; the climax of the poem and song can be thus made hushed and spectral... 

Tracks Five:  Black Stitchel, John Jeffreys (3.18 and 2.45 min)

In the traditional song, Blow The Wind Southerly, a Northern lass sings  a Northumbrian folksong:  she sings for the wind to bring her lover home.  Her voice, like the clarinet, rich in under- rather than overtones, may tell you that this lass is none other than Klever Kath, from Higher Walton, Lancs.  Kathleen Ferrier.

Track Six:  Blow The Wind Southerly, Trad (2.21 min)

The Lancashire composer and socialist, Alan Rawsthorne, born in Haslingden in 1905, was a student of the Royal Manchester College of Music.  He wrote symphonic works, concerti and chamber music - including three fine string quartets, and scores for classic British film-dramas, such as The Cruel Sea and Uncle Silas.  Here is the andante finale of his Second Symphony, A Pastoral Symphony, of 1959.  A kind of epilogue, it sets a poem to Spring by the Earl of Surrey. There are important solos from oboe, trumpet and violin; the introduction is derived from the opening of the symphony, the trumpet haunting, severely mystical.  The movement develops around the soprano, with folksong-like motifs in woodwind and the graver sound of trumpet and hushed, close strings, and ends in peace, on the strings and horns and then strings alone: it may be the closest that Rawsthorne came to writing a pastoral idyll!  The work was written after a move to rural Essex; it was intended to celebrate country over town!  It is tempting nonetheless to hear the Northern accent!  Dark and true and tender is the North, but its light is never forgotten!

Track Seven:  Andante from the Second Symphony, Alan Rawsthorne (4.44 min)

From Oldham, Sir William Walton acquired fame early at Oxford and in London - he spent much of his life in the south, and farther south still, on the isle of Ischia!  From the age of sixteen, he was a known composer, and was soon befriended by Peter Warlock, Ernest Moeran and Constant Lambert, and taken up by the smart Sitwell set in the Twenties.  It is hard to hear Lancashire in his music, but in a series of brilliant scores, he created a legacy in all forms to rival that of any contemporary.  Moving from a serious twelve-tone and parodic, jazz-inflected tunefulness - think Facade -  to a less brittle synthesis of Hindemith, Elgar and Sibelius, he hit his stride in choral, concertante and symphonic works, and film-music.  His origins were in singing as a chorister, and melody remained important to him.  Let’s hear an early work for orchestra from 1925, Siesta.  A curious rather than affected display of Walton’s musical moods, it begins in open-hearted, lazy lyricism, and moves through slyness and outright grotesquery - a kind of pantomime slapstick with woodblocks - to a quiet close.  The transitions are, to say the least, elliptical.  The scoring is adept and happy, whether honeyed or sour.  

Track Eight:  Siesta, Walton (4.47 min)         

The Yorkshire of the Brontes is found around Haworth, near Halifax:  an isolated region of North Yorkshire.  The clever but agoraphobic children of Haworth’s rector, Patrick Bronte or Brunty, proved incapable of leaving home and maintaining their health.  They had lost their mother and two sisters in childhood; in all, tuberculosis lay dormant.  Branwell, the son, became a failed artist and powerful poet whose continued neglect remains as it was in his lifetime,  tragic and shameful; he died from a combination of that neglect, love, drink, laudanum and, latterly, tubercular exhaustion.  He died shortly after a measure of success - carefully excluding him and his own literary efforts - came to his sisters.  Charlotte, Emily and Anne, became poets and novelists under assumed names that in two of three cases, went to the grave with their owner.  All died young.  Emily, the middle daughter, had had no intention of seeking publication for her poems; her subsequent first novel brought her only disillusionment in a bad publishing-deal and savage reviews:  She caught a cold at Branwell’s funeral and died from consumption within months of him. Wuthering Heights is possibly the greatest Bronte literary production.  Its tale of crossed love, death from love and love to eternity is set amid superb natural descriptions - the Brontes were keen walkers - and darkly claustrophobic interiors in which much evil is done and two generations rise only to fall.  Bleak loveliness is in the weather and landscape whose light and shade shape the spirits of those who live and grow more or less inhibitedly in it.  Human nature and society in Yorkshire as Emily saw it, is redeemed by true love.  The ghost of the unhappily-married Catherine Earnshaw haunts her Healthcliff’s farm at Top Withens, as he ages, bereft...and at length, childhood sweethearts - farmer’s daughter and Liverpool foundling - are reunited in death.  The American, Bernard Herrmann wrote an opera on Wuthering Heights, having composed music for a film--adaptation of Charlotte’s first published novel, Jane Eyre, some years before.  He loved the novel and the region that had inspired it, and all his love went into a magnificent work in four acts.  The idiom is late-romantic, expressionistic in places, emphatically not to be characterized as shaped by folk-song.  Yet it seems for the most part characteristic of its book, reconcilable to both an English novel and its setting.  Let’s hear the scene On The Moors, between the two young lovers.  Interestingly, it utilizes thematic material from his score for the film The Ghost and Mrs Muir, another story of love unrequited in this life...

This was Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  We hope that you’ve enjoyed our journey to the North, researched and scripted by Mike Burrows, and will join us again soon.  Goodbye!    

Track Nine:  Wuthering Heights, On The Moors, Herrmann (5.42 min)


















Wednesday, 29 February 2012

25th and 26th February

This week's Classical Break was first broadcast a year ago. In it, Rupert Kirkham talks to Mike Howell, the well-known local Baptist minister about his life and his favourite music.

Friday, 17 February 2012

Classical Break February 18th & 19th

CB  Where The Rainbow Ends


Intro, Track One:  Quilter - Where The Rainbow Ends Suite: 1.  Rainbow Land   (3.24 min)



This is Classical Break, and I’m Rupert Kirkham.  Today’s programme was researched and written by Mike Burrows.  You’ve just heard Rainbow Land, the first movement of a suite Where The Rainbow Ends, written for a play of this name by Roger Quilter.  It introduces a programme of largely British music of dreams and otherworld fantasy, some of it what Edward German would have called ‘good light music’.  Where The Rainbow Ends was a Christmas fairy-tale, produced at the Savoy Theatre - famous for the D’Oyly Carte Company and the operas of Gilbert and Sullivan, first performed in 1911.  For many in those days, the fairy world was no faraway Shangri La, as was to be shown when, a decade later and after the Great War, Conan Doyle revealed The Coming of The Fairies to an astonished public.  Where The Rainbow Ends tells of children who travel on a magic carpet to save their ship-wrecked parents from a dragon, and are protected in their adventures by Saint George...

  

“This is the universe.  Big, isn’t it?”  The Archers film, A Matter of Life and Death, drawn from a Robert Nathan novel by Emeric Pressburger and directed by Michael Powell.  It tells the story of a Lancaster pilot who jumps from his burning aircraft without a parachute; survives to fall in love with a WAAC from Boston, Mass, and is visited by a heavenly messenger who wants to conduct him up a celestial stairway to the training-centre for another world.  Terrestrial scenes were shot in colour, scenes in Heaven in black and white.  The fantasy may be the result of a thought-unimportant head-injury, or it may be real.  In any event, the film culminates in emergency brain surgery and an Appeal heard in the Highest of Courts.  Intended to promote Anglo-American relations, and invoking every species of idealism of outlook, it owes some of its glamour to the score composed by the Polish émigré, Allan Gray.  Here are elements of the score - a fanfare, piano-music connected with sensory disturbance and the escalator, and romantically swooping but distinguished love-theme of its time (used for end-credits). 



Track Two:  Allan Gray:  A Matter of Life and Death (4.09 min)

The first film of one of the stars of A Matter of Life and Death, Roger Livesey, was a silent adaptation of Where The Rainbow Ends. released in 1921 - the year Conan Doyle’s The Coming of The Fairies was published...     



Now, a song from a cycle of Yeats-settings, To A Child Dancing In The Wind, by John Tavener (B 1944).  A soprano is accompanied by flute, viola and harp.  In its tessitura of wide intervals, the vocal part calls for sublime breath control - and the lightest of touches from the instrumentalists. The vision of the unself-consciously graceful and sensuous young girl in a world of her own exists in a harsh world on a Western shore, where work and widowhood await, but the melisma is of the self-hypnotized unmarried girl... A world within the world...    



Track Three:  John Tavener - To A Child Dancing In The Wind (2.13 min)      



There are as many worlds within the world as there are people and products of the artistic imagination. One may need only a fire to sit by to find one’s dreams. The Canadian, Robert Farnon was for many years composer and conductor in light music.  He specialized in mood-music and miniatures as did many romantics and late-romantics.  His best is good indeed, vivid, natural and skilfully written - the orchestration fits the melody and harmony like a soft glove, a blending of the sections that favours the woodwind, horns and strings, often including harp - his pieces bloom from simple, but affecting elements developed with great care and distinction.  Here is Pictures In The Fire, a kind of canzona for violin and orchestra with notable asides from flute, oboe, clarinet and bassoon - and, at one point, fleeting piccolo.



Track Four:  Farnon - Pictures In The Fire.  (4.57 min)



Edward Elgar, self-taught, composed from the age of about ten.  His father gave him the run of his music-shop and his mother did all that she could to foster the child’s interest in literature with the result that the young Edward and siblings wrote a play, The Wand of Youth for which he composed the music.  Grown-ups were lured across a stream into the world of childhood imagination, with the result that they developed an understanding of children and so scolded them less severely in future.  The miracle was achieved by moths and butterflies, little bells, fairy pipers, fairies and giants, tame and wild bears, a sundance and other such cues.  Household music was transformed forty years later in 1907 when, his mother and father now dead, Elgar took up the score and developed and arranged its numbers for full orchestra with unself-conscious, magical results. 



The beautiful variety in style, mood and scoring of the finished pieces is proof that the excitement of having the run of a music shop had never left him, and that his mother’s literary dreams and the ambition to express philosophical constructs in poetic imagery and music had been passed on.  The titles and ‘little tunes’ are inseparable.  Here, the grown-up couple are lulled to sleep by Fairy Pipers.     



Track Five:  Edward Elgar - Fairy Pipers (4.08 min)



The pianist, philosopher and mystic, Cyril Scott, was a composer of great ambition and talent for symphonic music, admired by Vauaghan Williams and Bax, and Elgar, who credited him with inspiring the more daring harmonies of his late period!  Scott worked as well in small forms, often orchestrating his own piano-music.  Here is his orchestral miniature, Lotus-Land:  the heavy, sweet blossom of the lotus was reputed by the Greeks to induce dreaming lethargy, a narcosis forgetful of home or a life of action, as Odysseus found to his cost during his travels. 



Track Six:  Cyril Scott - Lotus-land (4.28 min)



The composer Cyril Rootham wrote at least one fine choral-orchestral song in The Stolen Child...  Setting Yeats, it is an enticement to the life of faery, of an escape from the human world:

                        Come away, O human child,

                        To the waters and the wild,

                        With a fairy, hand in hand,

                        For the world’s more full of weeping than you can understand... 

The song is beautiful, the scoring and variations in accompaniment well-suited to the imagery, but this refrain, with its flute flourish on the second and clever scansion of the long, subtlely rhythmical last line, more than anything else, stays with one.  It is, after all, such a hard journey to that otherworld, one made (or expressed) by any serious artist.  Childhood is the origin of so many of our fantasies of beauty and truth, even enlightenment...



Track Seven:  Rootham:  The Stolen Child (6.39 min)





Not all dreams are welcome:  not all fantasies are an escape from the anguish of living.  Here is a short partsong by Elgar, dating from a couple of years after the Wand of Youth Suites, and written whilst on holiday in Rome.  It is an evocation of dread, of the thing that dies in the night, and of Owls.  Here, the composer - according to his own story - sets verses written by his daughter Carice’s pet white rabbit, Pietro D’Alba, in reality, self-penned.  The deliberately uncertain tonality is wedded to a hushed funereal processional, intensely ghostly, the owls’ antiphonal voices caught to peculiarly unsettling effect....



Track Eight:  Elgar – Owls, An Epitaph (3.18 min)



One of the Australian composer Percy Grainger’s least-known professional interests was the search for a machine to play ‘free music’ - music that truly sounded to the pitches and pulses of the elements.  The idea first came to him as a youngster as he watched sunshine on waves and currents.  Here is a short piece of Free Music, arranged for string quartet.  Another world within this world and the literally hypnotic, fantastical world of music...



Track Nine:  Percy Grainger - Free Music  (1.57 min)



Lastly, a long piece for piano-soloist and orchestra by John Ireland.  The Legend, opening with a modal horn signal, evokes the Sussex downs:  it concerns the atmosphere of a particular spot, a district of stone--age civilization, near where there was a post-Crusades leper-colony - the lepers worshipped through a small slit in the wall of a local church. Out for a solitary walk in this hilly, windblown landscape, Ireland stopped for a picnic.  He told later of how as he ate he became aware of a group of children dancing and playing in a circle close to him as though oblivious of him.  He was annoyed, but then it was

borne in on him suddenly that they played quietly and that their clothes were ‘archaic’.  He looked away, looked back and found that they were gone, leaving him alone on the hillside...  A friend, the psychical researcher, mystic and ghost--story--writer,  Arthur Machen, heard of this experience and wrote a postcard to him, saying simply:  “So you’ve seen them, too!”  Legend is fittingly large-scale, an awkward gear-change from the opening horn--theme to quicker music got over better in some performances than in others.  By the middle of the piece, it is as if the mind clears of gong-clash, bluster and dramatic outlines, pianistic gestures, woodwind fragments, an obsessively menacing liturgical element threatened by chromaticism, a feeling of rising damp and decay.  There comes another, clearer, fresher vision, as hallucinatory, in which the orchestral sounds stream hypnotically in light-footed movement - a thinner orchestration of sunshine and swift cloud-shade - and children of another, ancient time dance and play, and the piano-part moves between freedom and thematic matter of earlier...  The piano is induced to accompany the dream.  It’s not so much that these children are innocent or aesthetically charming, though they are, it’s that life and time have not overcome their natural zest for life, the faith and hope they find in living.



Adults have fantasies of what they are and what life truly is, but perhaps wouldn’t be happy here even if they could be!  Because there are always new generations of children, happiness and hope spring eternal.  The episode reminds one that the word maze has many meanings, including dance and trance; that mazes can be an adjunct to religious ritual, often of initiation, preparation and purification, and, like the best in musical expression can represent acceptance, enlightenment and progress.



The horn-signal recurs affirmatively, harmonized in the major.  A long dying fall reprises nightmare elements amid calm, the piano introducing the chromatic sounds, dwindling away to nothing - perhaps into the depths or distance.



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 join us again soon.  Goodbye! 



Track Ten:  Ireland - Legend For Piano and Orchestra (11.38 min)



©  Mike Burrows 2/12

11th and 12th February

We are joined in the studio by Emma Cross and Julie Peacock from the Bath Bachfest. They'll be talking about JS Bach and the music of his and other contemporary composers being performed over the 2-day Bachfest (24th and 25th February). We'll be hearing performances of some of the music in the festival played by some of the performers you can see that weekend and other pieces by Bach and Vivaldi.

There's a chance to win some tickets for the Saturday lunchtime and evening concerts, too:

COMPETITION: Where was JS Bach buried?

Answers to production@somervalleyfm.co.uk ,or text SV plus your answer (the name of the city) to 81400 by 1200 Wednesday 22nd February please.

PRIZES: 2 pairs of £25 tickets for the Abbey concert at 7.30pm on Saturday 25 Feb, and 1 pair of £20 tickets for the coffee concert at 11am that morning.

  - we'll post the results of the competition on the somervalleyfm.co.uk website by the end of Wednesday 22nd February.

Friday, 3 February 2012

4th and 5th February

Classical Break Winter 2

Intro:  In Freezing Winter Night, Britten (4.11 min)

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 (1.59 Min)

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 (9.30 approx)

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 (3.21 min)

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...”

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 (6.21 min)

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 (2.53 min)

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 (2.10 min)

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-track,
           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 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 Christ.

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 (5.55 min)

Here’s another song by Gurney.  It sets a poem by Edward Thomas. Snow is a brief portrayal of a little girl’s thoughts as she plays in the snow.  The little girl in question was the poet’s younger daughter, Mywanwy.  A strange, dream-like epiphany of universal suffering is treated with fugitive strokes as in a sketch.  The after-impression is of sensitivity and kindness:  the human warmth that snow cannot pretermit.  Gurney loved children and shared their games, preoccupations and humour with genuine enjoyment.  Edward Thomas was a less certain companion, oversensitive, afraid of derision and often simply impatient;  there is a stressed unease in his words:  you might say that in his anxiety to be truthful and avoid sentimentality, he could not find the way back to being young.  He would have been surprized and made sadder to know how his children loved and looked up to him...

 Track Eleven:  Snow, Gurney (2.00 min)

From snow to The Snowdrop, a song for female choir and orchestra from 1909-10, by the late romantic Russian composer, Alexander Grechaninov.

 Track Twelve:  Snow-drop, Grechaninov (1.53 min)

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 (11.00 min)

This script was edited and two pieces – Snow by Ivor Gurney and Snow-drop by Alexander Grechaninov – left out owing to lack of time!  The sonnet was written while the programme was being put together and was retained.





















































 






Saturday, 28 January 2012

28th and 29th January

This week's programme is a bit of a personal indulgence. No particular theme, just a lot of 20th century music, Debussy, Stravinsky, some modern 'classical' music for brass band, some organ and choral classics and a Debussy piece played on a synthesiser by Tomita.