Gerald Finzi (1901-1956) Clarinet Concerto Five Bagatelles Three Soliloquies Severn Rhapsody Romance Introit Gerald Finzi belongs to a generation of English...
Gerald Finzi (1901-1956)
Clarinet Concerto
Five Bagatelles
Three Soliloquies
Severn Rhapsody
Romance
Introit
Gerald Finzi belongs to a generation of
English composers that has, until recently, suffered some neglect, His music is
tonal and attractive, firmly based in English traditions to which the
descriptive adjective 'pastoral' has been applied, in addition to more
opprobrious epithets from some quarters. Born into a family of Italian Jewish
origin, Sephardic on his father's side and, less happily, belonging to the
Askenazim tradition on his mother's, rooted rather in Germany than in the
long-established Sephardic connection with England, Finzi was born, the
youngest of five children, in London in 1901. His father died in 1909 and he
was brought up by his mother, his three brothers dying in close succession, the
youngest as a war-time airman in 1918. Finzi and his mother had meanwhile moved
from London to Harrogate, where he was able to study music with Ernest Farrar,
a former pupil of Stanford who had worked in Germany and was at the time
organist at Christ Church in Harrogate. Farrar's connection with composers
associated with the revival of English music in the early years of the
twentieth century had a lasting influence on Finzi, felt all the more after
Farrar's death in action in 1918. Farrar had been nearer to his own age, only
33 when he died. Finzi's next teacher represented a much more conservative and
formal tradition. Edward Bairstow, a Yorkshireman, had been appointed organist
at York Minster in 1913, a position he held until his death in 1946. A pupil of
Henry Farmer and, as an organist, of Frederick Bridge, he remained a pillar of
the English cathedral tradition, his stricter teaching of less relevance to his
pupil.
It was, it may be supposed; in pursuit of
the spirit that had inspired Vaughan Williams and Holst, Parry and Elgar, that
Finzi moved in 1922 to Gloucestershire, his compositions at this time largely
consisting of songs, settings of Christina Rossetti and Thomas Hardy.
His period in the Cotswolds brought
contact with the composer Herbert Howells. In 1925, on the advice of the
conductor Adrian Boult, he took lessons in counterpoint from R. 0. Morris,
whose pupils included Edmund Rubbra and Howard Ferguson, moving then to London,
where he had personal contact with a wider circle of young musicians. His
friendship with Ferguson and with Rubbra remained of great importance to him,
as was the encouragement he received from Vaughan Williams, Hoist and Bliss. It
was this last who seems to have procured for him, in 1930, work at the Royal
Academy of Music, teaching second-study composition students the elements of
counterpoint and harmony one day a week. During this period in London his
compositions had varied success. His Violin Concerto, written for Sybil
Eaton, proved intractable and after a first partial performance it was revised
and completed, to be heard under Vaughan Williams in 1928. His attempted Piano
Concerto offered still further difficulties and was not completed, serving
as the source for later compositions.
In 1933 Finzi married the artist Joyce
Black and after a period living in Hampstead they moved to the country, this
time to Wiltshire. In 1939 they moved again to Ashmansworth on a Hampshire
hill-top, near Newbury, having bought a farm-house that they replaced with a
building well adapted to their own requirements. Retirement from London allowed
Finzi to live a relatively simple life, concentrating now on composition, on
his continuing literary interests and on his study of earlier English music, in
particular that of the eighteenth century. In the English countryside, where he
was able to indulge an interest in apple- growing, he was in close touch with
the roots that he had adopted as his own and that were an essential basis of
his work as a composer. Contact with the Three Choirs Festival brought the
composition of what remains his best known composition, Dies Natalis.
Although Finzi had distanced himself from
his Jewish identity, he nevertheless was bound to be affected by the events in
Germany in the 1930s. The war brought inevitable disruption and he was forced
to return to London, working there throughout the war at the Ministry of War
Transpon. Although there was relatively little time for music, there was, by way
of compensation, a salary, although the Newbury String Players, the amateur
orchestra he had established in Newbury in 1940, could still occupy weekends
when he was able to escape to the country. Compositions from this period are
few, although the Five Bagatelles date in pan from this time.
Released from his war-time duties in 1945,
Finzi was able to resume the life on which he had embarked five years before.
The Newbury String Players continued to flourish, often providing an outlet for
composers whose work he found congenial. His own life as a composer prospered
with a series of compositions that now found a hearing, notably his setting of
Wordsworth's Intimations of Immortality on which he had embarked before
the war and which he now completed, for a first performance in the Three Choirs
Festival in 1950 Finzi's health had never been good and the years before the
war had brought threats of tuberculosis. In 1951 he was found to be suffering
from Hodgkin's Disease and it was as a result of an infection consequent on
this immune deficiency that he died in September 1956, three weeks after
conducting his In terra pax at the Three Choirs Festival, where Howard
Ferguson' s Amore langueo, dedicated to the Finzis, had also been
performed.
Finzi's Clarinet Concerto was
completed in 1949 in response to a commission from the Three Choirs Festival,
that year to be held in Hereford Cathedral, where it was performed with
Frederick Thurston as the soloist and the strings of the London Symphony
Orchestra under the composer's direction. The first movement opens with a
strong statement from the strings, leading to an Elgarian sequence, A
stridently repeated octave figure precedes the solo entry with the principal
theme of the movement. The soloist leads to the second subject with a two
octave downward leap, before the lyrical theme proper is heard. There is a
relatively short development section and a recapitulation that is followed by a
more extended coda, an undemanding cadenza, inserted at the suggestion of
Vaughan Williams, and a maestoso conclusion, the whole in a finely
connected, thoroughly English rhapsodic style. Muted strings open the slow
movement, before the entry of the soloist. The orchestra then introduces the
modal principal theme of the movement. allowing the clarinet to offer its own
rhapsodic comment. The music moves forward to a dramatic dynamic climax, the
mood of the opening finally restored, as the sound dies away. The final Rondo
opens forcefully, leading to the cheerful principal theme from the clarinet,
which frames extended episodes, with their reminiscences of motifs from the
first movement.
Finzi wrote his Five Bagatelles for
clarinet and piano for the clarinettist Pauline Juler, for whom he had
originally intended the Clarinet Concerto, forestalled by her marriage
and pregnancy and subsequent withdrawal from a concert career. The Bagatelles,
completed as a set in 1943, were subsequently arranged for clarinet and
strings by Lawrence Ashmore. The highly characteristic Prelude has an
exuberant opening and gently contrasting middle section, ending in a slightly
menacing climax, after which the first material returns. The tenderly lyrical Romance
is followed by the simplicity of Carol that seems to have had its
origin in a tune written for the children of Herbert Howells some years before.
The Forlana has a gentle lilt to it, not strictly in the pace or mood of
the original dance. It seems Finzi himself hesitated over the title of the
piece, which seemed mid-way between a Forlana and a Berceuse. The
work ends with a Fughetta, its subject first entrusted to the clarinet.
While not a masterpiece of counterpoint, it provides a delightful ending to an
agreeable set of short pieces.
Finzi's incidental music for Shakespeare's
Love's Labours Lost was commissioned by the BBC for use in a broadcast
version of the play in 1946. The part of Berowne was taken by Paul Scofield and
the cast included Ernest Milton and the young David Spenser. From the score,
for a small group of instrumentalists, Finzi first extracted the Three
Soliloquies for concert performance, followed by a more extended suite. The
play, set at the court of the King of Navarre, makes fun of the lofty idealism
of the King and his friends, determined to establish at the court a little
academe,/ Still and contemplative in living art, forswearing the company of
women for three years. The King and his courtiers are soon induced to break
their vows, their feelings revealed in the soliloquies. Berowne, a sceptic at
court, hides in a tree and observes the King, with a paper in his hand:
So sweet a kiss the golden sun gives not
To those fresh morning drops upon the
rose,
As thy eye-beams, when their fresh rays
have smote
The night of dew that on my cheeks down
flows:
Nor shines the silver moon one half so
bright
Through the transparent bosom of the deep,
As doth thy face through tears of mine
give light:
Thou shin'st in every tear that I do weep:
No drop but as a coach doth carry thee:
So ridest thou triumphing in my woe.
Do but behold the tears that swell in me,
And they thy glory through my grief will
show:
But do not love thyself; then thou wilt
keep
My tears for glasses, and still make me
weep. O queen of queens! How far thou dost excel,
No thought can think, nor tongue of mortal
tell.
The King's poem, to be recited with its
matching musical accompaniment, is followed by Longaville's sonnet, still
observed secretly by Berowne:
Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine
eye,
'Gainst whom the world cannot hold
argument,
Persuade my heart to this false perjury
Vows for thee broke deserve not
punishment.
A woman I forswore; but I will prove,
Thou being a goddess, I forswore not thee
My vow was earthly, thou a heavenly love;
Thy grace, being gain' d, cures all
disgrace in me.
Vows are but breath, and breath a vapour
is:
Then thou, fair sun, which on my earth
dost shine,
Exhal'st this vapour-vow; in thee it is:
If broken, then, it is no fault of mine:
If by me broke, what fool is not so wise
To lose an oath to win a paradise!
The third to break his vow is Dumaine,
another woodcock in the dish:
On a day, alack the day!
Love, whose month is ever May,
Spied a blossom passing fair
Playing in the wanton air:
Through the velvet leaves the wind,
All unseen, gan
passage find;
That the lover, sick to death,
Wish 'd himself the heaven's breath.
Air, quoth he, thy cheeks may blow;
Air, would I might triumph so!
But alack! my hand is sworn
Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn:
Vow, alack! for youth unmeet,
Youth so apt to pluck a sweet.
Do not call it sin in me,
That I am forsworn for thee;
Thou for whom e'en love would swear
Juno but an Ethiop were;
And deny himself for love,
Turning mortal for thy love.
As with the King's poem, the music, as in
any melodrama, matches the verse.
Finzi's Severn Rhapsody is prefaced
by a well-known quotation from Rupert Brooke.
...Oh! yet
Stands the Church clock at ten to three?
And is there honey still for tea?
The work was written in 1923, when Finzi
was living at Painswick in the Cotswolds, and dedicated to his friend, the
Australian artist Vera Somerfield. The rhapsody is scored for flute, oboe
doubling cor anglais, clarinet doubling bass clarinet, French horn and strings.
The music gently evokes the mood of the English countryside and the meandering
river. This unpretentious pastoral was well received and the work received a
number of performances, to be published in the Carnegie Collection of
British Music, a sign of official approval.
The Romance, scored for strings and
using a solo violin, was largely the work of 1928, although it seems to have
received further attention before its eventual publication in 1952, with a
dedication to the pianist and conductor John Russell, a musician who had been
of material assistance in the promotion of Finzi's music and had for long been
a neighbour and friend. The work has something of Elgar about it, with the solo
violin, heard near the opening bars, assuming more prominence in the D flat
major central section The material of the first section returns in a much
shorter recapitulation.
Finzi's Violin Concerto was written
in the years 1925 to 1927, designed for the violinist Sybil Eaton, for
whom he entertained considerable admiration. The slow movement was
completed first, in 1925, characteristic of the composer's general preference
for slower tempi. The first performance by the British Women's Symphony
Orchestra under Malcolm Sargent in May 1927 took place without the original
first movement, with which Finzi was now dissatisfied. The completed concerto
was given its first performance the following February, when the London
Symphony Orchestra was conducted by Vaughan Williams. On neither occasion was
it well received, with Finzi seemingly as dissatisfied with the work as anyone.
Eventually it was only the slow movement that was published, under the title Introit
and scored for a small orchestra of flute, oboe, cor anglais, two
clarinets, bassoon, two horns and strings. The single movement is very much of
its period, gently tender as its melody slowly unwinds, leading to whispered
harmonics, before the soloist descends into the lower register of the violin.
There is a curious shift of tonality, with the soloist entering in canon with
the flute and a solo double bass. A distant horn-call is echoed by the clarinets
and it is a solo horn that offers the final comment, as the music fades to
nothing.
Robert Plane
Since winning the First Prize, Gold Medal
and Champagne Pommery Award at the 1992 Royal Over- Seas League Music
Competition, Robert Plane has established himself as a much sought-after
soloist and chamber musician. He made his London recital debut, in partnership
with the pianist Sophia Rahman, at the Purcell Room in 1993 as part of the Park
Lane Group New Year Series. Since then he has appeared at all the major London
recital venues, as well as the Queens' Hall, Edinburgh and St George's, Brandon
Hill, Bristol, and has made many festival appearances, including Cheltenham,
Brighton, Buxton, Spitalfields, Newbury, Chester, Malvern and Arundel. Robert Plane
is a member of a highly successful trio with Sophia Rahman and the viola-player
Philip Dukes. Prizewinners in the 1993 John Tunnell Trust, the
Plane-Dukes-Rahman Trio fulfills a busy schedule of engagements at home and
abroad, with recent concerts in Argentina, Uruguay, the United Arab Emirates
and France. Robert Plane is also a member of the ensemble Mobius and gives
chamber music recitals in partnership with the Gould Piano Trio. Together with
Philip Dukes, Robert Plane has given performances of the Bruch Double
Concerto with the Bournemouth Sinfonietta. He regularly broadcasts
concertos and chamber music for BBC Radio 3 and has recorded an interesting and
varied repertoire, including important contemporary works, for a number of
major record companies. Since January 1993 Robert Plane has been principal
clarinet of the Northern Sinfonia.
Northern Sinfonia
Since its first concert in Newcastle in
1958, the Northern Sinfonia has brought orchestral music of the highest
standard to the entire North of England, in addition to the concerts it gives
throughout Britain and on concert-tours abroad. With a present complement of 37
players, the orchestra was the first such chamber group to offer its concerts
on a subscription basis, the first to open its own purpose-built rehearsal and
administration centre and the first to include in its programmes smaller-scale
chamber pieces. In 1996 the distinguished French pianist and conductor
Jean-Bernard Pommier took up his position as Artistic Director, while Heinrich
Schiff continues his highly successful association with the Sinfonia as
Honorary Guest Conductor and Richard Hickox is the orchestra's Conductor
Emeritus. John Casken serves as Composer in Association. The Northern Sinfonia
has toured widely throughout Europe and the Americas, is heard regularly in
programmes given for the BBC, is seen on television and has recorded a wide
repertoire of music for major record companies.
Howard Griffiths
Howard Griffiths was born in England. He
first studied at the Royal College of Music in London and later with Eric
Schmid in Zurich and with Leon Barzin in Paris. Since 1982 he has lived in
Switzerland where he enjoys a long-standing partnership with the Zurich Chamber
Orchestra, since 1996 as Artistic Director and Principal Conductor. The
orchestra gives some fifty concerts annually in its home city and tours widely
abroad. Howard Griffiths also has a flourishing international career,
conducting well known orchestra throughout Europe, as well as in South Africa
and the United States of America. In England he made his debut with the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall in London in 1991, a year
after his first London performance with the English Chamber Orchestra, with
which he has had a continuing relationship. He is also a frequent visitor to
the Northern Sinfonia in Newcastle, appearing with the orchestra in
concert-tours and in the recording studio. Howard Griffiths has made over forty
compact disc recordings, often promoting the work of lesser known composers, as
well as performing standard repertoire.