HARTY: Piano Concerto (Ulster Orchestra)
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Hamilton Harty (1879-1941) Piano Concerto A Comedy Overture Fantasy Scenes Hamilton Harty was born in 1879 in the small town of Hillsborough, in Northern...
Hamilton Harty (1879-1941)
Piano Concerto A Comedy Overture Fantasy Scenes
Hamilton Harty was born in 1879 in the small town of
Hillsborough, in Northern Ireland, about twelve miles
south of Belfast. His first teacher was his father, organist
at the parish church, and a versatile musician, and the
music that he heard in his youth, whether it was Handel
or the folk-music of the local people, was of seminal
importance in the formation of his musical personality.
Harty's first musical appointments were as organist
at churches in Northern Ireland. When he was about
sixteen he moved to Dublin, where he met the Italian
composer, pianist and pedagogue, Michele Esposito.
The influence and encouragement of Esposito were of
great importance to him, a fact acknowledged in the
dedication of two of the works recorded here, A Comedy
Overture and the Piano Concerto, to his friend and
mentor.
At the end of the nineteenth century, however,
Ireland did not have the musical infra-structure to
support a professional career at the highest level. In
1900 Harty moved to London, where he made his name
first as a piano accompanist, and then as a conductor,
with the London Symphony Orchestra and later in
Manchester with the Halle Orchestra. He was principal
conductor of the Halle from 1920 to 1933, and the
special relationship that he formed with that orchestra
can still be appreciated in their many recordings. He
championed the music of Berlioz at a time when that
composer was still generally unappreciated, and he
introduced new works to the British public, including
Mahler's Ninth Symphony in 1930 and Shostakovich's
First in 1932. After leaving the Halle he worked mainly
with London orchestras: important occasions included
the first performances of Walton's First Symphony
(1934) and Bax's Sixth (1935). He received a
knighthood in 1925 and the gold medal of the Royal
Philharmonic Society in 1934. He died in 1941.
The years 1900-1920 were Harty's most fertile
period as a composer. As he achieved success as a
conductor he had less time for composition. His early
works consisted mainly of songs and chamber music,
but he ventured increasingly into the orchestral sphere as
opportunities for performance grew. Many of his works
are overtly celtic in character, with titles and
programmes that proclaim their Irishness, such as An
Irish Symphony (1904), With the Wild Geese (1910),
Variations on a Dublin Air (1912), and The Children of
Lir (1938), but even in the works that are not explicitly
Irish, such as A Comedy Overture and the Piano
Concerto, the influence of Irish folk-music is apparent in
turns of phrase, modal harmonies, and dance rhythms.
Harty's creative spirit was essentially a Romantic one,
and shades of mainstream European composers like
Brahms, Dvofiak and Tchaikowsky are present in his
music. The influence of Tchaikowsky, and Harty's idol
Berlioz, are to be heard in the colourful and imaginative
writing for the orchestra..
A Comedy Overture, composed in 1906 and first
performed at a Queen's Hall Promenade Concert in
1907, was one of the works which brought Harty to
wider notice as a composer. The title simply reflects the
lively character of the music, and does not imply any
theatrical connection. There are two main themes: the
first is heard on the oboe after the bustling introduction,
and its jaunty rhythm pervades much of the music; the
second is slower and is first heard on the woodwind.
Two instances must suffice to illustrate the varied and
imaginative way in which Harty treats these themes.
One occurs at the end of the development section, where
the piccolo (over a bagpipe drone on the bassoons)
embarks on a recapitulation of the first theme in the
'wrong key'. It is then left to the timpanist to beat out the
right notes and prepare the way for the real
recapitulation on the clarinet. The other example occurs
later in the piece, when the second theme is heard on the
cellos with the harmonies most subtly altered.
Fantasy Scenes (From an Eastern Romance) was
composed in 1919 and first performed by the Halle the
following year. It paints the conventional 'Arabian
Nights' picture of the East which was popular at that
time, as made famous in music by Rimsky-Korsakov's
Scheherazade. Harty provided the four movements with
a programme:
I. The Laughing Juggler. The Sultan, having heard of the
skill and wit of Mohammed, the 'Laughing Juggler', has
commanded his attendance. The Juggler is performing
his most brilliant feats, at the same time keeping up a
flow of amusing chatter, when his eye falls upon
Zuleika, the Sultan's favourite dancing girl. Enraptured
by her beauty, he endeavours to give to his jesting words
a deeper meaning, which she will understand.
II. A Dancer's Reverie. Zuleika is reclining by the
fountain in the courtyard. It is dusk; she is alone.
Fragments of dance-tunes mingle drowsily in her mind
with thoughts of the handsome Juggler and his
significant words and glances.
III. Lonely in Moonlight. The Juggler is wandering in the
palace gardens by moonlight and sings of his love for
Zuleika.
IV. In the Slave Market. The Sultan, having discovered
the love of Zuleika and Mohammed, has banished the
latter and sentenced Zuleika to be sold into slavery. It is
noonday, and the market is crowded. Dealers are
appraising the charms of Zuleika. They are all outbid by
a stranger. It is the Juggler, disguised as a merchant. He
carries off Zuleika, and the lovers escape from the city.
Harty's Piano Concerto in B minor was composed
at Fiesole in Italy in 1922 while the composer was
staying with the Espositos. Harty was the soloist
(Beecham conducting) in the first performance the
following year, and the bravura writing for the solo
instrument is a reminder of what a fine pianist he was.
The work is very much in the Romantic tradition, with
shades of Rachmaninov in the piano and orchestral
writing, the chromaticisms, the beguiling countermelodies,
and the air of lingering melancholy. In the
first movement the main theme is first given to the
orchestra while the piano supplies a toccata-like
accompaniment. The second theme is first heard on the
woodwind before being taken up by the soloist. In the
development section Chopinesque filigree work leads to
a cadenza before the main themes are repeated. The
second movement features a long, pensive melody
punctuated by orchestral interludes. Trumpet fanfares
herald a more decisive middle section, before the main
theme returns newly dressed, with soft chimes of a bell,
and solo violin and cello adding to the magical effect.
Irish traits are more strongly to the fore in the robust
finale, not only in the jig-like rhythms and modal
character of the main material, but in passing allusions
to an Irish tune, 'The Wearing of the Green'. This is first
heard on horns and muted trumpets in a mysterious
passage in the middle of the movement, and later on it
returns in a blaze of glory.
David Greer
A Comedy Overture (more info)
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A Comedy Overture - 13:08
Fantasy Scenes on an Eastern Romance (more info)
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I. The Laughing Juggler - 3:51
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II. A Dancer’s Reverie - 2:59
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III. Lonely in Moonlight - 2:37
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IV. In the Slave Market - 2:29
Piano Concerto in B minor (more info)
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I. Allegro risoluto - 11:03
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II. Tranquillo e calmo - 8:57
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III. Con brio e vivace - 10:05