Eric Coates
(1886 - 1957)
Songs
With the rise of
American dance music and the development of serialism, popular and serious
music were set to part company. Up to this time the two types of music had
shared common ground. The early Promenade Concerts in London
had mixed symphonies and concertos with ballad songs, cornet and organ solos in
their programmes. Sirni1arly, the famous ballad concerts designed to promote
the latest published ballads also incorporated classical works. A strong middle
ground, which was known as light music, existed between the two sides. The
concert waltz, the suite for orchestra, the orchestral fantasy and the march
were the hallmarks of the light music world, which was designed expressly for middle-brow
listeners. Seaside and festival orchestras in Britain played a wealth of this music, written by countless
composers, even up to the early 1960s, by which time serious and popular music
cultures were so far apart that the middle ground simply ceased to exist.
The undisputed
master of British light music was Eric Coates. He was born in Hucknall,
Nottinghamshire in 1886 and entered the Royal Academy of London twenty years
later to study the viola with Lionel Tertis and composition with Frederick Corder.
This was the period of the great English musical renaissance, and Coates's
fellow students included Arnold Bax, Montague Phillips, York Bowen, Myra Hess
and Walton O'Donnell.
Professional work
for Coates came initially on the viola. He was Tertis's prize student and
played in the Hambourg String Quartet, followed by Beecham's symphony
orchestra, then becoming principal viola of Henry Wood's Queens Hall Orchestra.
In 1919, however, he left the playing world behind and embarked upon a career
as a composer of light music. Three of his pieces entered the musical
consciousness of the nation and perhaps most of the Western world as well. Knightsbridge,
from his London Suite, became a BBC programme 5ignature tune; a
waltz serenade called A Sleepy Lagoon became a number one seIler in both
England and America, and the Dam Busters March, written for the film of
the same name, became an equal in popularity to EIgar's Pomp and
Circumstance March No.1.
Coates began his
compositional career, however, by writing songs. He wrote 160 in all, the
majority being written while he was still a professional viola- player. They
were destined mostly for the commercial market, first in the form of baIlad
songs and then later as popular songs. As this CD demonstrates, however, he did
write songs in a more serious classical style and even composed a short song
cycle.
Coates's first
published works were the four old English songs set to Shakespeare's verse and
written under Corder's guidance during his time at the Royal Academy of Music.
The official first performance was given at a Promenade concert in 1909 by Mrs
Olga Wood with her husband Henry conducting, and soon they were taken up by
other well-known singers including Gervase Elwes, Carrie Tubb and Nellie Melba.
Two other songs - When I am dead and The Outlaw's Song - come
from his Academy period, but it was a song called Stonecracker John written
in 1909 that propelled Coates into the baIlad song market. Sung by Harry Dearth
at a Boosey BaIlad concert it became an instant success, selling thousands of
copies. Stonecracker John was a new type of baIlad song, a West Country
character song, and Coates naturally followed this up with a number of similar
songs, including The Grenadier and Betty and Johnny. The lyrics
for many of these early songs were by Fred Weatherly, the most sought- after
baIlad lyric writer of the time. Coates was to say of Weatherly: "he had
an astonishing flair for telling a story in verse which appealed not only to
the intellectual but to the man in the street. His knack of painting pictures
with his poems was uncanny".
TeIl me where
is fancy bred and Sigh
no more, ladies, again using Shakespeare's verse, were written for a
performance of The Merchant of Venice at Caldicote Towers in
1912. Mill o' Dreams, the only published song cycle Coates wrote,
with words by Nancy B. Marsland, was first performed in 1915 by Louise Dale at
a Chappell's baIlad concert and repeated at a Prom concert that year. At
Vesper Bell is a rare example of a more serious art song by Coates frorn
the 1920s, but with The Fairy Tales of Ireland we have the finest
example of Coates's baIlad song style.. This song became a great favourite with
the Irish tenor John McCormack.
1925, the date of The
little green balcony, saw a marked change in Coates's output as it dropped
from the average seven songs to two songs a year. BaIlad songs were fast
disappearing and making way for the more sophisticated popular song of the
1920s and 1930s. Royden Barrie, Christopher HasseIl and Coates's wife PhyIlis
Black became his main lyric writers, but Coates's heart was really in writing
orchestral music, and the songs were written mainly to fulfill his publisher's
contract. Although he later stated that he found writing songs limiting, it is
these later songs that show him at his finest.
The two songs of
1930 - Because I miss you so and The Young Lover - are especially
good. A rich glorious melodic vocalline is supported by subtle piano writing
that maintains the unity and intensifies the colour and effect of the vocal
line. These are beautifully balanced songs that capture the very essence of
their lyrics with the utmost refinement. As the 1930s progressed Coates w rote
f ewer and f ewer songs, and Rise up and reach the stars of 1933 was to
be the only fast song that Coates wrote. With his final songs Beautiful Lady
Moon, Music of the Night, Your Name and Princess of the Dawn there
came a marked change of style. With the bravura vocalline, big chord clusters
in the piano part of almost orchestral dimensions, these songs were set to
compete with the grand show numbers of the West End and Broadway musical stage. One is reminded a little, perhaps, of Ivor
NoveIlo.
Chamber music did
not figure at all in Coates's output. The only extant piece is a minuet from a Suite
for string quartet, the other movements being written in turn by Frank
Bridge, Hamilton Hart y, I. D. Davies and York Bowen, all commissioned
by Coates and his coIleagues of the Hambourg String Quartet in 1908. There was
also a souvenir called First Meeting for violin and piano (originally
for viola and piano, according to Coates's son Austin) written in 1941 during
his heyday of orchestral writing. It is dedicated to Austin, who tells this
interesting story about the piece:
"Lionel
Tertis and my father had always kept in touch and in the autumn of .1941 he
asked my father for a short work to celebrate his half century of playing. By
November the work was ready and Tertis came round to lunch. Afterwards we went
into the drawing-room and Tertis and my father played it. Tertis was sight-reading
but played as if he had known the work all his life. It was so beautiful I
could never forget it. He was so delighted he insisted on their doing it again.
But when he left after tea we knew it was the last time he would ever play it.
Like all of them ...they were scared of touching anything that might be
considered popular!"
Coates rearranged
the work for violin and piano for publishing. It was given the title First
Meeting and dedicated to Austin on his birthday. Although the original
viola version no longer exists the present writer has taken the liberty of
transcribing it back to viola and presenting it on this CD.
@ Michael
Ponder