Gustav Holst (1874-1934) Somerset Rhapsody Beni Mora Invocation for Cello and Orchestra Fugal Overture Egdon Heath Hammersmith Looking back over the...
Gustav Holst (1874-1934)
Somerset Rhapsody
Beni Mora
Invocation for Cello and Orchestra
Fugal Overture
Egdon Heath
Hammersmith
Looking back over the twentieth century
one might wonder how Gustav Holst came to be such a seminal figure in British
music on the basis of so few familiar works. Today's casual concert-goer or
record-buyer would be challenged to name three or four of his compositions. In
fact he wrote several hundred in practically every genre. Singers will know
part-songs and wind-players the military-band suites, but his modern reputation
rests on The Planets, The Hymn of Jesus, and perhaps the ballet music to
The Perfect Fool. These few pieces not only underpin Holst's present
position but were all written in the surprisingly short period when he
received, or in his view endured, popular approval. The Planets was
first performed in 1918, The Hymn of Jesus in 1920 and The Perfect
Fool in 1922. Outside this period of public favour things were different:
hitherto he was young, up and coming, needing to feed himself, find his own
voice and make it heard; afterwards, being the personality he was, the price of
forging ahead was to leave the public and the musical establishment behind.
This caused Holst no heartache at all for there was little chance that critical
endorsement would ever compromise his artistic tenets.
This recording neatly covers in
chronological order these outer two periods (three pieces from each of them),
revealing some clues as to why Holst was so central to English music of the early
twentieth century. In this one man's music can be traced all those musical
currents which fed and energised the musical renaissance in England at that
time. A man who never stood still, who was driven to experiment, who needed no
cheering from the touchline, a man with his mind open to the musical revolution
that was under way in Europe but in whose ears still rang the modal inflexions
of folk-song, the rhythmic freedom of plainsong and the exhilarating
counterpoint of the Tudor age.
The Somerset Rhapsody (1906-7) was
written at the suggestion of the great folk-song collector Cecil Sharp and was
Holst's first real critical success. Had he then decided to climb aboard the
English pastoralists' hay-wagon he might well have shared the now
well-composted reputation of that school, but already there were signs of where
Holst would be going: those repeated scalic bass lines, the rising
trumpet-calls and his love affair with contrapuntal ingenuities. Yet there are
backward glances to what his daughter Imogen calls his 'early horrors'; some
rather trite thematic development and residual patches of overripe Wagnerian
harmony. He quotes four different songs: his own acknowledged favourite the Sheep
Shearing Song, High Germany, The True Lover's Farewell and The Cuckoo, all
presented in full at least once but overlaying each other to varying degrees in
a tight musical structure.
Beni Mora (1909
-10) or Oriental Suite could, like the Somerset Rhapsody, convey
in its title the suggestion of diversionary salon music. Holst does to some
extent indulge the listener in some picture-postcard scene painting but he
could never be content with just that. The premiere drew some hisses as the
audience realised that Holst was not presenting his holiday snapshots in quite
the way that prevailing musical conventions required. The First Dance is
the most conformist, complete with the nasal sound of the cor anglais,
'oriental' intervals and impassioned arabesques not dissimilar to Borodin. In
the Second Dance carefully selected instrumental groups; timpani,
bassoons, low flutes and upper strings, create a scene of stillness, mystery
and some menace. The finale, subtitled In the Street of the Ouled Naïls, reveals
something of the emerging Holst.
Scenting a musical challenge, he introduces
a short evocative riff in the low flute which he had apparently heard an
Algerian native instrumentalist intone for 21/2 hours. Holst repeats it a mere
163 times, stretching his technique and harmonic ingenuity to the limits, while
creating a hypnotic atmosphere of torrid, highly charged night air vibrating as
the sounds of an approaching Arab procession mingle with those from the dance
halls and cafes lining the street.
Invocation for Cello and Orchestra (1911)
also evokes a nocturnal atmosphere, even to the extent of having as an original
title A Song of the Evening. It too looks forward and backward. Romantic
harmonies still linger, but the free rhythm of the introduction, and the
crystalline woodwind colours pre-echo Venus from The Planets, a
work that would occupy much of the next few years. After a few early
performances Invocation became lost amongst Holst's papers where it
remained for some sixty years with the encouragement of his daughter Imogen,
who regarded it as 'not of any value in itself'.
After the next few years, during which
the public and the critical establishment fell into step with him, Holst strode
on ahead. The Fugal Overture (1923), first used as an overture to the
opera The Perfect Fool, shows further evidence of his lifelong musical
preoccupations. Contrapuntal ingenuity and asymmetric rhythms are set in a
concise, balanced yet totally original formal structures. The scoring
demonstrates an economical and individualistic use of the orchestral palette.
Its initial reception was mixed; some praising its good humour but others
ominously regretting Holst's lapse into asceticism and perverse exercises in
the contrapuntal style.
The even colder reception given to Egdon
Heath (1927) failed to perturb Holst who, for the rest of his life,
considered it his best work. Above the score is a quotation from The Return
of the Native by the work's dedicatee Thomas Hardy; 'A place perfectly
accordant with man's nature - neither ghastly, hateful nor ugly; neither
commonplace, unmeaning nor tame; but like man, slighted and enduring; and
withal singularly colossal and mysterious in its swarthy monotony'. Holst
was obviously fascinated by the challenge of recreating such an elusive yet
finely drawn atmosphere and there may be an uncharacteristic note of
self-justification in his anxiety that this quotation should always be in the
work's programme notes.
Hammersmith (1930)
was commissioned by the BBC for their Wireless Military Band and is played here
in the wind-band instrumentation. Holst then made an orchestral version for its
first performance, sharing the programme with the London premiere of Walton's Belshazzar's
Feast. This unlucky coincidence may account for its subsequent obscurity as
an orchestral work, Holst lived and worked for much of his life in West London
and this musical tribute to the area contrasts the inexorable slow progress of
the Thames with energetic bustle of the then energetic street-life on its
banks.
Christopher Mowat
Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Formed in 1891 as the Scottish Orchestra,
in 1951 the ensemble, now full-time, took the name of the Scottish National
Orchestra, later assuming the title Royal, a recognition of its importance in
the musical life of Scotland. Distinguished conductors who have worked with the
orchestra include Karl Rankl, Hans Swarowsky, Walter Susskind, Bryden Thomson
and Sir Alexander Gibson, the last named becoming the first Scottish-born
principal conductor in 1959. Neeme Jarvi, who was conductor from 1984 to 1988
is now Conductor Laureate and Walter Weller was appointed Music Director in
1992. The orchestra has a busy schedule in Scotland, including regular seasons
in its home-town of Glasgow, annual appearances at the Edinburgh Festival and
regular performances in the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts in London. In
addition to concerts in England, the orchestra has travelled to other countries
abroad, with tours of North America, Japan, Austria and Switzerland. The wide
repertoire of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra extends from the Baroque to
the contemporary. There have been two recent awards from the Gramophone
magazine and the orchestra has embarked on a continuing collaboration with
Naxos.
David Lloyd-Jones
David Lloyd-Jones began his professional
career in 1959 on the music staff of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and
soon became much in demand as a free-lance conductor. In 1972 he was appointed
Assistant Music Director at the English National Opera and during his time in
that position conducted an extensive repertory which included the first British
performance of Prokofiev's War and Peace. In 1978, on the invitation of
the Arts Council of Great Britain, he founded a new full-time opera company,
Opera North, of which he became Artistic Director, with its new orchestra, the
English Northern Philharmonia. During his twelve seasons with the company he
conducted fifty different new productions and numerous orchestral concerts,
including festival appearances in France and Germany. He has made a number of
very successful recordings of British and Russian music and has a busy career
as a conductor in the concert-hall and the opera-house that has taken him to
leading musical centres throughout Europe and the Americas.