Malcolm Arnold (b. 1921): Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4 Born, like Alwyn and Rubbra, in Northampton, Malcolm Arnold studied at the Royal College of Music, London....
Malcolm Arnold (b. 1921): Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4
Born, like Alwyn and Rubbra, in
Northampton, Malcolm Arnold studied at the Royal College of Music, London. Here
his teachers included the "wonderful" Ernest Hall, principal trumpet
of Sir Adrian Boult's BBC Symphony Orchestra, and Gordon Jacob, an
"inspiring" non-academic traditionalist from whom, he claims, he
learnt not only all he knew but also how "to talk about my music without
embarrassment."
Apart from a spell of voluntary military
service from autumn 1944 to early 1945, Arnold's youth was spent as a
professional orchestral player, mainly with the London Philharmonic (second
trumpet 1942, principal trumpet 1943-44, 1946-48), but also for a brief
post-war period with the BBC Symphony, second trumpet to his teacher, on
contract from 23rd September 1945 to 16th January 1946. Comparatively glossed
over by his biographer, Piers Burton-Page (Philharmonic Concerto, 1994),
Arnold's time as a player in his mid-twenties on either side of the 1945 divide
coincided with several of the greatest conducting legends of the century. He
played Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony under Fistoulari and Bernstein, and
recorded it with Celibidache. He appeared in Furtwangler's ten historic British
come-back concerts, in February and March 1948, including a complete Brahms
cycle, a Beethoven Choral Symphony at the Royal Albert Hall, and a
recording of the Second Symphony of Brahms. He recorded Beethoven's Eroïca
Symphony under de Sabata. He played not only for his friends Basil Cameron
and Constant Lambert, but also under Erich Kleiber, Clemens Krauss, Bruno
Walter, Richard Tauber (a Beethoven Pastoral Symphony in January 1944),
Galliera, Martinon, Enescu, Coates, Beecham and Boult. He accompanied Casals in
the Dvořak Cello Concerto and Menuhin in the London première of
Bartok's Second Violin Concerto (BBC), as well as Heifetz in the British
premiere of Walton's Violin Concerto. He took part in the first
performance of Tippett's A Child of Our Time, conducted by Walter Goehr,
of 19th March 1944, and under the Dutch conductor Eduard van Beinum, he
both got to know the Mahler Wunderhorn symphonies, and lead the trumpets
in the first "demonstration standard" recording of his own precocious
Beckus the Dandipratt Overture. Much as William Schuman had used the
Broadway musical, so he used the first trumpet desk to learn about the modern
interactive orchestra in all its periods and styles, simplicity and virtuosity
to "intensely dislike" Wagner and "detest" playing Elgar
symphonies but not the Enigma Variations, "his masterpiece",
and to acquire the skills of conducting. "if you don't pick up a few
things from being principal trumpet of a great symphony orchestra, you're no
use". His memories today are of having played in "a very good performance
in Brighton of Beethoven's Ninth conducted by Carl Schuricht" (then
in his late sixties); of a very "nervous" Furtwangler who "used
to take his injections in the artist's room" and "was never rude to
the orchestra"; of the bicycling van Beinum; of conducting Brahms's Third
Symphony and Berlioz's Romeo and Juliet together with the original
version of the Symphonie Fantastique. His regret is never to have
directed a complete Beethoven symphony cycle "the one thing I always
wanted to do."
Confirming his belief that one should
"always think in terms of sound ...not only of notes on paper," the
greatest musical influence of his life, Arnold claimed in an article for Music
& Musicians in July 1956, "has been, and still is, the
music of Berlioz." Interviewed by Murray Schafer (1963), he re-nailed his
colours to the mast as a diatonic, tonal romantic, criticizing the
incomprensibility of modern "insulated" composers with their concern
for truth above beauty, adding the influences of Sibelius, formally the tritonic
Fourth Symphony in particular, and his friend Walton
"outwardly". Having stopped composing in 1990, after a lifetime of
the most extraordinary application and variety ("I gave up... I have no
urge to write... I've done enough"), Sibelius still inspires: he
recollects Basil Cameron showing him the sketches of the rumoured Eighth
Symphony before, "I suppose, they were just thrown away as rubbish -
If I'd had any sense I should have copied them out." As a symphonist he
believes himself Germanically rooted. "I don't see the symphony like
Mahler, who said the whole world should be in it. A symphony should be
classical in form, like Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms." He claims never to
have been influenced by anyone. Yet equally confesses that "everything
influences every composer who has ever lived" - events, writers, poets,
artists: "all of them influenced me, oh yes." He is justifiably proud
of the fact that, like Gordon Jacob, he was always a musician of rapid
facility, who never outstayed his welcome and knew when to stop. ("It was
Alan Rawsthorne who said Malcolm Arnold writes music quicker than it takes the
ink to dry.") Just how quick, inventive and professionally accommodating
he was, a man of alert ear and "quicksilver imagination" without need
for keyboard ("if you compose at the piano you'll compose things like
Liszt"), can be gathered from the fifteen film scores, sketches for an
opera Henri Christophe (about the first black ruler of Haiti), First
Symphony and First Quartet completed during the year after leaving
the London Philharmonic Orchestra.
Positively charged hyper-energy similarly
resourced the ten pressurising days it took to write the Oscar-winning score
for David Lean's The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) - "the worst
job I ever had in my life." To see Arnold more as ephemeral journalist
than enduring philosopher has always been a temptation: he remains one of the
most critically crucified composers of the past fifty years. Yet, as his output
shows, from nine symphonies (1949-86) to close on 120 feature and documentary
film scores (1947-69), there is a darker, deeper, more intricately complex
dimension to the man, counterpointing the jolly and the uproarious: behind the
laughter lurks a disquietened, lonely spirit. Celebrant of "innocent lyricism"
and emotional cliche, resistant to compromise, an entertainer responsive to the
predicaments, joys and stresses of the human condition, he has been
interestingly compared with Dickens, by Donald Mitchell, and with Betjernan by
Adrian Williams.
The Third Symphony (1954-57),
commissioned by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Society "to take the
place of one Sir William Walton couldn't finish," was first performed in
the Royal Festival Hall, London, by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
under John Pritchard on 2nd December 1957. In three movements, the score calls
for piccolo, double woodwind, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones,
tuba, timpani and strings. According to the composer's own original programme
note, "the first movement has two main subjects, the first of which is
played by the violins, violas, flutes and bassoon at the very outset of the
piece. Later on the second subject is first stated by the oboe accompanied by
violins. Towards the end of the movement the tempo abruptly changes [from Allegro
to Vivace] and the same material is developed as a scherzo.
The [passacaglia] second movement, elegiac in character, is a
set of [twenty] variations based on a series of chords more than a melodic
theme. The [Haydnesque] last movement is based on three main themes and could
be loosely described as a rondo." The Sibelian sub-plot of the work
Arnold attributes to the telescoped structure of the first movement, and the
presence of "a recurrent leitmotif" redolent of Sibelius's Fifth
Symphony, likewise the Franck D minor Symphony (both of which,
within a fortnight, he played with the London Philharmonic Orchestra in
February 1944).
Commissioned by William Glock and the BBC,
the populist Fourth Symphony, completed in Thursley, a Surrey village
between Godalming and the Devil's Punch Bowl on 13th July 1960, was first
performed in the Royal Festival Hall by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under the
composer on 2nd November 1960. In four movements, with the scherzo placed
second, the score calls for piccolo, double woodwind, contra-bassoon, four
horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, celesta,
harp and strings "This symphony," wrote the Arnold in his programme
note for the first performance, "is composed for a normal symphony orchestra
[but with] extra percussion instruments which have been used for years in West
Indian and South American popular music [including bongos, marimbaphones and
tom-toms]. The first movement is based on three main ideas; the first one is
the very simple idea of an ascending and descending scale in contrary motion,
first heard as the accompaniment to the first subject, which is in the Lydian
mode. The conflict between the Lydian mode, with its sharpened sub-dominant
[fourth], and a scale which has no name, but has a sharpened sub-dominant
[Lydian lower tetrachord] and a flattened leading-note [Phrygian upper
tetrachord - coincidentally the combined tempered pitches of the 64th Carnatic mela,
"Vachaspati"], plays an important part in the development of the
movement, The second subject is in the major (Ionian) scale, and is accompanied
by a rhythmic figure in 8/8 time where the quavers are divided into 3+2+3
(1--2-123, he now emphasizes). It should not be necessary to describe the
design of this movement, which is in normal sonata form [and] tries to be as
direct as possible at first hearing. The second movement is a scherzo which
is more chromatic than is usual in my music, believing, as I do, that excessive
chromaticism is the most devitalizing dead-end in the music of the last sixty
years. This movement is not intended to arouse emotions that are necessarily
pleasant. The third movement is... lyrical... based on two themes. The last...
a rondo, the rondo subject being in the form of a fugal
exposition in the Lydian mode, alternating with the nameless scale used in the
first movement."
In one of his rare writings (The
Listener, 14th October 1971), Arnold drew attention to the fact that the
year of the Fourth Symphony, 1960, "was also the year of the
[London] Notting Hill race riots... I was appalled that such a thing could
happen in this country that racial ideas have become increasingly strong in
this country dismays me even more. In my Fourth Symphony I have used
very obvious West Indian and African percussion instruments and rhythms, in the
hope, first, that its sounds well, and second, that it might help to spread the
idea of racial integration. This of course is only a small part of the work,
and is only useful for me to know as a composer." Lest anyone thinks it
descriptively programmatic, however, he firmly insists otherwise. none of his
symphonies is, he says, "there are no hidden messages," "there
is nothing to give away ." Even the meeting of "brown and
coffee-coloured musics" in the "culturally dissonant" finale was
a matter of "musical and dramatic contrast, not social." Maybe, in
Sir Malcolm's most recent words, there is indeed "no underlying
intention" behind the paced B flat "big tune" of the first
movement "It's just a bloody good second subject! If I'd been Elgar I'd
have snapped it out of the air, but unfortunately I'm not." Yet,
paradoxically, the eruptive alla marcia interlude just before the end of the
finale he now reveals to be "the frustration of the artist. It's meant to
be completely crazy - I hope it sounds crazy." Contemplating the scherzo,
floating "insubstantially and horror-struck through a procession of
nightmares" (The Times), Hugo Cole (1989) believed it to
descend from Berlioz's Queen Mab or
Hoist's Mercury. Arnold himself points to the Prelude from
Lambert's ballet Tiresias (Covent Garden 1951) as the inspiration of its
palindromic procedure -"the most wonderful sound I've ever heard."
"The pursuit of happiness is not my
aim. I just wanted to lead a useful life and occasionally write a piece of
music. I'd have been quite happy to always remain a trumpet player."
These music notes incorporate an
interview with Sir Malcolm Arnold on 25th September, 1997 With the author's
grateful thanks to the composer, Anthony Day, and Fiona Southey, Novello &
Co Ltd.
National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland
The Radio Telefis Eireann Symphony
Orchestra was founded in 1947 as part of the Radio and Television service in
Ireland. With its membership coming from France. Germany. Britain, Italy,
Hungary, Poland and Russia, it drew together a rich blend of European culture.
Apart from its many symphony concerts, the orchestra came to world-wide
attention with its participation in the famous Wexford Opera Festival, an event
broadcast in many parts of the world. The orchestra now enjoys the facilities
of a fine new concert hall in central Dublin where it performs with the world's
leading conductors and soloists. In 1990 the RTE Symphony Orchestra was
augmented and renamed the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, quickly
establishing itself as one of Europe's most adventurous orchestras with
programmes featuring many twentieth century compositions. In 1992 the orchestra
embarked upon an extensive recording project for the Naxos and Marco Polo labels,
recording music by Nielsen, Tchaikovsky, Goldmark, Rachmaninov, Brian and
Strauss as well as an Irish composers' series.
Andrew Penny
Andrew Penny was born in Hull and
initially studied the clarinet at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester,
where he also worked as conductor of the Opera Unit. The newly established
Rothschild Scholarship in conducting led to study with Sir Charles Groves and
Timothy Reynish and work as assistant with Richard Hickox and Elgar Howarth.
Winner of the prestigious Ricordi Prize, he achieved a major success with the
Vaughan Williams opera Riders to the Sea at Sadlers Wells Theatre in
London. Andrew Penny subsequently studied with Sir Edward Downes and made a
number of radio recordings in Holland and Britain. He has conducted regularly
for both the Naxos and Marco Polo CD labels, recording principally with the RTE
Concert Orchestra and National Symphony Orchestra in Dublin. There have been
other recording engagements in Australia and in Kiev, while in Dublin he is
recording a cycle of symphonies by Malcolm Arnold. His recordings have won
considerable critical acclaim both in Europe and America.