Edward Elgar (1857-1934) Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85 Introduction and Allegro, Op. 47; Elegy, Op. 58; Serenade for Strings, Op. 20 Salut d'amour; Pomp...
Edward Elgar
(1857-1934)
Cello Concerto in E
minor, Op. 85
Introduction and
Allegro, Op. 47; Elegy, Op. 58; Serenade for Strings, Op. 20
Salut d'amour; Pomp
and Circumstance: March No. 1
Sir Edward Elgar enjoys a curious reputation in his own country. To many
he is, above all, the composer of the Pomp and Circumstance Marches, the
celebrator of Edwardian Imperialism, the man who preferred the races to a
rehearsal of his Violin Concerto with the young Yehudi Menuhin, who adds
to the popular image by describing the composer as "a grandfatherly
country gentleman who should properly have had a couple of hounds at his
heels".
In fact Elgar deserves rather better than this, nearly qualifying for
admission to the exclusive club that belongs to the greatest of the late
romantic composers. He enjoyed the discerning esteem of his fellow-countrymen
in his own time, and then, as now, was largely underestimated abroad, except in
the United States of America. His oratorios have an interest that may now be
unfashionable, although The Dream of Gerontius retains a place in
English choral repertoire, but the two symphonies, the concertos for violin and
for cello and the Enigma Variations remain firmly entrenched in English
concert programmes.
Edward Elgar was born in the West of England, near Worcester, in 1857.
His father was a piano-tuner, organist, violinist and shopkeeper, from whom
Elgar acquired much of his musical training. The boy at first made his living
as a freelance musician, teaching, playing the violin and organ, and conducting
local orchestras and choirs. His marriage in 1889 to a piano pupil, daughter of
a retired Indian army general and nine years his senior, had a marked effect on
his career, allowing him to move to London, where acceptance at first proved difficult.
In 1897 his Imperial March for the royal Jubilee won success, enhanced
still further by the Enigma Variations, which he completed in 1899. The
following years brought him increasing fame, culminating in the remarkable and
introspective works of 1918 and 1919, the violin sonata, string quartet, piano
quintet and cello concerto.
With the death of his wife in 1920 Elgar's creative urge seemed to
diminish and he was to spend his final years in the West of England, in
appearance the country gentleman that Yehudi Menuhin recalls, occupied in
country pursuits, a figure seemingly from an earlier age that had now passed.
The Cello Concerto, written after the First World War, was
influenced by the relative economy of means that the composer had discovered in
his String Quartet and Piano Quintet of the preceding year. It
differs from the Violin Concerto in particular in its intense
concentration of material. He worked on the composition during the summer of
1918 with the collaboration of the cellist Felix Salmond, the cellist in
earlier performances of Elgar's Quartet and Piano Quintet and
later an influential teacher at the Juilliard School and the Curtis Institute.
The first performance was grossly under-rehearsed, since the conductor of the
rest of the programme, Albert Coates, described in her diary by Lady Elgar as
"that brutal selfish ill-mannered bounder Coates", used rehearsal
time allocated to the concerto for Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy, keeping
Elgar waiting for an hour. The public reception of the work was, in
consequence, luke-warm, while some critics at least correctly apportioned the
blame for the inadequate first performance of a major work by the greatest of
living English composers.
The first movement opens with a grandiose statement by the soloist,
leading, in almost improvisatory style, to a lilting melody announced by the
violas. This is repeated by the soloist, who continues to dominate the
movement. Plucked chords by the soloist lead to the second movement, a
melancholy Scherzo, in which the soloist is again to the fore, with
orchestration of the greatest economy. There is still greater poignancy in the
brief slow movement, a continuous solo for the cello. The final Rondo opens
with eight bars in which the first theme is suggested, to be interrupted by a
declamatory statement from the soloist, before the movement is allowed to take
its full course. Even then the excitement and joy of the principal theme are
broken by references to earlier themes in the concerto and the mood of autumnal
introspective melancholy that make this one of Elgar's greatest works. At the
end of the score, where Haydn might have written Deo gratias, Elgar
wrote the words Finis. R.I.P., intentionally or not signalling the
concerto as the end of his creative life, the end of a war but also the end of
an age.
A former string-player himself, Elgar's writing for strings is, in
consequence, idiomatic, although he explained his particular ability by
claiming the example of a dominant figure in the history of music in England.
"Study old Handel", he advised, "I went to him for help ages
ago". The Introduction and Allegro for string quartet and string
orchestra, completed in 1905, arose from earlier sketches. In particular he
made use of a melody that had occurred to him during a holiday in Wales, a
Welsh tune, incorporated in a work that he described as "a tribute to that
sweet borderland" where he had made his home, and where, indeed, he had
been born and bred. The new work was first performed at the Queen's Hall in
London by the London Symphony Orchestra under the direction of the composer,
but only gradually won its lasting place in orchestral repertoire. It was
dedicated to Professor S.S. Sanford of Yale University, which had recently
awarded Elgar an honorary doctorate.
The Introduction and Allegro contrasts a small group, a string
quartet, with the main body of the orchestra, a form suggested by the Baroque concerto
grosso. The romantic texture is enriched by sub-division of the string
sections of the orchestra and the characteristic sweep of the composer's
writing for strings. The Introduction suggests the principal themes that
are to follow in the Allegro, the opening providing the broad second
theme and the first entry of the quartet proposing material for the first theme.
The work moves forward to a brilliantly worked fugal section that leads back to
the re-appearance of the first theme, the second theme, now appropriately
changed in key, and a final triumphant reference to the Introduction. The
Elegy, a work of great sensibility, scored for strings and harp, was
written in 1909 and dedicated to the memory of the Reverend R.H. Hadden, Junior
Warden of the Worshipful Company of Musicians. It was first performed at The
Mansion House on 13th July, 1909.
The Serenade for Strings was written in 1892, shortly after
Elgar's marriage, when he had decided to give up his attempt to gain a foothold
in the musical world of London and return to the provinces. Its probable origin
lies in an earlier work, Three Pieces for Strings, written in 1888 and
first played at the Worcestershire Musical Union. The later Serenade, presumably
a revised version of the Three Pieces, was probably first played in
Worcester by amateurs, and had its first successful professional performances
abroad, before becoming an established and popular element in English
repertoire. The first professional performance took place in New Brighton in
1899 under the composer's direction. A work of characteristically sweet
melancholy, the Serenade, in the key of E minor, opens with the
pulsating rhythm of the viola. The expressive second movement leads to a final Allegretto
that explores again the rich possibilities of divided string sections and
the briefly contrasted sound of the solo violin.
The first of the Pomp and Circumstance Marches was written in
1901, the title taken from Shakespeare's Othello and very much answering
the spirit of the time. Salut d'amour, familiar from many arrangements,
was originally a piano piece, Liebesgruss, a greeting to his wife in the
days before their marriage and written in 1888 while Elgar was on holiday in
Settle. He orchestrated the work the following year.