ELGAR: Marches
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Edward Elgar (1857-1934) Marches Sir Edward Elgar occupies a strange position in his own country. For many he is associated with British, or, more...
Edward Elgar (1857-1934)
Marches
Sir Edward Elgar occupies a strange position in his own
country. For many he is associated with British, or,
more specifically, English Imperialism, epitomized in
Land of Hope and Glory, a patriotic anthem now sung
with gusto and tongue in cheek on the last night of the
London Promenade Concerts each year. The image of
an Edwardian country gentleman, with his dogs and
horses is misleading. Elgar was the son of a shopkeeper,
in the days when to be in trade marked a man for life
and escape from this background earned a man the
name of counter-jumper. He married the daughter of a
retired Indian Army general, a pupil of his, nine years
his senior, and it was she who gave him the necessary
support, morally and socially, that finally helped him to
make his way in Edwardian society. Nevertheless,
musically Elgar was far nearer to the German romantic
composers of his time than to the developing vein of
English music, with its pastoral reliance on newly
collected folk-song.
Edward Elgar was born near Worcester, in the West
of England, in 1857. His father was a piano-tuner,
organist, violinist and eventually a shopkeeper, and it
was from him that Elgar acquired much of his musical
training. He at first made his living as a free-lance
musician, teaching, playing the violin and organ, and
conducting local amateur orchestras and choirs. His first
success away from his own West Country, after earlier
abortive attempts, was in 1897 with his Imperial March,
written for the royal jubilee celebrating sixty glorious
years of Queen Victoria. His reputation was further
enhanced by the so-called Enigma Variations of 1899.
The oratorio The Dream of Gerontius, which followed
in 1900, was less successful at its first performance in
Birmingham, but later became a staple element in
British choral repertoire. His publishers Novello had not
always been particularly generous in their treatment of
him, but he came to rely on the encouragement of the
German-born Augustus Johannes Jaeger, a reader for
the firm, who found in Elgar's music something much
more akin to the music of his native country.
Public recognition brought Elgar many honours, his
position sealed by the composition of music for the
coronation of King Edward VII. He was awarded
honorary doctorates by universities old and new and in
1904 received the accolade of a knighthood. Later
official honours included the Order of Merit in the
coronation honours of 1911 and finally, in 1931, a
baronetcy. Acceptance, as represented by the musical
establishment of the country, was confirmed by the
award of the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic
Society in 1925, after an earlier award to Delius.
Elgar's work had undergone significant changes in
the later years of the 1914-18 war, a development
evident in his Cello Concerto of 1919. His wife's death
in 1920 removed a support on which he had long relied,
and the last fourteen years of his life brought a
diminishing inspiration and energy in his work as a
composer, although he continued to meet demands for
his appearance as a conductor in both the concert-hall
and recording studio. He died in 1934.
The marches that Elgar wrote, whether for public
occasions or as an incidental part of other works,
represent only one aspect of his achievement as a
composer, and not necessarily the most important, in
spite of the wide popularity a number of them have
enjoyed. Altogether they often represent music of
profounder achievement, by no means jingoistic in
conception, whatever the present connotations may be.
In 1911 a march was commissioned for the
coronation of King George V, an event that Elgar and
his wife decided not to attend, because of the expected
length of the ceremony, the allocation of seats in the
south aisle of Westminster Abbey which offered a
limited view of the ceremony, and Elgar's own dislike
of crowds. The Coronation March opens with a less
festive theme from material originally intended for a
projected ballet based on Rabelais that had excited his
wife's disapproval, when it had been under discussion
seven years before. The march uses other earlier
sketches, but turns out to be an orchestral composition
of some significance, no merely superficial occasional
piece, but a work of symphonic proportions and
profounder suggestion.
In 1901 Elgar had provided incidental music for the
play Grania and Diarmid by George Moore and
W.B.Yeats, staged at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin in
October of that year. The play concerns the rivalry of
Finn and his nephew Diarmid for the hand of Grania, a
pursuit in which Diarmid's success leads to his murder
by Finn. In a letter to Jaeger, Elgar describes the funeral
music as 'big and weird' and likely to appeal to his
correspondent. The Funeral March is a sombre piece,
evocative of the Celtic twilight of the early Irish legend,
winning praise from the authors of the play. Elgar
dedicated it to the conductor Henry Wood and included
it in his own concert programmes.
Elgar wrote his first two Pomp and Circumstance
Marches in the same year. He was particularly pleased
with the trio melody of the March No. 1 in D major, in
his own words 'a tune that will knock'em flat'. The
famous melody has won further fame coupled with the
words supplied by A.C. Benson for the Coronation Ode
of 1902, Land of hope and glory. The second march, in
A minor, is less familiar, with a first theme of mounting
excitement, and a contrasted secondary melody. The
lively trio section is in A major. The work was
dedicated to the composer and conductor Granville
Bantock.
Elgar completed his Pomp and Circumstance
March No. 3, in C minor, in 1904, having already
dedicated it to Ivor Atkins, organist and choirmaster of
Worcester Cathedral. It starts ominously, before rising
to a climax, as the melody emerges in fuller form. The
cheerfully lyrical trio is in marked contrast, framed by
the march and returning before the extended coda. The
fourth march, in G major, was finished in 1907 and
dedicated to the Hereford Cathedral organist George
Robertson Sinclair, who features, with his dog Dan, in
the Enigma Variations. This march comes only second
in popularity to the first, with the trio again seeming to
demand words of some sort. Pomp and Circumstance
March No. 5, in C major, was written in 1930 and
dedicated to Sinclair's successor at Hereford Cathedral,
Percy Hull. With a lively main section, there is contrast
in the A flat major trio, which returns, marked
nobilmente like the trio of the fourth march, after the
recapitulation of the opening section.
Elgar completed his cantata Caractacus in 1898.
The text was supplied by Harry Acworth, a neighbour in
the West Country who had provided parts of the book
for the earlier King Olaf, and dealt with the defeat of the
British chieftain Caractacus by the Roman Emperor
Claudius, the former's captivity in Rome, and his
release by the Emperor. The work goes on to foretell the
fall of Rome and its opportune replacement by Queen
Victoria's British Empire. The story had some appeal
for Elgar, as the last battle of Caractacus had
supposedly taken place in the environs of
Herefordshire. The Triumphal March marks the
culmination of the drama.
Contemporary patriotism is reflected in the March
of the Moghul Emperors, an episode in the Imperial
Masque mounted by Henry Hamilton at the Coliseum in
1912, a celebration of the 1911 Durbar, under the title
The Cities of Ind. The Durbar marked not only the
accession of King George V but also the transfer of the
Indian capital from Calcutta to the traditional capital
Delhi, a location to which the great Moghul Emperors
of the past bear appropriate witness, with rather less
positive testimony from St George, who leaves the last
word to King George.
In 1924 Elgar succeeded Sir Walter Parratt as
Master of the King's Musick in April, at a time when he
was occupied with the celebration of Empire at the
Wembley Exhibition, for which he wrote the Empire
March, replaced, at royal request, by the earlier
Imperial March at the opening of the exhibition, but
serving to introduce the Pageant of Empire in the
summer, when music by Elgar and others was included
in the patriotic extravaganza. The music reflects an
improbably confident optimism in a greatly changed
world.
Polonia was written for a concert in 1915 in aid of
the Polish Victims' Relief Fund. Here Elgar uses Polish
themes, with a national song, after the introduction, a
hymn associated with revolt against the Russian Tsar in
1863. Later themes include Chopin's Nocturne No. 11
in G minor and a melody from Paderewski's Polish
Fantasia. A further national Polish melody is used in
the last section, presented with the required patriotic
enthusiasm. The work was dedicated to Paderewski and
described by Elgar as a symphonic prelude.
Keith Anderson
Coronation March, Op. 65 (more info)
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Coronation March, Op. 65 - 10:37
Grania and Diarmid, Op. 42, No. 2: Funeral March (more info)
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Grania and Diarmid, Op. 42, No. 2: Funeral March - 10:21
Military Marches Nos. 1-5, Op. 39, "Pomp and Circumstance" (more info)
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March No. 1 in D major - 6:13
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March No. 2 in A minor - 5:08
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March No. 3 in C minor - 5:48
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March No. 4 in G major - 5:14
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March No. 5 in C major - 6:16
Caractacus, Op. 35: Triumphal March (more info)
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Caractacus, Op. 35: Triumphal March - 7:06
The Crown of India, Op. 66, No. 4: March of the Mogul Emperors (more info)
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The Crown of India, Op. 66, No. 4: March of the Mogul Emperors - 3:50
Empire March (more info)
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Empire March - 4:17
Polonia, Op. 76 (more info)
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Polonia, Op. 76 - 14:25