Bax: Piano Works, Vol. 1
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Arnold Bax (1883-1953): Piano Works 1 Piano Sonatas Nos. 1 and 2 Dream in Exile Nereid Arnold Bax was one of a group of talented young pianist-composers who...
Arnold Bax (1883-1953): Piano Works 1
Piano Sonatas Nos. 1 and 2 Dream in Exile Nereid
Arnold Bax was one of a group of talented young
pianist-composers who emerged from London's Royal
Academy of Music in the years immediately after
1900. They included York Bowen, Benjamin Dale and
Paul Corder, all pupils of Tobias Matthay for piano and
Frederick Corder for composition. At much the same
time the pianists Myra Hess, Irene Scharrer, and a little
later Harriet Cohen were all Matthay pupils, and of
course they played Bax's music. While Bax took many
years to make a career, his contemporary York Bowen
was an immediate hit both as pianist and composer and
appeared at Queen's Hall in his own music while still a
student. Yet Bowen's orchestral music is now largely
forgotten while Bax is widely known.
Bax wrote in almost all conventional forms
excluding opera (though he unsuccessfully attempted
opera more than once). With seven symphonies,
concertos, many orchestral works including the
familiar tone poem Tintagel, choral music, many
chamber works, songs and piano music his would
eventually be a large output and between the wars at
least he was certainly seen as a major figure, a stature
rewarded by a knighthood in the Coronation Honours
List in 1937. Against his better judgement he became
the Master of the King's Musick in 1942 after the death
of Walford Davies.
Bax's early life was dominated by the keyboard
and in his twenties he appeared in concerts playing his
own music. Though not a regular concert pianist such
was his pianism that he tended to be called on when
others failed. Thus in February 1909 he accompanied
Debussy songs in the composer's presence, and in
January 1914 did the same for Schoenberg's songs
when the booked pianist withdrew at the last minute.
But after the First World War he played in public
increasingly rarely, although he did make two
recordings, of Delius's First Violin Sonata and his own
Viola Sonata in May and June 1929. The fire in Bax's
romantic pianism is evident in both, with his generous
phrasing and left hand articulation, and while Delius is
reported as finding Bax's playing too forceful for his
music, we might feel it gives it some fibre.
Bax's solo piano music consists of four big-boned
sonatas written between 1910 and 1934, and a couple
of dozen highly characteristic shorter pieces many of
them technically in the shadow of Debussy or Scriabin.
There was also the original version, a sonata, of what
in 1922 became his First Symphony, and a dozen or so
alternative versions of orchestral works, and short late
piano pieces unpublished in his lifetime.
The shorter piano pieces were mainly written
between 1915 and 1920 and include impressionistic
miniatures such as The Princess's Rose Garden, Apple-
Blossom Time and A Romance. Bax's well-known
liaison with the pianist Harriet Cohen started in 1915
and many of his short piano pieces were dedicated to
her. Indeed this resulted in rivalry between Harriet
('Tanya' to her circle) and Myra Hess in the playing of
Bax's piano music. Yet Harriet Cohen had small hands
and this later caused her to avoid the heavier demands
of concertos by Brahms and Rachmaninov. Curiously,
Bax's writing, particularly in his works for piano and
orchestra, are seemingly oblivious of her problems,
Bax not limiting his expression by his champion's
difficulties.
Much of Bax's early music must have arisen from
improvisation at the piano, an approach that led him to
invent harmony which, used in a colouristic way, must
then have sounded startlingly modern. His inspiration
was the new piano music of the Russians, especially
Scriabin, and his habit, in the days before recording or
broadcasting, of playing recent orchestral scores at the
piano, often as a duet with his friend the pianist Arthur
Alexander, was a powerful influence. They played
through Glazunov's symphonies in this way, indulging
in all manner of pianistic 'in jokes' with each other -
friends said they should go on the halls as 'Bax and
Frontz'. Bax's preoccupation with the piano led him to
write many songs whose headlong accompaniments,
complex and virtuosic, tell us a lot about Bax the
pianist in his early twenties.
Bax's early years were closely associated with
Ireland where he spent much time in the far west
aborbing both the musical and literary atmosphere.
Here he developed his literary alter ego Dermot
O'Byrne, publishing poetry, short stories and plays.
The Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916, though viewed by
Bax from England, came as a personal blow and is
reflected in various scores of the time. Bax's shorter
pieces were not all sunlit idylls, and in such darker
scores as the piano pieces Winter Waters and What the
Minstrel Told Us it seems probable that there may be
some programmatic elements from this time. This is a
sensibility reflected in our programme in Dream in
Exile and the Second Sonata.
Bax's romantic First Piano Sonata in F sharp
minor was written in the Ukraine in the early summer
of 1910 during a romantic adventure which he
describes in his autobiography. In a turbulent Lisztian
single movement it was first played by Myra Hess as
Romantic Tone-Poem in April 1911, and then varied
and extended until, renamed Sonata, it was played by
Harriet Cohen at one of her earliest recitals in June
1920 and again by her when revised for publication in
1921.
In this 'Russian' sonata, colouristic effects abound,
particularly at the bottom of the keyboard. The darkhued
images that Bax conjures certainly appear to have
been written with some other palette in mind than the
black and white of the piano. The characteristics of the
music that strike one immediately are its passion and
its onward sweep, developing the material organically
into a large-scale structure. In this work Bax does not
offer us musical picture postcards as he does in the
short, Russian-oriented, May Night in the Ukraine
which he wrote in 1912 and dedicated to his female
companions in Russia 'Olga and Natalie'. The 'broad
and triumphant' coda is punctuated by a vivid pianistic
impression of the wild pealing of Russian cathedral
bells, the bells that Bax heard as he first arrived in St
Petersburg. Frank Merrick has suggested that 'the bells
in Bax's coda may well have been inspired by those of
the Cathedral of St Isaac . . . I was there for a fortnight
in that very year . . . and had hardly reached my room
in an hotel when those wonderful bells did their
remarkable performance, twice in close succession.
Bax does not use the actual motif with which the tiny
bells began and ended, but what he has written has
several points which lead me to think that it was from
the bells of this very Cathedral that he was helped to
plan his superb ending to the sonata.'
The Second Sonata, still in one movement, is much
grimmer in character, though also epic in treatment and
is dated 19th July 1919. Bax does not give us a specific
programme, but we might well assume it to be related
to the First World War, or more likely, again the
tragedy of the Easter Rising, which is hinted at in the
folk-like second subject of the first section. The sonata
was first performed by Bax's friend Arthur Alexander
in November that year, though on the manuscript
Harriet Cohen has written a dedication to herself and
when the revised version appeared in June 1920 she
was the pianist. In a letter to Tilly Fleischmann Bax
admitted the Sonata was 'concerned with the warring
forces of light and darkness'.
The sonata, which plays continuously, broadly
subsumes elements of three movements with two new
themes in the middle section and the motif of the long
threatening introduction to the sonata returning to
mark the third. Here, material from the previous two
sections are juxtaposed and the work ends with the
motif from the introduction now in the major, all
passion spent.
The journey from the ominous, foreboding
introduction with its distinctive motif (perhaps a 'fate'
motif) through the heroic first subject, marked
'Brazen and glitteringly' to the contrasted folk-like
second theme, first introduced very quietly, gives the
music an enormous emotional span. Bax launches his
middle section with a typical lyrical reverie marked to
be played 'very still and concentrated' but in the
space of four minutes his tune is itself found to be
heroic, setting the literal return of the sonata's
opening into striking contrast.
By this time we have thoroughly convinced
ourselves that Bax's epic score must reflect the
composer's autobiographical response to the recently
ended war or the Easter Rising, or both. Bax reviews
his themes in his third section, a movement of
conspicuous drama and contrast. Then the tune from
the slow movement returns to be played 'very simply',
and suddenly one begins to wonder if he is more than
hinting at the opening phrase of his song Roundel, at
Chaucer's words 'Your ey-en two wol slay me
sodenly'. Is Bax, who had only recently left his wife
and family for Harriet Cohen, writing a quite different
sort of musical autobiography? Or rather, is he
celebrating the human condition out of his own
experience. The sonata ends as the 'fate' motif from
the introduction returns, briefly threatens, but soon
becomes a distant muttering, as the light and Bax's
vision slowly fades.
Written in February 1916, Dream in Exile:
Intermezzo is dedicated to Bax's piano teacher Tobias
Matthay, and was first championed by Myra Hess.
The manuscript has Bax's first thoughts for the title,
Capriccio and Intermezzo, deleted, the title we know
it by appearing on the printed score in 1918. The piece
was written less than two months before the Easter
Rising in Dublin in which many of his Irish friends
were killed. It seems probable that in retrospect, for
him it became another of those elegiac Irish memorial
pieces which he wrote at this time, Bax dreaming of
his land of hearts content before the catharsis.
The knock-about Burlesque first appeared in 1920
and may well have been written the same year.
Without dedication when it was first published, Bax
later inscribed it to the pianist Iso Elinson, a Second
World War neighbour, when it was reissued in 1945.
In 1920 it was his first work to be issued by his
publisher Murdoch and Murdoch. With its succession
of unequal phrases and rapidly shifting harmony it is
surely a response to what Bax had heard at the
Russian Ballet, which he had worshipped before the
war and which had returned to London late in 1918.
Dated 24th March 1916, Nereid is one of the
several piano pieces Bax dedicated to Harriet Cohen.
First given the title Ideala it acquired its present title
as Bax revised it into the published version which
appeared in 1919. Harriet Cohen played it in her
recital at the Wigmore Hall in June 1920, and this was
probably its first performance. Later she published an
extended account of interpreting the piece in her book
Music's Handmaid, remarking 'Bax has often told me
that he considers his music to be directly derived from
nature. When he wrote this piece . . . he had vaguely
in mind some sort of water nymph of Greek
mythological times.' In a newspaper interview Bax
himself described it as 'nothing but tone colour -
changing effects of tone'.
In January 1915, at a tea party at the Corders, the
nineteen-year-old Harriet Cohen appeared wearing as a
decoration a single daffodil, and Bax wrote almost
overnight the piano piece To a Maiden with a Daffodil;
he was smitten! Over the next week two more pieces
for her followed, the last being the pastiche Russian
vignette In a Vodka Shop, dated 22nd January 1915. It
illustrates, however, Bax's problem trying to keep his
rival lady piano-champions happy, for Myra Hess gave
the first performance at London's Grafton Galleries on
29th April 1915, and as a consequence the printed
score bears a dedication to her.
Lewis Foreman © 2004
Piano Sonata No. 1 in F sharp minor (more info)
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Piano Sonata No. 1 in F sharp minor - 22:28
Piano Sonata No. 2 in G major (more info)
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Piano Sonata No. 2 in G major - 22:57
Dream in Exile (more info)
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Dream in Exile: Intermezzo - 11:50
Burlesque (more info)
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Burlesque - 3:02
Nereid (more info)
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Nereid - 4:45
In a Vodka Shop (more info)
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In a Vodka Shop - 3:59