ARNOLD: Overtures, Op. 8 Nos. 1-6
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Samuel Arnold (1740-1802) Six Overtures, Op. 8 Incidental Music to Macbeth Samuel Arnold was born in London, the son of Thomas Arnold and probably Princess...
Samuel Arnold (1740-1802)
Six Overtures, Op. 8 Incidental Music to Macbeth
Samuel Arnold was born in London, the son of Thomas
Arnold and probably Princess Amelia, Handel's pupil.
He studied under Bernard Gates, a student of John Blow,
at the Chapel Royal and from the mid 1760s he was an
active composer for the summer gardens concerts.
Arnold began his theatrical activities in 1764 and within
a decade established his reputation with works such as
The Maid of the Mill (1765), the first modern English
opera with action-finales, and The Prodigal Son, an
oratorio performed at the Oxford University encaenia in
1773.
At the age of 29, Arnold, in partnership with the
violinist Thomas Pinto, took up the proprietorship of
Marylebone Gardens but despite good quality music
performed there, the owners faced a constant struggle
against financial adversity and strenuous efforts were
necessary to attract the public. Burlettas (Italian comic
operas in translation) were a particular speciality, being
staged in a separate small theatre, and so were Torre's
fireworks displays. François Hippolyte Barthelemon,
one of London's foremost virtuosi (admired by Fanny
Burney's Evelina) was leader of a small but
accomplished orchestra. Arnold retired from
Marylebone in financial ruin when he lost around
£10,000 as a result of embezzlement.
Arnold resumed his professional association with
the patent theatres when, in 1777, he was engaged by
George Colman the elder as composer and music
director of the Little Theatre in the Haymarket. He
composed over sixty stage works over the next twenty
years, some with impressive overtures, such as those for
The Castle of Andalusia (1782) and Turk and No Turk
(1785). From the mid 1780s Arnold was in a position to
combine his summer directorship of the Little Theatre
with several other posts in London, such as organist and
composer to the Chapel Royal (from 1783) and organist
to Westminster Abbey (from 1793). In 1789 he became
conductor of the Academy of Ancient Music and in
1790 founded the Graduates Meeting, a society of
academic musicians that included Haydn among its
associates. From 1786 Arnold was dedicated to editing a
complete Handel edition, 180 parts of which were
completed. He died in 1802 and was buried in
Westminster Abbey.
The Six Overtures, published in orchestral parts by
John Welcker in about 1771, were composed by Arnold
for the Marylebone Gardens. His brand of symphonic
writing, a spirited homophonic idiom with fast tempos,
pleasing tunefulness, striking tutti style and colourful
contrasts, had resonances with gardens' audiences; the
style is recognisably English even if the idioms are
ultimately derived from Mannheim or the symphonies of
J. C. Bach. First movement expositions begin fierily,
taking a picaresque trajectory as they move through a
series of sharply-etched motivic themes linked by active
passage-work as in, for example, Overture No. 4, the
central section of which settles on the relative minor and
a subtle re-working of the third idea before migrating
obliquely to the first and a well-prepared return to D
major. The opening Allegro of Overture No. 2 is a
particularly fine example of Arnold's quirky structural
thinking: the central section starts with the syncopated
opening theme followed by modulatory passage-work
which issues into a new idea to close, while other
expectations are teased in the recapitulation when new
motives playfully replace old. Slow movements are
scored for strings alone, except in the case of Overture
No. 2 which exploits colourful instrumental timbres. All
are within the galant lingua franca and chiefly they are
in duple Andante metre, sometimes sophisticated in
phrasing and texture, but always limited in range and
rhythmic variety, with Overture No. 4 (in triple metre)
elegantly suave. Arnold interestingly favours the
subdominant key for central movements, a practice he
shares with Mozart, among others. Catchy finale-tunes
produce a characteristic English jollity, as, for example,
in the buoyant "hunting" theme of Overture No. 5 and
the John Bull type melodies of Overture No. 6, while
episodes offer brief contrasts with perhaps a breathless
hint of minor mode.
The Incidental Music to Macbeth is one of a halfdozen
Shakespeare pieces by Arnold. The focus of
Arnold's music for the play is Scottishness, with five of
the eight pieces based on Scottish folk-song and two
newly composed in quasi-Scots style. All the music is
intended to engender strong associative qualities with
Scottish feudal society.
George Colman the elder produced Macbeth at the
Little Theatre in the Haymarket on 7th September 1778.
The performance was advertised to include "the original
music composed by Matthew Locke" but Arnold is not
cited. The "original" music referred to was in fact by
Richard Leveridge, who composed it for a new Drury
Lane performance in 1702, but even Boyce's edition of
1770 misattributes the score to Locke. Leveridge's
music is exclusively for the witches and this is the
reason for Arnold's elimination of any reference to the
supernatural. The Haymarket Macbeth was given a
lukewarm reception by the critics. The Morning Post of
8th September 1778 told how Digges as Macbeth had
"botched his lines and ranted at climaxes", Mars Massey
as Lady Macbeth drawled in a "provincial dialect" and
Aickin as Macduff overly wept at Ross's bad news. The
Morning Chronicle of the same day considered the
costumes too "gaudy" for the tragic action and
suggested that the witches paint face wrinkles to look
more haggish; the "witches shewing Macbeth the figures
of the future King through a transparent scene" was
liked and also "the scene of witches, and all the musical
parts, were well given".
Arnold's Macbeth music serves to give a view of the
action, expressing what has happened and to show it in
perspective. The opening military march presents
Macbeth as a soldier, wielding, when we first hear of
him "his brandish'd steel / Which smok'd with bloody
execution" (I.i.17-18). On the other hand, the banquet
minuet in imitation-Scots style, signals the feast as a
symbol of order, against which Macbeth appears
appalled and disorientated by the appearance of
Banquo's ghost (III.iv). Arnold is sensitive to the
meaning of source texts in the Scots songs he employs.
The Birks of Invermay is a spring-song, inviting
comparison with the arrival of Duncan and Banquo at
Inverness. when they construe Macbeth's moral
character in terms of beneficent and procreative nature,
commenting on "the halcyon air" and nesting birds. The
Yellow-Hair'd Laddie (for the end of Act I) is a sweetand-
sour portrait of women, which is here associated
with the presence of Lady Macbeth. The Braes of
Ballenden (for the end of Act II) is a nocturnal, now
marking the murder of Duncan. Lochaber (for the end of
Act III), a song of exile, follows the news of Macduff
and Duncan in England, working for restoration. Having
the innocent Macduff family slaughtered is the low point
in Macbeth's decline, indicating a complete break with
the normal bonds of humanity. The bereaved Macduff,
realising the full import of Ross's bitter news, is
imagined in The Earl of Douglas's Lament (otherwise
known as Lady Randolph's Complaint), a chivalrous
song of piety and farewell. At the end of the play
Macbeth is conquered by the English forces and Arnold,
in an arrangement of Purcell's quasi-nationalistic
'Briton's strike home' from Bonduca (1695), employs
full orchestra in the way he did for the soldierly march
at the beginning.
Polly (1728), sequel to The Beggar's Opera, with
tunes harmonized by Johann Christoph Pepusch to a
libretto by John Gay, was banned by Walpole's
government but Gay's Tory friends ensured that the
printed text sold well; the overture, though mentioned in
the libretto, is missing, and was probably never written.
Almost fifty years later, on 19th June 1777, the opera
was staged at the Little Theatre in the Haymarket. The
libretto was a cut version by George Colman the elder,
with music revised, rescored and partly new-composed
by Samuel Arnold.
The long-awaited Haymarket performance of Polly,
possibly stimulated by a new Drury Lane production
(29th January 1777) of The Beggar's Opera re-scored
by Thomas Linley, was only a fair success. The problem
was partly that Hester Boyd in the title-rôle sang
"horribly out of tune" but more, that Polly was a very
different kind of work: The Beggar's Opera is a
colourful political satire, mainly at the expense of Sir
Robert Walpole, whereas Polly explores the idea of
nature as culture. Set in the West Indies, the heroine
Polly rejects the values of her materialistic society to
live apart from other colonists, sharing the life of the
wilderness with her Indian husband, Cawwawkee.
Arnold captures the shift in perspective between The
Beggar's Opera and its sequel by looking backwards in
the overture and forwards in subsequent instrumental
dances. By composing a medley overture of themes
culled from The Beggar's Opera, Arnold cunningly
recovers the heroine's past while the crisis of her present
is represented in a central suite-like dance of pirates
(during which Cawwawkee is captured); a group of
Indian dances at the end shows in the resolution a
definite step towards reconciliation when doublestopping,
made to sound exotic, celebrates the quest of
spiritual renewal in a savage wilderness. Arnold
acknowledges Polly as protagonist in music by investing
her new-composed songs with a special kind of lyricism.
In his borrowings Arnold creates additional openings for
ironic cross-reference - for example, Polly's lament for
the pirate Morano (Macheath) is set to Arne's pungent
music for Abel's death in the oratorio The Death of Abel
(1744). The first-night critics applauded Arnold's
achievement, especially the overture. The Morning
Chronicle of 20th June 1777 reported "we do not
remember any Overture being more enjoyed" and The
Morning Post of the same day observed that the medley
"airs were arranged and blended with great judgement"
adding "though we cannot but condemn the Doctor's
policy in the playing of the finest tunes out of the
Beggar's Opera, lest a comparison might the more easily
be drawn to the disadvantage of the airs that succeeded
in the new opera".
The thirteen tunes from The Beggar's Opera which
make up the overture to Polly were selected and grouped
by Arnold with particular care. The first six make up a
kind of Allegro exposition, framed by drinking songs
(the first, second and sixth); the first of two inner
"quarrel" songs sharpens the tonality into the dominant
and Macheath's 'dilemma' song, with its raised pulserate,
leads into an accelerated close. The central sections
are reserved for Polly with orchestral tutti now reduced
to strings for her protest song (the seventh) and strings
with oboes for the ruminative 'love' music (the eighth)
placed in the tonic minor. Allegro and 6/8 serve a
bristling 'resolution' of five tunes bound by the theme of
'womankind' (wenching, jealousy, fading beauty); not
even a tonic minor episode checks the teasing comic
tone. Orchestrally, this closing section is like a rondo
alternating tutti with string episodes; the rounding-off
bars connect directly to the cackling quavers in the
finale of Pepusch's overture to The Beggar's Opera.
Although Arnold's overture resembles a structured
"logical improvisation" in three sections its inner fibre is
subtly centred on Polly, who enshrines the main moral
concerns of both parent opera and sequel.
Robert Hoskins
Overture in B flat major, Op. 8, No. 1 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 2:20
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II. Andante - 3:09
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III. Tempo di minuetto - 3:10
Overture in D major, Op. 8, No. 2 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:26
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II. Largo andante - 1:40
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III. Rondo: Vivace - 1:31
Overture in F major, Op. 8, No. 3 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 4:58
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II. Andante - 2:02
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III. Vivace - 2:44
Overture in D major, Op. 8, No. 4 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:14
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II. Un poco andante - 1:57
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III. Allegro - 2:14
Overture in G major, Op. 8, No. 5 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:21
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II. Andantino - 4:41
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III. Allegro - 1:44
Overture in D major, Op. 8, No. 6 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 2:48
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II. Andante - 3:49
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III. Allegro - 4:04
Macbeth [Incidental Music] (more info)
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March for Macbeth - 1:52
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Music Before the Play - Birks of Invermay - 1:43
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The Yellow-Haired Laddie - 4:04
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The Braes of Ballenden - 4:09
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Menuetto to be Play’d at the Banquet - 1:00
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End of 3rd Act – Lochaber - 2:12
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End of Act 4 – The Earl of Douglas’s Lament - 2:00
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The Favorite March in [Purcell’s] Bonduca - 1:16
Polly: Overture (more info)
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Polly: Overture - 5:20