Rubbra: Violin Concerto, Op. 103 / Improvisations, Op. 89
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Edmund Rubbra (1901-1986) Violin Concerto, Op. 103 Improvisations on Virginal Pieces by Giles Farnaby, Op. 50 Improvisation for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 89...
Edmund Rubbra (1901-1986)
Violin Concerto, Op. 103 Improvisations on Virginal Pieces by Giles Farnaby, Op. 50
Improvisation for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 89
Although he was renowned for his symphonies, concertos
and quartets, the unique compositional gifts of the British
composer Edmund Rubbra sometimes seemed at variance
with the large sectional contrasts and structural symmetries
of the sonata-based forms he composed in. Rubbra drew
perhaps his profoundest inspiration from the polyphonic
music of the sixteenth century and the Baroque eras - he
was a natural composer of vocal motets, of large, breathing
spans of counterpoint. Although a subtle harmonist, the
basic unit of his music is the line, whether for a voice or an
instrument, flexibly moving against and in consort with
other lines. Growth happens in the way these lines extend
themselves, growth of a peculiarly organic, alwaysdeveloping
kind, more resembling the inner life and
progressive metamorphosis of a plant than the formal
architecture of, say, a Beethovenian sonata-movement. It is
no coincidence that the first movement of Rubbra's Piano
Concerto carries the botanical title 'Corymbus', suggesting
a shape peculiar to certain plant forms, nor that he wrote
one of the most valuable short manuals on counterpoint in
the twentieth century.
One might, therefore, expect any work that Rubbra
entitled Improvisation to manifest this quality of free,
formally untrammelled growth to perfection: and so it is
with the Improvisation for violin and orchestra, Op. 89,
composed in 1956 for the Louisville Orchestra of
Louisville, Kentucky, under that orchestra's enlightened
policy of commissioning, giving the première and
subsequently issuing commercial recordings of new works
from leading composers around the world. The world
première was given by Sidney Harth, the orchestra's
leader, during the Louisville Orchestra's 1957 season,
under the baton of their conductor Robert Whitney. The
Improvisation is in fact a substantially recomposed version,
using a smaller orchestra, of a Fantasia for violin and
orchestra that Rubbra had composed in the mid-1930s but
had held back owing to dissatisfaction with its shape and
scoring. The Improvisation opens with an extended solo
for the violin in which, accompanied only by a timpaniroll,
the soloist expounds the main material, growing freely
and spontaneously from the calm initial phrase and its
answer, which between them immediately span nine of the
twelve pitches of the chromatic scale. This long, eloquently
'speaking' line immediately sets the scene for a discourse
at once searching, serious and passionate. This opening is
taken over basically unchanged from the original Fantasia,
but Rubbra was now able to build upon its implications
with a greater sense of direction.
Thus the violin proceeds to explore several of the
motivic elements of the line in partnership with the
orchestra, in a combination of variation and thematic
metamorphosis. The mood is mainly meditative, but apt at
any moment to flare up in sudden ardour or slip into
dreamy fantasy. The tempo quickens into a brief, furious
Allegro, then subsides to the initial Lento with a return to
the opening theme. As a new, contrasting melody, marked
molto cantabile, in suave conjunct motion rather than the
wider leaps of the initial theme, takes over the proceedings,
this section develops into a kind of ardent slow movement.
Before long, however, the stormy faster music returns and
rushes, with solo writing of virtuoso standard, into the
work's climactic outburst, with the opening theme on
winds heard against a reiterated polonaise rhythm in col
legno strings. The contrasting theme, majestically
sostenuto on full strings, leads into a brooding coda where
the violin rhapsodizes against chorale-like wind chords.
The opening theme is heard for a last time shared between
harp and violin, with a closing reminiscence on solo horn.
Rubbra's affection for the music of the Elizabethans
and Jacobeans is displayed in a different fashion in another
work whose title incorporates the term 'improvisation', the
Improvisations on Virginal Pieces by Giles Farnaby,
Op. 50, of 1938-9. Farnaby (c.1563-1640) wrote many
vocal works but is most celebrated for his keyboard pieces.
Rubbra arranged five of these for a Haydn/Mozart-sized
orchestra, double woodwind, two horns, two trumpets,
timpani and strings, at the request of his publishers, who
after his first three symphonies desired a less complex
work that would be comparatively inexpensive to produce
and might be easier to market to a wide audience. Rubbra
had in fact already demonstrated a knack for working
creatively with early-music materials, notably in the
scherzo of his First Symphony, founded on the old French
dance Perigourdine. While some of the Improvisations
adhere quite faithfully to the modest dimensions of their
originals, even observing Farnaby's literal section-repeats,
others use them as a jumping-off point for further
exploration of the material in a more contemporary
context, after the manner perhaps of Stravinsky's
Pulcinella. The opening Farnaby's Conceit is a case in
point. The spell-binding His Dreame, with its haunting
oboe solo and muted strings, establishes a magical sense of
connexion between Farnaby's day and the English pastoral
school of Rubbra's own time. The glinting, capricious His
Humour breaks up its tunes all over the orchestra in teasing
scherzo-style. A solo viola then intones the tune of Loth to
Depart, one of Farnaby's best-known pieces, whose air of
melancholic elegy gains a cumulative intensity from
Rubbra's setting. The final movement, Tell me, Daphne,
treats the eponymous tune to a series of six short and
simple variations of which the last, marked Allegro
bucolico, forms a cheerful finale.
The violin Improvisation of 1956 sometimes sounds
like a study for a full-scale concerto, and indeed only three
years later Rubbra completed his Violin Concerto, Op.
103. While his previous concertos for piano and for viola
had been designated by key, the Violin Concerto discloses
no 'official' overall tonality (in fact the first and last
movements are fairly clearly centred on A and the central
movement on F and C). As his music evolved Rubbra
became increasingly interested in the power of particular
intervals to govern the harmony, while remaining firmly
within the orbit of diatonic tonality. The work was first
performed in February 1960 by the violinist Endre Wolf
with the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Rudolf
Schwarz. As in all the works on this disc, Rubbra's
orchestration is notable for its range of colour and timbre
and his precise judgement of weight and texture, so that the
solo instrument is never masked.
The first movement is one of Rubbra's finest sonata
structures, while showing continuous organic growth
across the formal divisions of exposition, development and
recapitulation. The stern opening theme, which has been
compared in rhythm and interval-structure to that of
Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony, is soon contrasted with a
sweeter, more aspiring theme in woodwind, and these two
ideas, immediately taken up by the violin, provide most of
the movement's material. The formal second subject, in D
major, could be viewed as an extension of the woodwind
theme. There is a quality of passion and seriousness about
the music which is reminiscent of the Bloch and
Shostakovich concertos, but also a very English quality of
serene joyfulness which is very much Rubbra's hallmark.
The development section flows into the recapitulation
without obvious break, and the searching cadenza appears
very late in the movement, just leaving time for a few
abrupt final bars.
Rubbra entitled the slow movement Poema; though no
specific poem is indicated, it seems to have a spiritual
kinship with the slow movement of his Sixth Symphony
(1954), entitled Canto, and which was inspired by lines
from a poem of Leopardi concerning the restorative effects
of a well-loved landscape. This musical 'poem' has two
contrasted themes, expounded by the orchestra and taken
up by the violin, but a powerful unity of mood: a gravely
ecstatic quality of meditation. Calmo and sereno are
characteristic markings, not seriously disturbed by the
march-like tread of the central section, which issues in a
calm dialogue between violin and flute. Only towards the
end does a hint of drama emerge, in throbbing triplet
writing and wide violin leaps, but eventually the solo line
soars calmly, nightingale-like, into the upper air.
The finale has been called a country dance; certainly it
makes clear allusion to folk-music and bagpipe drones. But
this is a very sophisticated dance, teasingly irregular in its
cross-rhythms and changes of metre and with a quality of
blithe formality that harks back to the Farnaby
Improvisations. The tonality here is a bright A major, but
twice, the second time very near the end, a contrasting
theme in the diametrically opposite tonal direction of E flat
minor casts a brief, ambiguous shadow over the
proceedings before this splendid concerto ends decisively
in A major in the highest of spirits.
Malcolm MacDonald
Improvisation for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 89 (more info)
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Improvisation for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 89 - 12:25
Improvisations on Virginal Pieces by Giles Farnaby, Op. 50 (more info)
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I. Farnaby’s Conceit - 3:24
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II. His Dreame - 2:33
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III. His Humour - 2:18
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IV. Loth to Depart - 3:12
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V. Tell me, Daphne - 2:44
Violin Concerto, Op. 103 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 14:36
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II. Poema: Lento ma non troppo - 10:41
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III. Allegro giocoso - 5:12