Bax: Symphonic Poems
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Arnold Bax (1883-1953) Symphonic Poems The son of cultured and well-to-do English parents, Arnold Bax was born in Streatham but spent much of his childhood...
Arnold Bax (1883-1953)
Symphonic Poems
The son of cultured and well-to-do English parents,
Arnold Bax was born in Streatham but spent much of his
childhood in Hampstead, where the family later settled,
taught at home by a private tutor and strongly influenced
by the cultured and comfortable environment in which
he found himself. His early interest in music persuaded
his father, a barrister, to allow him to enter the Royal
Academy of Music in London at the age of seventeen.
There he became a piano pupil of Tobias Matthay, while
studying composition under the Wagnerian Frederick
Corder.
In 1902 Bax came across the poem The Wanderings
of Usheen (Oisin), by the Irish poet W.B.Yeats, and
discovered in himself a strong Celtic identity, although
racially descended from a family long established in
East Anglia. He and his brother, the writer Clifford Bax,
made their first visit to Ireland and were captivated.
Here they established themselves for a time, associating
with leading figures in Irish cultural life, while Bax
himself won a reputation as a poet and writer, assuming,
for this literary purpose, the name Dermot O'Byrne and
studying Irish legend and the old Irish language. A visit
to Russia with a Ukrainian girl that he had met in
London and her Italian friend, introduced a further
influence to his cultural formation. While his pursuit of
the Ukrainian girl came to nothing, he was able to
absorb something of the spirit of Russian music, secular
and sacred, and was dazzled by the glories of the
Imperial Ballet, as he was to be by Dyagilev's Ballets
russes on his return to London. His return also brought
marriage to the daughter of the then distinguished
Spanish pianist Carlos Sobrino and the present of a
house from his father. Bax, however, could not settle in
London. Before long the couple had rented a house in
Ireland, and then returned to England, living in various
places, but eventually separating, thereby allowing Bax
to pursue his own musical and amorous ventures in a
measure of freedom. His prolific career reached its
creative height in the years up to 1930, the period in
which the present tone-poems were written. He was later
appointed Master of the King's Music, a position illsuited
to his talents and temperament, which
nevertheless allowed the composition of a Coronation
March in 1952. He died while staying in Ireland the
following year.
Tintagel owed much to Bax's relationship with the
young pianist Harriet Cohen. In the late summer of 1917
they had spent a few weeks on holiday in Cornwall at
Tintagel. The resulting tone-poem, dedicated to her, was
to become the most popular of all Bax's compositions.
For a performance in Leeds in 1922 Bax provided a
programme note, in which he declared his intention as
'simply to offer a tonal impression of the castle-crowned
cliff of ... Tintagel, and more especially of the long
distances of the Atlantic, as seen from the cliffs of
Cornwall on a sunny, but not windless, summer day.' He
had in mind, too, the legendary associations of the
ruined castle, the stories of King Arthur and King Mark,
of Tristan and Isolde. The first theme in the brass seems
to represent the castle, while the following string melody
suggests the expanse of the ocean. In a more turbulent
section the historical events associated with Tintagel are
reflected, leading to a climax in the tumult of the sea,
which subsides, leaving the castle 'still proudly fronting
the sun and wind of centuries'.
An earlier work, The Garden of Fand was
completed in 1916, described by Bax as the last of his
Irish works. In his introduction to the published score he
explains that the garden of Fand is the sea. The picture
at first is of a calm sea, over which a small ship sails into
the sunset, to be tossed by a wave onto the shore of
Fand's miraculous island. There the voyagers are caught
up in the endless revelry of the place. Fand sings her
song of love, enchaining the hearts of her hearers for
ever: there is dancing and feasting, and then the sea
rises, to overwhelm the island, leaving the immortals to
ride on the waves, laughing at the mortals drowned in
the depths of the ocean. Twilight falls, the sea grows
calm again and Fand's garden is seen no more. The story
of Fand is part of the saga of Cuchulain, the great hero
of Irish legend.
The tone-poem The Happy Forest was finished in
short score in May 1914. Bax orchestrated the work in
1921, dedicating it to the conductor and composer
Eugene Goossens, who conducted the first performance
in London in July 1923. Described in its title as Nature
Poem, the work has a literary source in a prose-poem by
Herbert Farjeon, a contribution to the quarterly Orpheus,
edited by Clifford Bax. The Farjeons were neighbours
and friends of the Baxes in Hampstead and Herbert
Farjeon won a considerable reputation as a drama critic
and as a writer of revue sketches. Here, however, he
provided a pastoral scene that almost suggests the world
evoked by Mallarme and Debussy. The writer is lying in
woodland, surrounded by wild flowers, observing a
clearing where, at noon, two shepherds compete in their
verse, one with another, in praise of their beloved, a
scene recalling the classical eclogues or bucolics of
Virgil or Theocritus. A third shepherd appears, awarding
one of the contenders the victor's garland and playing
his pipe. A satyr, perhaps Pan himself, appears, dancing
and leading the shepherds, joined by one figure after
another, until the procession dances away into the
distance. Herbert Farjeon's prose-poem is quoted in full
in the authoritative study of Bax by Lewis Foreman.
Bax completed The Tale the Pine Trees Knew
towards the end of 1931 and the work is a reflection of
the composer's association with Scotland. In his own
programme note on the work he writes that he had been
'thinking of two landscapes dominated by the pine trees
- Norway and the West of Scotland - thinking, too, of the
Norse sagas and of the wild traditional legends of the
Highland Celt', but continues to disclaim any intention
at direct programme or narrative. The main theme is
given to the brass, after the scurrying strings have
suggested something of the wind sighing through the
trees. There is a slower central section before a build-up
to the return of the principal theme, leading to the final
tranquillity of a violin solo, as the Celtic mists gather
once more.
The evocative November Woods was completed in
1917. Bax insisted that the work was not to be taken as
a mere depiction of a wood in the Chilterns in late
autumn, dank and stormy, but rather as a reflection of his
own troubled experiences of the period, with the second
theme suggesting a feeling of happier days in the past.
The main theme forms the substance of the first part of
the tone-poem, its varied textures leading to a second
theme, after the curious rattle of dry sticks from the
cellos, briefly marking the passage that, with its oboe
melody, immediately precedes this Andante con moto.
Here there is a melody for cor anglais, bassoon and
viola, coloured by the sounds of the celesta and
mounting to a climax of feeling. A solo violin is heard,
followed by four violins and then by eight, in a
variegated texture that continues to suggest the changing
weather of a winter scene, as the wind blows, bringing
the stillness of icy cold. There are broad elements of
tripartite sonata-form in the structure of the work, with
the return of the earlier material, in changed
instrumentation, leading to a gentle conclusion, as the
sound of the bass clarinet fades away to nothing.
Keith Anderson
Tintagel (more info)
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Tintagel - 14:33
The Garden of Fand (more info)
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The Garden of Fand - 16:32
The Happy Forest (more info)
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The Happy Forest - 9:39
The Tale the Pine-Trees Knew (more info)
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The Tale the Pine Trees Knew - 16:38
November Woods (more info)
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November Woods - 16:48