Bridge: Piano Music, Vol. 1
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Frank Bridge (1879-1941) Piano Music, Vol. 1 Frank Bridge studied violin and composition at the Royal College of Music where he was a pupil of...
Frank Bridge (1879-1941)
Piano Music, Vol. 1
Frank Bridge studied
violin and composition at the Royal College of Music where he was a pupil of Stanford
from 1899 to 1903. Apart from composition his career embraced performance (he
was the violist of several quartets, most notably the English String Quartet),
conducting (he frequently deputised for Sir Henry Wood), and teaching, Benjamin
Britten being his most renowned pupil. No other British composer of the first
half of the twentieth century reveals such a stylistic journey in his music.
His early works, like the First String Quartet (1906), the Phantasy
Piano Trio (1907), and the orchestral suite The Sea (1910-11),
follow in the late-Romantic tradition bearing a kinship with Brahms and Faure;
subsequently, in the orchestral tone poem Summer (1914), Bridge comes
close to the orbit of Delius. After the First World War, however, his music became
intense and chromatic as in the Scriabinesque Piano Sonata (1921-4). The
radical language of the sonata was pursued in his chamber works of the 1920s, so
that in the Third String Quartet (1926) Bridge rubs shoulders with the
early works of the Second Viennese School. Also to this decade belong two
orchestral masterpieces, Enter Spring (1927), and Oration for
cello and orchestra (1930). These and later works, for instance, Phantasm for
piano and orchestra (1931), and the overture Rebus (1940) languished,
finding little favour either with public or critics, and despite Britten's advocacy,
it was not until the 1970s that Bridge's remarkable legacy began to receive the
attention it deserved.
Bridge was also a fine pianist, and his contribution to solo
works for the instrument date primarily from the first two decades of his
career from 1900 onwards. Up to the First World War much of it was composed in response
to the demand for salon music, which was played by the many skilled amateur
musicians of that time, as well as for professional pianists to include in recitals.
The evocative titles chosen for pieces were often at the behest of publishers
as a sales ploy. Overall Bridge's pieces are marked by his superb craftsmanship
and apart from Faure, Ravel and Debussy influence them too. Occasionally they
are related to larger works that were occupying the composer at the same time. During
the war years Bridge mainly composed smaller works, particularly for piano, as
well as songs, and this seems to be due, in part, to the anguish he felt at the
death and destruction wrought by the conflict. (It is known that he was so
distressed by the war that he would wander the streets by himself at night,
mulling over the horrors.) It was as if he could not muster the necessary
concentration to work on extended pieces, as witnessed by the four-year
gestation period of the Cello Sonata (1913-17). In addition his response
to the war also seems to have triggered a stylistic crisis in his music, and a
need to develop a more radical harmonic voice to express himself. The first
major manifestation of this new style was his most important solo work for piano,
the Sonata (1921-4).
The suite, A Fairy Tale (1917), gives no hint of the angst
that Bridge was feeling about the war. Indeed perhaps these 'once upon a time'
evocations of the stock components of any fairy-tale were for him a means of escape
from the times. The music for The Princess is pert, carefree and
graceful, in contrast to the menacing, ungainly portrait of The Ogre. The
Spell is music of dreamy enchantment with its cascading figure like the waving
of a wand. Finally, the debonair, heroic music of The Prince suggests
that the spell has been broken and that everyone lives happily ever after.
The trio of pieces that comprise The Hour Glass (1919-20)
form a particularly effective sequence built around images of transience.
Bridge's music, especially from the 1920s onwards, inhabits, at times, a
nocturnal world, one of shadows and half-lights as in Dusk. Here fleeting
wisps of melody and a melancholy phrase that turns in on itself evoke a
twilight pall. The shimmering flight of The Dew Fairy provides
translucent contrast, before darkness returns in the rolling waters of The Midnight
Tide that brings to mind Debussy's La cathedrale engloutie. It ebbs
and flows from sombre chords that build to a dramatic climax as the pianist tumbles
down the piano in octaves like foam breaking over a wave. Over a hushed
pedal-point the chords swell again to a further swirling outburst, before
subsiding to a brooding conclusion.
Miniature Pastorals (1917) was the first of three sets under the same title
conceived as pieces for children which in their original edition were
accompanied by line drawings by Margaret Kemp-Welch. In character they are in
the tradition of Schumann's Kinderszenen and are cast in the manner of
Bridge's salon music. The first dwells on a delicate rhythmic figure with a
repeated note, which for Kemp-Welch suggested a girl dancing to a pipe played
by a boy in a tree. Her drawing for the second movement, a wistful waltz,
suggests that the boy and girl have quarrelled, whilst in the last, reconciled,
they stare up spellbound at some unseen wondrous sight in the branches of a
tree to music imbued with innocent charm.
The first two pieces of the Three Lyrics were composed
in 1921 and 1922 respectively and were published as Two Lyrics, with The
Hedgerow added in June 1924, three months after the completion of the ground-breaking
Piano Sonata. Heart's Ease harks back to Bridge's early salon
music and is formed around a descending bell-like tinkling phrase in the treble
and the simple, but warm and reassuring, melodic fragment that follows. Towards
the end there are some luscious harmonic twists before the tintinnabulations
are recalled to round off the piece. Dainty Rogue is an ebullient, humorous
scherzo marked by rapid changes in metre and bravura writing for the
instrument. The Hedgerow is elusive in character with its rapidly
changing musical images and moods. It is far more chromatic in its harmony than
either of the preceding pieces and reflects the stylistic developments Bridge achieved in the sonata.
The Three Pieces (1912) are the earliest works included
here. Of them Columbine and Minuet are in the style of Bridge's
early music. The former, a waltz, has the elegance of Edwardian salon music
with just a hint of sentimentality, although at its climax it seems made of
sterner stuff, while the Minuet was originally composed in 1901, and was
substantially revised in 1912. Romance is predominantly tender in mood, culminating
in two impassioned climaxes.
Composed in 1924 during the months immediately after the
completion of the Piano Sonata, the two pieces comprising In Autumn are
major achievements amongst Bridge's piano music. They clearly are written in
the wake of the harmonic world Bridge had established for himself in the
sonata: the mood of Retrospect is inward-looking, with bleak, lean
textures and an extended sombre chromatic melody which gradually rises inexorably
to two dissonant climaxes. In a letter to his patron Elizabeth Sprague
Coolidge, Bridge commented that he was particularly pleased with the piece. Its
faster companion, Through the Eaves, is a fleeting vision shot through
with rustlings and furtive movements.
At the turn of the years 1913-14, Bridge conceived the idea
of writing a four-movement suite under the title of Four Characteristic Pieces.
He later changed his mind, submitting just the first three pieces for publication
with the title Three Poems (the fourth movement was published two years
later as Arabesque). Two of the pieces indicate connections with contemporaneous
orchestral works, thus Solitude is related to the chromatic harmony of
the Dance Poem (1913), whereas the wistful Sunset shares a
relationship with the first of the Two Poems of Richard Jeffries (1915).
The extended middle movement, Ecstasy, provides a vibrant and passionate
contrast to the pensive moods of the outer pieces.
Andrew Burn
A Fairy Tale Suite (more info)
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I. The Princess: Allegretto con moto - 2:49
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II. The Ogre: Allegro deciso - 1:27
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III. The Spell: Adagio e sostenuto - 4:12
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IV. The Prince: Allegro giocoso - 2:52
The Hour Glass (more info)
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I. Dusk: Molto moderato - 4:59
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II. The Dew Fairy: Allegretto moderato e rubato - 3:48
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III. The Midnight Tide: Molto lento - 5:58
Miniatures (more info)
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I. Allegretto con moto - 2:17
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II. Tempo di valse - 2:09
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III. Allegretto ben moderato - 1:44
3 Lyrics (more info)
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No. 1. Heart's Ease: Andante tranquillo – Lento - 2:34
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No. 2. Dainty Rogue: Molto allegro e vivo - 1:53
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No. 3. The Hedgerow: Allegretto moderato - 4:02
3 Pieces for Piano (more info)
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No. 1. Columbine: Poco lento – Tempo di Valse - 2:55
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No. 2. Minuet: Tempo di Minuetto - 2:04
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No. 3. Romance: Andante molto moderato - 3:57
In Autumn (more info)
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I. Retrospect: Adagio ma non troppo - 5:37
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II. Through the Eaves: Allegro moderato e rubato - 2:41
3 Poems (more info)
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No. 1. Solitude: Poco adagio e molto espressivo - 3:25
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No. 2. Ecstasy: Lento e sostenuto – Allegro con moto - 4:38
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No. 3. Sunset: Adagio e sostenuto - 3:51