In
2007 Dutton released a CD of violin and piano music by Cyril Scott that
included a number of his shorter essays in this medium alongside the major,
mature Sonata Lirica. Some three
years later Naxos has just issued a further three Sonatas from both ends of the
composer’s creative life. Nothing is said on the CD cover (or elsewhere) as to
whether this is a ‘first volume’ or whether it is simply a one off. Yet one
thing is clear – on the basis of the recorded music presently available for
violin and piano from Scott’s pen, we desperately need to complete the canon,
as it were. Two major sonatas remain unrecorded alongside the two Sonnets, the Irish Suite, Cherry Ripe and the Irish air Gentle
Maiden. Let us hope that these pieces will be forthcoming. Meanwhile the
three Sonatas presented in this CD are all important contributions to the
genre.
The
First Sonata was composed in 1908 and was premiered in March of that year. It
was dedicated to the composer Ethel Barns. This is a large four movement work
that lasts for nearly half an hour. At
the time of its performance it was regarded as an extremely advanced and
technically challenging work. It is full of big themes that are marshalled with
skill and power. Typically the shifting harmonies used in this work are
gorgeous – some reviewers have suggested that parts of this work are ‘Delian’
in their mood.
The
first movement is tightly controlled, in spite of often being rhapsodic in mood.
The music is not written in a formal sonata-form as there is no recapitulation
of the two main themes. In fact, after the development section the music moves
immediately to a powerful and imposing coda.
The
‘andante mistico’ is exactly that: it is deliberately unfocused music that
creates an impressionistic mood that captures the imagination in spite of the
fact that it reminds the listener of a number of composers including Ravel,
Ireland and Delius. Yet this is beautiful music that remains in the mind long
after the work has concluded.
Eaglefield
Hull has noted that the third movement, which is really the ‘scherzo’, has been
likened to the ‘playfulness of monkeys in a tropical forest.’ It is not a
metaphor that strikes me as being pertinent, save that it does highlight the total
contrast between this music and the preceding ‘exotic melancholy’ of the second
movement. However, monkeys of not, the ‘allegro molto scherzando’ is exhilarating
music that balances fine violin playing with piano music that includes
glissandi and spread chords. There is a reflective middle section that nods
back to the previous movement; however this does not last long, before the exuberant
music returns and brings this short scherzo to a rollicking end.
The
final movement is similar to the first in that it is composed in a modified
sonata form: it has two contrasting themes and once again dispenses with a
formal recapitulation. These subjects are developed with care and skill,
providing music that never loses interest.
This
Sonata is a deeply felt work somehow manages to balance feelings of highly
charged emotions with a sense of resignation. Somehow Cyril Scott has, in this
Sonata managed to square that particular circle.
The
second piece on this CD is subtitled Sonata
Melodica. This three movement work was composed in 1950 and was first
performed at the Music Teachers Association Concert in London the following
year. The conventional wisdom appears to be that this piece, by definition is
more relaxed than much of Scott’s chamber works. However, I have listened to
this sonata twice over and I do not really feel that it is particularly less
intense or involved than other works of this period. In fact, the melodic and
harmonic resources used are both complex and at times aggressive. Yet, there
are moments when a filigree of magic takes to the air. Certainly, the first
movement, which is nearly as long as the second and third combined, manages to
present a huge contrast in emotional resources. On face value the ‘adagio ma
non troppo’ would seem to be reflective and ‘pensive’ but even here there are
attempts to destroy the mood by the use of forceful piano chords that dispel
the enchantment. However the serenity finally wins over and brings this
movement to a quiet close. This mood of tranquillity is shattered by the
dynamic ‘allegro vigoroso’, that balances a well-crafted toccata-like melodic
line with something a lot wilder and perhaps improvisatory. The conclusion of
this movement and the work is positive, but somewhat disturbing. The calm of
the last bars of the adagio are not reiterated.
The
latest piece on this CD is the Third Violin Sonata, written in 1955 when the
composer was 76 years old. It certainly cannot be seen as the work of an
elderly man at the end of his composing career. (In fact Scott was to live and
compose until he was nearly ninety years old)
From
the opening unaccompanied violin statement this work unfolds its argument in a
lyrical, but much more astringent manner than the previous two Sonatas. The
programme notes suggest that in spite of the first movement being signed
‘tranquillo’ the music gains a darker colouring and ‘expressive fervour.’ Here
and there pastoral phrases ease the tension but never entirely dissipate the
concentration of the argument. The intensity is relaxed a little as the violin
recollects earlier material, before bringing the movement to an ‘impassioned’
close.
The
second movement, a ‘pastorale: andante amabile’ is described as ranking
‘amongst the most lilting and unaffected in all Scott’s chamber output.’
Certainly, this music is in total contrast to the previous movement. However,
the musical material is not in any way ‘typically’ pastoral: this is not a
sunny landscape in the Home Counties, but something just a little bleaker. In
fact, this is deeply introspective music that haunts the listener.
The
final Rondo Capriccioso is in complete contrast, yet this is not a jolly rondo
that casts care to the winds. It is an intense piece that balances a vigorous
tune with a ‘secondary theme [that] brings a measure of calm’ but never manages
to raise the largely dark tones of this movement and work.
All
the music on this CD is played with conviction and sympathy. To my knowledge,
there are no other recordings of these three Sonatas available for comparison;
however my impression is that these works are given an absolutely ideal
performance.
The
sleeve notes are well written by Richard Whitehouse and provide sufficient
information for listeners to appreciate this music. Apart from a few pages about
the First Sonata by A.Eaglefield Hull in his 1918 study of the composer, there
is virtually nothing written about these works: there is a need for a major
study of the music of Cyril Scott. When this book is eventually written it will
be discovered that Scott’s music developed in a very subtle but quite definite
manner over the years of his composing life. There is also a tension between
his art music and his more commercial pieces: there is a huge difference
between the potboilers such as Rainbow
Trout, Lotusland and the Irish Reel and the slow movement of the
Third Violin Sonata. However, great as the differences may be, they are clearly
by the same composer.
Finally,
these three Sonatas are all important and rewarding pieces that deserve to be
in the repertoire. I have a personal preference for the ‘capricious and
ruminative’ First Sonata; however, the other later works are both absorbing and
demanding. The Second is a little more ‘relaxed’ in mood whilst the last is
‘one of most inventive works from Scott’s later years’.
Track Listing:
Cyril SCOTT (1879-1970)
Violin Sonata No. 1, Op.59 (1908)
Sonata Melodica (1950)
Violin Sonata No. 3 (1955)
Clare Howick (violin); Sophia Rahman (piano)
NAXOS 8.572290
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published