Arthur Butterworth died on 20 November 2014. He will be sorely missed by all his friends, colleagues and acquaintances. From a personal point of view he was always most helpful with my enquiries about his music. The essay that follows could not have been written without his considerable help. R.I.P.
Introduction
It
is a commonplace to insist that the ‘Symphony’ was a ‘dead form’ in the mid-twentieth
century. Conversely, looking at the listings for 1964 discloses that a number
of important British composers were producing valuable essays in this
genre. Works written or first performed
in the same year as Butterworth’s Symphony no.2 included Frankel’s Third, Alan Rawsthorne’s
Third, Humphrey Searle’s Fifth, Daniel Jones’ Sixth, and Kenneth Leighton’s
First. The previous year had seen a performance of Robin Orr’s Symphony in One
Movement and Havergal Brian had reached Symphony No. 21 in his extensive catalogue.
Arthur
Butterworth has (to date) composed eight symphonies:-
Symphony no.1 op.15
(1957)
Symphony no.2 op.
25 (1964)
‘A Moorland
Symphony’ for bass solo, chorus and orchestra op.32 (1967)
Symphony no.3
‘Sinfonia Borealis’ op. 52 (1979)
Symphony no.4 op.72
(1986)
Symphony no.5 op.115
(2001-2)
Symphony no.6 op.124
(c 2005?)
Symphony no.7 op.140
(2011)
At
the time of the composition of the Symphony no.2, Butterworth had completed a
number of important works. At the start
of the previous year, 1963, the large-scale Moors
Suite op.26 for orchestra and organ had been performed by the BBC Northern
Orchestra under Stanford Robinson. The
following year, 1964, saw the brass-band version of the composer’s popular The Path across the Moors played by the
Yorkshire Youth Brass Band. Finally, in that same year, incidental music for
the school play The Castle of Perseverance
was heard at Guiseley School, near Leeds.
Genesis
After
resigning his post as trumpeter with the Hallé Orchestra, Butterworth was
involved with music-making in the West Riding of Yorkshire. This included
teaching and conducting for the local education authority. He was also associated
with Ermysted’s Grammar School in Skipton and had recently become conductor of
the Halifax Symphony Orchestra and the Huddersfield Philharmonic Society.
In 1957,
the première of Butterworth’s Symphony no. 1, op.15 at Cheltenham was
attended by Jack Holgate, the secretary of the Bradford Subscription Concerts
Society. This venerable organisation had more than ninety years of association
with the Hallé Orchestra and was planning the celebration of its centenary. Holgate
approached Butterworth after the Cheltenham performance and there and then
commissioned him to write a new Symphony for that centenary. Butterworth told
me: ‘I had almost eight years, 1957 to 1965, to write this work. I had not
realised at that time that the forthcoming 100th season would begin in October
1964 (not 1965!) so I had to get a move on and make sure it was ready in time.’
The composer
explained to me that until his Symphony no.1 (1957) he had been, ‘avowedly,
primarily influenced by Sibelius and the obvious native relationship with Vaughan
Williams and English music.’ As background information to this present work he
recalled a casual meeting with the critic and musicologist Deryck Cooke on the
steps of the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. Cooke had heard that Butterworth
had been commissioned to write a symphony for the 1965 Bradford/Hallé season. The
composer explained to him that it was to be a kind of ‘bi-dedication to the
Bradford/Hallé connection, but also to the Sibelius centenary’. Cooke had responded,
‘Ah! But you should remember 1965 also marks the centenary of Carl Nielsen too!’
Butterworth considered this appropriate: ‘So I did indeed incorporate the
notion of not forgetting Nielsen's contribution to early 20th century symphonic
development. Hence, the Symphony no.2 of mine does certainly acknowledge
something of Nielsen and not just Sibelius: especially the opening of the last
movement, and this I acknowledge unreservedly.’
One interesting anecdote that Butterworth told me
referred to the use of tubular bells in the ‘adagio’. The critic Desmond Shawe-Taylor
had written to him to say that he found ‘the bells distracting…’ Nonetheless
there was a reason. It was the
composer’s custom to walk his dog in Heaton Park, Manchester on summer evenings:
it was near to where he then lived. Butterworth recalled watching the sun ‘dip
westwards behind the wide-stretching parkland and the park bell would sound so
hauntingly.’ It was a ‘peculiarly evocative, romantic scene.’ The composer remarked to me that ‘What is
perhaps never actually ‘said’ by instrumental music (such as a symphony) but is
of course obvious in vocal music which relates a specific story through the
words, is that it can - for the composer - 'tell' - or at least hint at, the
inspiration behind the design of a particular passage. He may never actually
reveal what has motivated or inspired it, but there is often (if not always)
some specific private memory, and so it was with me’.
‘Mr
Manchester’s Diary’ in the Manchester
Evening News (October 30 1964) had provided a chatty approach to
Butterworth’s new work. He begins by
stating that a ‘country dweller…took his dog walking from his home near Skipton
[West Riding]…and wrote a symphony.’ He quoted the composer as saying that ‘I
get all my inspiration at night…every evening I take the dog for a walk through
the fields and lanes and there I find the peace and quiet to concentrate.’ Arthur
Butterworth moved from Manchester to Skipton in September 1962, so both Heaton
Park and the Yorkshire Dales have left their impression on this symphony.
Interestingly, these summertime nightly strolls
with his dog were not in themselves the beginning of the musical inspiration
for this work, but rather it went back more than twenty-five years to 1935
(when Butterworth was nearly 12). It was
a melancholy, rainy summer's evening when his mother died in hospital: being quite
young, he was left in the porters' lodge whilst his father visited his dying wife.
All he heard was the relentless tolling of the hospital bell signifying
'visiting time' was soon to be over. So, inspiration for this present work is a
concatenation of various memories, ideas and impressions.
Analysis
This
essay concentrates on the genesis and reception of Arthur Butterworth’s
Symphony no.2: a formal, technical analysis of this work is not appropriate
here. However, a few details about the construction and progress of the
symphony are of considerable interest. The source of much of this analysis is the
programme notes for the premiere produced by J.H. (Jack Holgate) in
consultation with the composer.
The
Symphony is in three movements: an opening ‘allegro molto’, an ‘adagio’ and a
concluding ‘vivace’. The ‘progression of
the emotional tension’ of the work is likened to the letter “W” ‘with its
various apexes corresponding to varied peaks of tension.’ As a general
structural overview, it is cyclic, with thematic links between the first and
second movements and the second and third.
As The Times (October 31 1964)
reviewer states, it is the ‘identity of thought and idiom which locks the whole
work together.’
The
programme notes stress the fact that there is a strict economy of material used
throughout this work. Reference is made to themes derived from the Symphony
no.1 which are used to create the opening statement of the ‘allegro molto’ in
the Second. Paul Conway, who has made a
detailed study of Butterworth’s music, has proposed that the present work
‘carries on where the volatile finale of the First Symphony left off’. He has suggested that Butterworth realised
that there was ‘previously untapped potential in that seminal work’. Is it that
this present work is deemed to be a ‘sequel?’
The
first bar with its immediate rising glissando of a tritone followed by a long
downward ‘scale’ sets the general mood of this movement. The second major theme mirrors the first with
its rising scale first heard on the clarinet. These themes, after some
development, are used to create what is effectively a scherzo, but without the
expected ‘trio.’ The music does calm down and the opening movement concludes
with a ‘calmer atmosphere’ bringing ‘clarification rather than complication of
the initial material.’
The
slow movement, an ‘adagio’, is clearly the heart of the work, in which the
composer has invested much personal feeling and emotion. This is recognised by
most critics. After a short opening phrase on the strings, the main theme is
presented ‘adagio’ on a solo ‘cello.
This has considerable rhythmic subtlety in its relatively gentle
unfolding. The addition of woodwind and brass bring an intense moment that is intensified
by the use of rising and falling scales.
The main theme of the slow movement is repeated in an augmented version which
has considerable passion. The composer
introduces what is effectively new material in the coda of the ‘adagio’ where
‘a strongly personal feeling of poignancy characterises the mood of resignation
after tension.’ Percussion used here includes tubular bells which reflect the
tolling of the hospital or Heaton Park bell as noted above.
The
finale begins quietly with a short passage played on bassoons and builds up
towards the conclusion of the movement. This theme has dotted rhythms and a
touch of syncopation which imbue the music with a degree of urgency. The
‘vivace’ develops as a ‘moto perpetuo’ although there is a break in the
activity when the oboe hints at a theme derived from the ‘adagio.’ As the music
becomes more expansive, the tonality seems to become more stable: the ‘opening
agitation promises to be resolved into a happy ending.’ The oboe presents a pastoral version of the
main theme whilst the strings give a tranquil turn to this melody. Then the intensity
of the music increases towards the conclusion. The work ends with a ‘whimsical
enigmatic flourish’. J.H./Butterworth notes that ‘solutions to problems are
often transitory rather than final.
First Performance
and Reception
Unusually
for a ‘provincial concert’ there were many journalists present at the première who
were celebrating the Centenary. These represented the national and provincial
press as well as a number of magazines and journals and the BBC. It is strange
that the BBC did not choose to broadcast or record this work.
The
premiere was given at Bradford’s St. George’s Hall on Friday October 30 1964. The concert also included Anton Dvorak’s
Symphony no. 5 ‘New World’ Symphony, the Concerto Grosso no.12 in B
minor by Handel, and the Scherzo from An Irish Symphony by Sir Hamilton Harty. The following day,
a second performance was given in Rochdale at the Champness Hall. The remainder
of that programme was largely similar: I understand that the Handel was swapped
for Nicolai’s overture The Merry Wives of
Windsor. It is significant to note that
Arthur Butterworth’s first concert as a trumpet player with the Hallé was at
Rochdale’s Champness Hall on January 22 1955. (Rochdale
Observer undated
review, probably November 2 1964)
One
major contemporary assessment was in The
Times (October 31 1964) newspaper by their ‘special correspondent.’ He
began by noting that the ‘enterprising committee’ had invited a ‘northern
composer’ to write a new symphony. After
a brief resume of Arthur Butterworth’s career up to that point, he writes that
it was a ‘happy coincidence’ that the first performance of the new symphony should
be given by his former colleagues in the Hallé. He notes that this ‘personal
relationship…showed itself in warm, sensitive playing.’ Musically, he points out that the composer
tends towards harmonic rather than contrapuntal textures. He majors on one of the most common critical
assessments of Butterworth’s’ music – he is ‘refreshingly free from ‘isms’ and
‘alities’ and his music language is strongly tonal.’ It was to be this facet of
the composer’s music that was to lead to him being ignored by the cognoscenti
until relatively recently. The one
negative side to The Times review is
an offhand suggestion that Butterworth’s ‘experience as an orchestral player
has betrayed him into regurgitating much that he has played and heard.’ He thought that the work is quite clearly
influenced by the two dedicatee’s Sibelius and Nielsen; however he felt that it
is easy to determine other sources of inspiration, such as Gustav Holst and
Shostakovich. The writer’s last comment
is to urge the composer to ‘develop a more individual style.’
J.H.
Elliot writing in The Guardian
(October 31 1964) believes that Butterworth’s Symphony reflects more the
‘spirit’ of Sibelius and Nielsen rather than their ‘traditional, but not
conventional, musical outlook’. He points
up the formal principles of the three movement work with a ‘closing section in
the first movement replacing the separate scherzo of classical practice’. Elliot
admits that there are parts of this work that are so Sibelian, especially in
the finale that ‘at moments they hesitate on the verge of actual quotation.’ Yet
the critic is forgiving of this homage and writes that the symphony has ‘no
little personality of its own and a heartening measure of expressive warmth.’
He highlights the ‘originality and fervour’ of the slow movement. Like other critics, Elliot is highly
complimentary of the scoring of this work, especially the ‘adroitness’ of the woodwind
and brass parts; unfortunately he considers that the use of tubular bells ‘sound
a little out of character, not to say rakish.’ He concludes his analysis by
remarking that 'such well-knit and thoughtful music, even though it belongs to
a tradition now in decline, or rather out of fashion, deserves a wider
circulation.’
Michael
Kennedy commenting in the Daily Telegraph
(October 31 1964) believes that this present symphony is a ‘definite advance’
on the first, both in the ‘handling of the material and in a generally more
mature approach.’ He makes a helpful suggestion that clarifies much criticism
of this work: Sibelius and Nielsen have influenced Butterworth ‘not only
musically but ethically in his belief that tonality is not a fully worked-out
mine.’ He adds that it is ‘good to find a composer who realises that he must
communicate with his audience, not blind them with science or perplex them with
nonsense.’
Gerard
Dempsey in the Daily Express (October
31 1964) noted that the orchestra ‘rose spontaneously to join in the applause’.
He quoted the composer saying about the performance ‘It was exactly as I saw
the work. It has been a wonderful night for me.’ Dempsey declared that this ‘deeply felt’ symphony
was ‘cleanly scored, tense, urgent and distinctly short of melody.’
The
Halifax Courier (October 31 1964)
carried an impressive review of this concert.
The correspondent A.W. considered that the performance was ‘obviously
prepared with much thought and care.’ An interesting aside suggests the
composer had told him that this work was ‘like Sibelius’s own Fourth Symphony’
it is in the nature of a ‘protest against the incomprehensibilities of our
present avant-garde in the arts.’ He sensed
that ‘thematically and in playing time, it is a comparatively terse work’ and
there is about it ‘a taut economy of material and expression, a close-knit
texture that puts great emphasis on the values of tonality.’ Interestingly, he believed that the musical
language of the Symphony is both ‘personal and modern’, which is a view that
goes against the grain of other critics who insisted this work to be a little
out of date.
Ernest
Bradbury (Yorkshire Post October 31 1964)
cites a long-running problem in British concert-life: ‘It is something of a
disgrace that… [With the exception of Butterworth] no living composer is
represented in the Bradford Subscription Concerts Centenary season.’ He then
points out that Butterworth’s Symphony no.2 is only ‘brand new… in the
historical sense’. He advocates that ‘musically it is not exactly new, in that
it leans markedly on the examples of earlier composers.’ He believes that the
work is ‘none the worse for that’ and submits that to ‘proclaim, nowadays,
allegiance to two such composers, (Sibelius and Nielsen) constitutes an open
act of defiance against the Establishment (more dreary than many people know)
of the so-called avant-garde serialists’. He concludes that ‘they will be
foolish critics who jump in immediately with the assembly-line opinion that
Butterworth is therefore and necessarily, a mere unimportant reactionary.’
Bradbury
states categorically that the new work ‘shows itself fascinatingly more
interesting than the already admired Symphony No.1’. He adduces three reasons for this opinion.
Firstly that the musical argument utilises a ‘thematic compression’ which
‘argues a more logical and clear-sighted scheme than in the somewhat rhapsodic,
atmospheric… earlier work’. Secondly there is the unusual form, which nods to
Sibelius, and thirdly in the unconventional instrumentation which stems from
Nielsen. It is the ‘symphony’s
underlying sense of unity, its intuitive purpose and its clearly directed
cumulative progress’ that defines its success.
Finally, Bradbury detected some ‘grey, austere colour of the northern
(English) landscape’ in this symphony as well as the ‘North’s hard, unyielding
qualities’.
The
Rochdale concert was reviewed by A.C.H. in the local paper (Rochdale Observer op. cit.) The author
expressed delight at the practical aspects of the performance itself, noting
that it is not often that ‘we get the composer of a work appearing on the
platform when the Hallé Orchestra gives a concert [in the town]…’ He cited the
‘interesting spectacle’ of the composer congratulating the conductor, Sir Adrian
Boult. Condescendingly, he writes that the ‘sight of this novelty did add a
little something extra…the applause accorded was undoubtedly appreciative, as
was the listening’ which was ‘attentive.’ The reviewer noted that there is
‘very little melodic interest’ in the two outer movements, with these being
dominated by ‘percussive rhythms.’ He believed that the ‘lyrical’ central
adagio ‘had a particular appeal of its own.’ A.C.H. reflects that this movement
has ‘a poignancy which appears to spring from some deeply felt spiritual or
emotional experience’. Finally, he notes
the ‘complex’ orchestration and suggests that the influences of Sibelius and
Nielsen can be heard in the brass fanfares and the use of the timpani.
Conclusion
Arthur
Butterworth has suggested to me that the Symphony no.2 as a whole might benefit
from ‘some shrewd revision: especially the fearfully dissonant opening bars’.
Having listened to this work a number of times (albeit on a less-than-perfect
recording) I feel that little needs to be done to make this a valuable and
ultimately successful addition to the British symphonic repertoire. In spite of
the fact that Sibelius and Nielsen are clearly dual influences, this is not a
parody or pastiche of those composers’ music. Arthur Butterworth has a powerful
voice and has composed a profoundly individual work. Paul Conway has suggested
to me that this is a ‘Moorland’ Symphony in all but name, with definite North
Country roots in spite of its part-Scandinavian dedication. There is little
warmth in this work, with the possible exception of the almost tragic ‘adagio’
however, even here the powerful emotion of these bars does not give respite to
the listener. The Symphony is ultimately positive in its effect but this
confidence is hard-won.
It
is unfortunate that Arthur Butterworth is poorly represented on CD. In the
present Arkiv Catalogue there are only seven discs devoted to his music (a
number of other works appear in compilations).
In recent years, three of his symphonies have appeared on disc, with two
versions of the ‘First’ being available.
A selection of orchestral and chamber music is also obtainable on Dutton
Epoch. There is an elusive CD featuring some of Butterworth’s brass band works. A number of private recordings of his music –
often from radio broadcasts – circulate amongst enthusiasts. At present the Symphony no.2 is only
available in an unidentified broadcast performance by the BBC Scottish
Orchestra.
The most
important task at present must be to complete Arthur Butterworth’s cycle of
symphonies on CD.
With
grateful thanks to Arthur Butterworth for much help and encouragement in
writing this article. Also to Paul Conway (by email, 21/08/14) for a number of extremely
helpful insights into this Symphony.
Hi John.
ReplyDeleteI noticed that you are interested in the music of Greville Cooke.
I have come across a signed copy of Greville Cooke's "High Marley Rest" in the Archive - it is signed: "Frederick Moore, with every good wish for 1933, from Greville Cooke."
Thought you might be interested.
Regards.
David R Dell - Archivist/Historian - Musical Heritage New Zealand - dell@clear.net.nz