I forgot to post this at the time. So here it is a few years late.
I
first came across Basil Deane (1928-2006) when I discovered his study of the
great French composer Albert Roussel. It was based on his doctoral thesis. At
present it is still quoted in most bibliographies of the composer as being a
seminal work. Certainly, it guided me in my exploration of this fascinating
music and for that I am eternally grateful. Other books from his pen included
important monographs on Cherubini and Alun Hoddinott.
Basil
Deane was born in Ulster and spent most of his working life in a trail of
academic appointments including Professorships of Music at Sheffield,
Manchester and Birmingham Universities. He was Director of Music at the Arts
Council of Great Britain during the late nineteen-seventies. His activities
were not limited to the United Kingdom. Basil Deane was the first Principal of
the Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts, and had held office in the University
of Melbourne. He was also a prolific
broadcaster on radio and television. In his final years, Basil Deane lived in
Portugal and was involved with local music-making.
The
present CD is a tribute featuring music composed ‘in his memory for a concert
at the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester’ which was given in September 2007. The
main thrust of this tribute is settings of songs by Deane’s ‘beloved’ poet W.B.
Yeats. However non-vocal works are also included.
A
word of warning. I believe that all the pieces on this disc are worthy of the
listener’s undivided attention. Please approach them individually: do not just
play-through the CD from end to end.
The
opening piece on this CD reveals another facet of Basil Deane’s achievement –
that of a composer. The composer Raymond Warren notes that at the time of
Deane’s death, he was working on a set of songs for soprano, recorder and cello
to texts by Yeats. The manuscript was presumed lost, but subsequently turned up
amongst his papers. Warren has ‘realised’ the songs by completing the
accompaniment and making a few minor changes to the vocal line. It is not mentioned how many poems Deane
originally planned to set although two have been completed here – the eponymous
‘The Rose Tree’ and ‘I am of Ireland.’ A recurring theme of this CD is the
timelessness of much of the music: it is difficult to apply any kind of stylistic
or analogous label to describe this music. Certainly these spare, Spartan
settings have a lilt of Irish folksong seen though the prism of an almost atonal fragmented sounding
accompaniment. They are fine examples of song composition.
I
found Anthony Hedges contribution a little unbalanced. I think it is the
scoring that causes this issue. Each of the four songs has a different
accompaniment – 1) recorder 2) cello 3) recorder and cello and 4) recorder,
cello and piano. I accept that the musical reason for this is to underscore the
concept of ‘change’ that the composer has found in the four poems by W.B.
Yeats. The journey would appear to be from innocence to experience, hence the
‘building up’ of forces in the accompaniment. That said, these are attractive
songs that are expressive, moving and vocally challenging. The four poems set
are ‘To a child dancing in the wind’; ‘O Do not love too long’; ‘Sweet Dancer’
and ‘The Cat and the Moon’. No date is given for this work in the liner notes.
John
McDowell was born in Armagh City in Northern
Ireland in 1935 and subsequently studied music at The Queen's University of
Belfast. His tutors there included Raymond Warren for composition. He was Head
of Music at Stranmillis University College, Belfast, for seventeen years, and
founded and directed the Stranmillis Singers and the Stranmillis Operatic
Society. He has broadcast regularly as pianist and conductor, and continues to
teach piano. His compositions include chamber music, choral pieces and songs, and
works for piano, as well as music, both original and arranged, involving
recorders.
McDowell
has managed to capture the mood and spirit of the landscape in his short
setting ‘On the Sussex Downs’ for soprano, recorder and cello. The text set is
by the American poet Sara Teasdale. The composer has noted that Basil and his first
wife Norma spent a number of years living in this locality. The music is
utterly simple (in the best possible sense) developing a sense of spaciousness
appropriate to the landscape. There is nothing ‘simple’ about the virtuosic
vocal line, which perfectly exploits Lesley Jane Rogers’s high tessitura.
Elizabeth
Poston is a composer who only occasionally crops up in discussions of British
music – which is a pity. Encouraged by Peter Warlock and Ralph Vaughan Williams
she made a significant contribution–especially with her incidental music for
radio broadcasts, vocal pieces and a deal of chamber works. Unfortunately,
where she is still recalled it is for her one carol ‘Jesus
Christ the Apple Tree.’ The ‘Concertino da Camera on a theme of Martin Peerson’
is a major work by any standards. It is scored for recorder, oboe d’amore,
gamba and harpsichord. I guess that the listener may suspect that this work is
going to be ‘pastiche’: nothing could be further from the truth. Poston has
certainly used gestures derived from baroque and sixteenth century music.
However, she is a child of her time and has introduced a variety of textures and
harmonies from the neo-baroque music that was in the air at the time of writing
– such as Stravinsky’s ‘Dumbarton Oaks’ (1937-8). It is interesting that Poston was a gifted
harpsichordist and had played Walter Leigh’s Harpsichord Concerto (1934) on a
number of occasions.
I struggled with Geoffrey Poole’s ‘After Long Silence’ for
soprano, recorder and cello. He makes use of declamatory vocal style that
appears to detract from the text. The accompaniment is fragmented and
disjointed and makes use of a number of ‘novel’ instrumental effects. Yet there
is depth and a power in this setting that transcends my reservations and makes
an appropriate memorial to Basil Deane and to the composer’s [Poole] late wife.
Perhaps I just need to hear this work a few more times?
I
found John Joubert’s setting of A Woman
Young and Old, Op. 162, for soprano, recorder, cello and harpsichord much
more approachable. What impressed me with this cycle was the composer’s ability
to bring considerable diversity and variety to what is a series of strophic
settings. The poems, by Yeats, are themselves written using stanzas, regular
metres and rhyming schemes. The cycle
explores ‘the experience of love as known to youth and age.’ It is beautifully
written and makes effective use of the accompaniment which is varied in every
detail.
Sir
John Manduell chose to set part of one of Yeats’ ‘playlets’ as his tribute to
Basil Deane. In this case ‘Calvary’. The
play was written during turbulent times in Ireland and depicts Christ dreaming
of his Passion and attempting to come to terms with the existentialist fact
that He is alone in the Universe. In spite of His sacrifice He has been
rejected. The work is scored for
soprano, recorder, oboe, violin and cello.
I find it an introverted work that is inherently depressing. The
accompaniment is integral to the entire construction of the work. The composer
has made use of some excellent word painting. For me, there are echoes of the
bleakness of Peter Warlock’s masterpiece, The
Curlew. This is a work that has been evacuated of any warmth or hope. Yet, this
is effective and the music is in perfect equilibrium with the text. A
masterpiece.
The final work on this disc is the remarkable Una and the Lion, Op 98 by Lennox Berkeley. It is one of the
composer’s final works. This cantata was commissioned by the recorderist Carl
Dolmetsch and was first performed at the Wigmore Hall in March 1979. The text
is derived from Edmund Spenser’s ‘The Fairy Queen’ (Part 1, Canto 3) and describes
an incident between the young queen and a lion. Initially the lion’s intention
is to eat the girl, but instead he is ‘charmed’ by her and ‘befriends her.’ The
words are truly beautiful and bring a tear to the eye (‘Still when she slept,
he kept both watch and ward/And when she waked, he waited diligent). Berkeley’s
music is the perfect compliment to this text. The musical language seems to me
to be timeless. Peter Dickinson has noted that Berkeley admitted to struggling
with the ‘early’ music instrumentation but this does not show in the finished
work. This is my favourite piece on this CD.
I
have reviewed a number of CDs featuring the beautiful voice of Lesley-Jane
Rogers and needless to state, she excels herself in these challenging works.
Again, I need make no special pleading for the major contribution made by John
Turner. He not only plays on most of the tracks but has acted as the ‘impresario’
for the genesis of the disc. As always, his playing is stunning. The other
soloists are equally talented and make a major contribution to the music on
this CD. The liner notes are excellent, with short but pertinent programme
notes on all the works. There are good mini-biographies for the performers.
Included in the booklet are the texts to the songs by W.B. Yeats, Edmund Spenser
and Sarah Teasdale.
Altogether
this is a superb CD. I am surprised that reviews of this album seem few and far
between. I was impressed by virtually every work on this disc and hope that
they will find a suitable place in the repertoire of the artists concerned and
venture out into the wider world.
Track Listing:
Basil DEANE (1928-2006) /Raymond WARREN (b.1928) The Rose Tree,
for soprano, recorder and cello (c.2007)
Anthony HEDGES (b.1931) Four Poems
of W. B. Yeats, for soprano, recorder, cello and piano (?)
John McDOWELL (1935) On the Sussex Downs, for soprano, recorder and cello (?) Elizabeth POSTON (1905-1987) Concertino da Camera on a Theme of Martin Peerson, for recorder, oboe d'amore, gamba and harpsichord (1957)
Geoffrey POOLE (b.1949) After Long Silence, for soprano, recorder and cello (2007)
John JOUBERT (b.1927) A Woman Young and Old, Op. 162, for soprano, recorder, cello and harpsichord (c.2007)
John MANDUELL (b.1928) Verses from Calvary for soprano, recorder, oboe, violin and cello (2007)
Lennox BERKELEY (1903-1989) Una and the Lion, Op. 98, for soprano, recorder, gamba and harpsichord (1978)
John McDOWELL (1935) On the Sussex Downs, for soprano, recorder and cello (?) Elizabeth POSTON (1905-1987) Concertino da Camera on a Theme of Martin Peerson, for recorder, oboe d'amore, gamba and harpsichord (1957)
Geoffrey POOLE (b.1949) After Long Silence, for soprano, recorder and cello (2007)
John JOUBERT (b.1927) A Woman Young and Old, Op. 162, for soprano, recorder, cello and harpsichord (c.2007)
John MANDUELL (b.1928) Verses from Calvary for soprano, recorder, oboe, violin and cello (2007)
Lennox BERKELEY (1903-1989) Una and the Lion, Op. 98, for soprano, recorder, gamba and harpsichord (1978)
Lesley-Jane
Rogers (soprano) John Turner (recorder )
Richard Simpson (oboe) Richard Howarth
(violin) Richard Tunnicliffe (viola da gamba) Jonathan Price (cello) Ian
Thompson (harpsichord & piano)
PRIMA
FACIE PFCD005
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
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