Recently, the American pianist Dr Richard Masters brought to my
attention his splendid 50-minute recital of piano music by John Ireland. And the
good news is that it is available on YouTube.
Richard Masters website
gives all his biographical information, details of repertoire, recitals, a
selection of writings and several audio samples.
Green Ways: I. The Cherry Tree II. Cypress III. The
Palm and May (1937)
Piano Sonata (1918-1920)
‘Chelsea Reach’ (from London Pieces) (1917-20)
Ballade (1928-29)
Piano Sonata (1918-1920)
‘Chelsea Reach’ (from London Pieces) (1917-20)
Ballade (1928-29)
Richard Masters (piano) [49:22]
Note: The Ballade and Chelsea reach were recorded at a
live recital.
The works include some of my favourite
Ireland pieces, including the relatively rarely heard ‘Green Ways’: Three Lyric
Pieces which were composed in 1937. I guess that this work needs most
introduction.
The first piece, ‘The Cherry Tree’ with
its Housman-inspired title, is a little forlorn. ‘Loveliest of Trees’ was one
of Ireland’s favourite poems. Rarely can a meditation on the transience of life
have been presented with such concise, sad and fundamentally beautiful words.
This is perfectly replicated in the music. It originally appeared in 1932 as ‘Indian
Summer’ and was revised for publication as part of Green Ways. For some reason, ‘The Cherry Tree’ was
dedicated to Ireland’s legal advisor Herbert S. Brown; he was a talented
amateur musician.
The second piece, ‘Cypress’, was dedicated
to the composer’s accountant, Alfred Chenhalls. The cypress is associated with
death, the underworld and mourning. It is often found in church graveyards. The
music reflects Shakespeare’s words 'Come away, come away, death /And in sad
cypress let me be laid'. (Twelfth Night,
act ii scene iv). Ireland has created a suitably reflective piece. It was
originally entitled ‘The Intruder’ which may mean that death intrudes upon
life?
The last number of Green Ways is ‘The
Palm and May’ which takes its title from a line by the English poet Thomas
Nashe – ‘The Palm and the May make country houses gay’. I am not convinced that
the music is quite as gay and happy as the title implies: there is certainly a
touch of bitter-sweetness in these pages. It was dedicated to the pianist
Harriet Cohen.
Masters approaches these three pieces
with great compassion and thoughtfulness which echoes the varying, but largely
melancholic mood of the music.
The most significant work on this YouTube
recital is the impressive Piano Sonata (at around 9:16 on this recording). This
hugely demanding work was composed between 1918 and 1920 and is one of the
masterworks of the British (and World) piano repertoire. It is an immensely
powerful sonata that requires deep interpretative skills and a strong
technique. The basic temperament of this work is post-romantic, although there
are moments of pure impressionism and even nods to Stravinsky. The pianism owes
much to Brahms and Liszt, although the complex ‘added note’ harmonies are
entirely Ireland’s creation.
John Ireland once said that the first
movement of his Piano Sonata was about ‘life’, the second was ‘more ecstatic’
and the last was ‘inspired by a rough autumnal day on Chanctonbury Ring &
[the] old British Encampment’. I am not sure that the second movement is
‘ecstatic’ – to me it is introverted and thoughtful.
Any pianist tackling John Ireland’s
Piano Sonata must appreciate the deep mysteries invoked in this work. These
include the ‘supernatural’ impact of the author Arthur Machen on the composer
with the references to Chanctonbury Ring.
Richard Masters approaches this sonata
with great style and understanding: all the facets of Ireland’s art are present
here: ‘…the lyrical, the dramatic, the extrovert and the melancholy – the intense
self-questioning and the open, almost naïve, avowals.’ (Colin Scott-Sutherland,
‘John Ireland: A Life in Music’, The John
Ireland Companion. Boydell, 2011)
I had heard John Ireland’s evocative
piano piece ‘Chelsea Reach’ some time before I first journeyed from Glasgow to
London during the autumn of 1973. To my mind (at that time) this music summed
up all that I imagined this Thames-side location represented. For the record,
this ‘reach’ is the stretch of water between Chelsea Bridge and Battersea
Bridge. It passes Battersea Park, the Royal Hospital and Cheyne Walk, where
Vaughan William once lived. Ever since I first visited this part of the London,
I have never been disappointed. It has remained one of my iconic places in
London to explore, to enjoy a drink in and to simply appreciate. Richard
Masters eloquently captures every nuance of ‘Chelsea Reach’.
The other two pieces (not played here)
in the set of ‘London Pieces’ are thoroughly enjoyable too: ‘Ragamuffin’ is
perhaps a little more of its time, however ‘Soho Forenoons’ is delightfully
evocative of the atmosphere of that fascinating part of London -at almost any
time in its history.
The Ballade for solo piano was composed
around 1928. Although the narrative of the story is never revealed, it clearly
reflects the Machen-esque mood of much of Ireland’s music. It is a dark, lugubrious piece that is
typically austere and uncompromising. There is little warmth in the near
ten-minute duration. After a slow
opening, the music develops an intense idée fixee ‘a wild elemental climax
[follows] in which one senses the participation of unearthly forces.’
(Christopher Palmer, Liner Notes Lyrita SRCD 2277). The final bars do give a
sense of closure. This turmoil, intensity and tentative repose are well-controlled
in this recording by Richard Masters.
The pianist has told me that he thinks
he is the only American pianist to have played an all-John Ireland recital.
Without considerable historical investigation, I cannot prove him right or
wrong. However, I feel that the truth is probably with Masters. Let us hope
that he records many more pieces by John Ireland and his contemporaries
(Farjeon, Livens et al).
The late American pianist Robert Helps, who taught at the University of South Florida in Tampa, was a longtime champion of Ireland's piano music and performed it often. I'm sure he gave some all-Ireland performances. I miss the Masters recital, which has been taken down from YouTube. I found this by seeking a CD of it.
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