One of my recent discoveries is
the splendid Concerto for Jazz Trumpet and orchestra by the Scottish
composer Iain Hamilton (1922-2000).
Fellow Scottish writer, Maurice
Lindsay (1918-2009) has outlined some of the musical achievements made during
1958. He considered that is was ‘scarcely [a] significant [year] for new
music…’ He then goes on to enumerate a couple of works that have gained
considerable traction over the last 60 years. His list includes Michael
Tippett’s opera King Priam (not
performed until May 1962), Benjamin Britten’s dream-like Nocturne for tenor,
seven obligato instruments and strings, Witold Lutolawski’s Funeral Music. Other works that made a
first appearance were Luciano Berio’s ‘Differences’ for five instruments and
tape, Ligeti’s Artikulation for tape
and Thea Musgrave’s Obliques as well
as the present work by Iain Hamilton. None of these appear to have maintained
the listeners interest. The most significant event in British music was the
death of Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose long career ended on 26 August 1958. His
powerful Symphony No. 9 in E minor was heard on 2 April 1958 some three months
before the composer’s death.
Iain Hamilton’s usual musical
style is usually deemed to be ‘progressive’, initially utilising serial techniques,
before adapting to a more romantic style in his later career. On the other hand,
Hamilton was no stranger to light music. In 1956, he had composed a delightful
set of Scottish Dances, which
included moments more suitable to smoke-filled New York jazz venues than the
Highland ceilidh. Other lighter fare included the Overture: 1912 (1958) and the
Overture: Bartholomew Fair (1952). The ‘Dances’ and the ‘1912’ have been issued
on White Line CD. However, these have been deleted from the catalogues.
The Concerto for Jazz
Trumpet and orchestra was commissioned by the BBC for the 1958 Festival of
Light Music. The composer was clearly paying homage to the great jazz
trumpeters of the of the 1930s, 40s and 50s. However, only one is acknowledged
explicitly: Ray Robinson. This occurs when the soloist is required to use a
‘Robinson cup-mute’ in the second movement. This now obsolete mute was designed
by Robinson and gives a unique sound.
The work is composed in four
well-balanced movements, although the first and second are played without a
break. The opening of the concerto begins with a ‘medium blues’ section, before
segueing into an ‘allegro: quick bounce.’
The third movement is played ‘lento’ and features a delicious slow blues
theme. The finale is a vibrant ‘allegro’ however, there is a short reprise of
the blues music just before the coda.
The work was premiered at the
Royal Festival Hall on 21 June 1958 the soloist was George Swift, who at that
time was billed as Britain’s answer to Harry James, with the BBC Concerto
Orchestra conducted by Vilem Tausky.
I was unable to locate a review
of this 1958 concert in any of the main broadsheets or contemporary music
journals. However, I did discover a relatively recent performance of the work give
at Glasgow’s City Hall on Saturday 25 June 2011. The soloist was the Norwegian
trumpet player Tine Thing Helseth and
the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra was conducted by their associate guest
conductor, Andrew Manze.
Michael Tumelty reviewed this
concert for the Glasgow Herald (27
June 2011). He considered that ‘clarity
was not enough to deliver Iain Hamilton's Concerto with any conviction,
despite the outstanding playing of Tine Thing Helseth.’ He believed that ‘it is
simply neither a jazz nor
a swing piece; moreover, it needs to be freed from the printed note and given
to a jazz trumpeter
to make it viable in any form.’ I disagree with this suggestion: the work is
perfectly satisfactory as a concerto utilising the ‘swing’ and ‘blues’ style in
this pastiche manner. There is no need to include improvisation as Hamilton’s
instrumentation ably creates the desired effect.
Kenneth Walton (The
Scotsman 27 June 2011) dutifully reported that ‘[the concerto] by the late
Scots composer Iain Hamilton …was surprisingly worlds away from the austere
modernism we generally associate with his music.’ I accept his view that the ‘Concerto
for Jazz Trumpet and
Orchestra was clearly a bit of fun on his part, laced freely with big band
harmonies and a solo line that Harry James would have died for.’ Yet, Hamilton
did take his light music works seriously They are never patronising. Walton
concluded: ‘Helseth played it subtly (a little underplayed at times) and with
an aptly free and easy swing.’
In 2006, trumpet player John
Wallace with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by Simon Wright
issued a recording of Hamilton’s Concerto for Jazz Trumpet and orchestra
on White Line CD (WHL2159). Other works
on this CD include John Carmichael’s (b.1930) Trumpet Concerto (1972), Rutland
Boughton’s (1878-1960) Trumpet Concerto (1943) and Tony Hewitt-Jones’s (1926-88)
Concerto for trumpet and strings (1986).
Reviews of this impressive CD were full of
praise. Jonathan Freeman-Attwood (The
Gramophone, September 2006), considered that the CD presented ‘real performances
- not without blemish, but positive, fun, carefree and bright-eyed.’ Like
virtually every other reviewer, including myself, Attwood feels that ‘Iain
Hamilton's Concerto for Jazz Trumpet is …the pick of the crop where Wallace and
the resourceful BBC Scottish SO switch effortlessly into the groove of late
1950s blues.’
Jonathan Woolf (MusicWeb International, 6 March 2006) in
an extensive review of the work initially wondered why the work was called a
Concerto for Jazz Trumpet; ‘What’s that?’ he mischievously
asks: -
‘Is
it shaped like Dizzy Gillespie’s? Well, I think we know what he means. There
are four brief movements. In the first we get some blowsy Harry James vibrato
getting down with ‘Stormy Weather’, a tune that runs like a spine throughout,
and this is followed by an allegro with big band drumming, hints of Ziggy
Elman, and chances for the soloist to stick in a [Robinson] mute to add colour
and different timbres to the brew. The slow movement has a fine string cushion
and legato trumpet, stretching out, but also undercurrents of unease. The
finale gives us some show band, tempo halving, back beat and a reprise of
Stormy Weather (some kind of ‘in’ joke for the hard-working soloist, one
wonders?).’
Rob Barnett (MusicWeb International, 06 January 2006) finds the Hamilton comes
as ‘a ragingly strange gear-change from fifties [style] light suave (Carmichael’s
Trumpet Concerto) straight into four movements of jazzy scorch, smooch and
swoon. John Wallace and the orchestra do the honours in the Iain Hamilton
concerto with breath-taking abandon. This is [the] renowned controversialist
Hamilton slumming it with death-defying style. There is not a hint of the 1960s
and 1970s Manchester School…Here however Hamilton carries off the act without
an arched eyebrow or a wink. He plays it serious and for me the piece works
resoundingly well. He vies with Gershwin and Bernstein in evocation of hot
summers and the jitteriest of jitter-bugs.’
Finally, Paul Snook reviewing the
CD in Fanfare (July 2006) insisted
that, for him ‘…the highlight of this program is Iain Hamilton's rambunctiously
sleazy concerto for jazz trumpet…’ and ‘thus may very well be the
most distinctive and likable ‘pop’ concerto of its kind in
the trumpet repertoire.’
I have not heard a better example
of a ‘pop’ concerto. It is unbelievable that it is not regularly heard on
Classic FM and in the concert hall.
Hello John France, by pure accident I read your interesting blog article about Iain Hamiltons Concerto for Trumpet while investigating the Third Stream theme. In my opinion Hamiltons work is a (little known) example og third stream in the fifties in spite of the fact that the music is all written out. Therefore the work has things in common with the earlier period of the tens and twenties where classical composers (Ives, Debussy, Milhaud, Stravinsky) used jazz elements and instrumentation in their modern pieces.
ReplyDeleteYou probably know the british saxophonist and composer Tim Garland - but I will just recommend his superb 'Weather Walker' (2018) album which features strings, percussion, piano and saxophone (improvising) in a beautiful and balanced blend.
Best wishes,
Christian Munch-Hansen (Denmark)