I mentioned in
my New Year (2018) post that I had never come across the Irish composer, A.J. Potter.
I promised a further exploration of his music in a later submission.
The piece of
music that first struck me was his gorgeous Rhapsody
under a High Sky which was included on an interesting Marco Polo CD
released in 1996. The Rhapsody was
the only piece by Potter on this disc of ‘Romantic Irish Music’. Other works
included Three Irish Pictures by Gerald Victory, Padraig O’ Connor’s
Introspect, John Larchet’s Nocturne for orchestra ‘By the Waters of Moyle,’
Arthur Duff’s Echoes of Georgian Dublin and Sean O Riada’s The Banks of Sullane. I found all these pieces
attractive, enjoyable and often quite moving. They deserve the attention of
music lovers, especially those with a taste for romanticism and impressionism.
A.[rchibald]
J.[ames] Potter was born in Belfast on 22 September 1918 and died at
Greystones, County Wicklow on 5 July 1980. In his early years he moved to Kent
where he was brought up by relatives. Potter gained entry to the choir school
at All Saints, Margaret Street in London and subsequently to Clifton College in
Bristol. He won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music, where he was a
pupil of RVW. After war service, Potter moved to Dublin where he was Vicar
Choral at St Patrick's Cathedral. In
1953, he was awarded a Doctorate of Music from Trinity College. For much of his
career he was Professor of Composition at the Royal Irish Academy of Music in
Dublin, retiring from this post in 1973. A.J. Potter died on 5 July 1980, aged only 62
years.
In 1951, Radio
Éireann had offered the Carolan Prize
to encourage native Irish composers. This was for a short orchestral work that
would be performed by the Radio Éireann Symphony Orchestra. The prize money was
£100 and the competition was adjudicated by Sir Arnold Bax. Potter submitted
the present Rhapsody as well as a
humorous Overture to a Kitchen Comedy.
He won first prize.
It has been suggested
by Patrick Zuk in his 2007 thesis ‘A.J. Potter (1918-1980): The career and creative achievement of an
Irish composer in social and cultural context’, that the musical material
of the Rhapsody may have originated
in student compositions prepared for RVW at the Royal College of Music between
1936-8. There is no proof of this: no sketches have survived.
The CD liner
notes advocate that the inspiration of the Rhapsody were the paintings of
Belfast-born Paul Henry (1876-1958). According to Artnet, Henry’s work displays ‘inventive landscape paintings: lush
vistas of the West of Ireland, replete with towering cumulonimbus clouds and
calm lakes and channels surrounded by rural villages, landscapes, and geography
endemic to …[Ireland]. Artistic influences included Jean Francois Millet, Paul
Cezanne and Paul Gauguin. Also, critical to his style, was a period of study at
James McNeil Whistler’s studio in Paris, during 1898.
Back to
Potter’s Rhapsody under a High Sky. If
the putative listener needs any recommendation it is that Potter was, as
mentioned above, a student of Ralph Vaughan Williams. The present work has
echoes of the elder composer, most especially of his In the Fen Country, The Lark
Ascending and the Norfolk Rhapsodies.
On the other hand, Potter does not appear to quote any actual folk-song,
although there are modal inflections and the melodies do have the sweep and flexibility
of folksong.
In a ‘draft’
programme note, cited in Zuk (op.cit.) the composer wrote that the Rhapsody ‘pictured
the idyllic beauty of Irish scenery. Particularly that of Connemara, Achill and
the west, where the characteristically Irish high sky, blue mountains, white
cottages and wind-ruffled waters were so effectively captured in paint and on
canvas by that prince of landscape painters, Paul Henry.’
Potter then remarks
on the formal style of the music. 'It is a tone-picture where the ‘basic format
of melody, trio and melody is prolonged and concluded by a rhapsodical violin
solo whose soaring notes carry the [mind], ear and eye across that ruffled
water, over the blue mountains and into the fading distance of the high Irish
sky.’
Musical tropes
in the Rhapsody include parallel triadic motion that immediately reminds the
listener of Vaughan Williams’ Pastoral Symphony with the clashes presenting a subtle
bitonality. The orchestration is effective, with some beautiful Debussy-like
moments for woodwind and muted strings.
Bax, in a note
to the composer, suggested that Potter may come to feel that the work was too
long. Listening to this piece in 2018 has the opposite effect on me: I wish
that this beautiful music would go on forever. It seems to sum up the Irish
Landscape with a senstive poetic response to it.
A.J. Potter: Rhapsody under a High Sky for orchestra
can be found on Marco Polo 8.223804: it has been deleted from the catalogue as
a CD. However, it is available from Amazon as a download and as streaming. It
is also included in Naxos’ own Music Library.
Thanks for writing about this piece that you just discovered. Your thoughtful, sensitive listening and the research you undertake to flesh out the composer and the composition are a model for music writers.
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