When I was looking through some old posts on my Land of Lost Content Blog I found that
in 2008 I had posted this review originally published on MusicWeb International.
On my blog, it had become corrupted with some missing text and the fonts
lacking uniformity. I have no hesitation in posting this again. I have
corrected a few typos and matters of style but have not changed the content or
sentiment of the review.
I was so delighted when I heard
that Lyrita were resurrecting these recordings. It is a long time since I last gave
my vinyl recordings of these pieces a spin and it is great to hear them again.
I live in hope that it will not be too long before the remaining mono
recordings in the Lyrita archive appear on CD. [This has happened! 2018]. Meanwhile,
Iris Loveridge provides the listener with a thoroughly enjoyable and often
moving account of some fine but neglected piano music.
The Irish Love Song was composed in 1926 and was based on a genuine
folksong. Moeran rarely used ‘real’ folksongs, however this piece is one two
such arrangements – the other being ‘The White Mountain’. There is some debate as to whether the
composer derived the tune from his friend Peter Warlock or from Hamilton Harty.
On the one hand the piano piece is dedicated to Warlock and on the other Harty
used the same tune in his Irish Symphony
written some eight years previously: Harty was one of Moeran’s mentors.
I must admit that the ‘Theme and
Variations’ is my least favourite of Moeran’s piano music: I have never been
able to work out why. I think that it may be that I feel it somehow lacks a
sense of unity. It is an early piece, written when the composer was about 26
years old. The ‘Theme’ would appear to be based on a folksong, yet the truth is
that it is a confection devised by the composer. Delius seems to lie behind
this tune. The theme is followed by six variations that explore various facets
of the material. Perhaps the most attractive is the 6th – non troppo
lento e rubato. This is followed by ‘a large scale peroration’ of a finale.
On a May Morning is one of those pieces of music whose title
belongs to someone else. Naturally, it complements Bax’s On a May Evening – also for piano solo. And Rob
Barnett suggests that it is a title that belongs to John
Ireland! This is possibly nearer the mark: the piece was written in 1921 at a
time when Moeran was studying with the older man. It is actually a very beautiful piano solo
that well balances folk music content (do I hear an echo of Linden Lea?) and a neo-impressionistic
style. It is played delightfully by Loveridge who manages to suggest all the
busyness of that magical time of year – at least as the poet imagines it, as
opposed to the reality of ‘May Days and Grey Days!’
The Three Fancies could be construed as ‘mere’ salon music, albeit of a
high quality. Yet there is much here that goes deeper. For example, the ‘Elegy’, with its dark and rather depressing
harmonies, is in complete contrast to the more ebullient pieces that flank it.
It has been suggested that the ‘Elegy’ is a ‘dreamy pastorale,’ however that is
a sentiment that overstates the mark. If a landscape was being described it
would be a marshy bog and not the smiling fields that the Scholar Gypsy knew.
The ‘Burlesque’ lightens matter up. It is not quite a peasants’ dance but is
full of ‘uncouth’ piano figurations that suggests Bax’s Gopak. The opening ‘fancy’ is really a little masterpiece that
could well stand on its own. Moeran spent much time in Norfolk exploring the villages and searching
out folksongs. In his travels he would come across windmills – certainly many
more that nowadays grace the skyline. His musical evocation of these ‘quixotic
giants’ echoes the ‘revolving sails’ in a clever impressionistic manner. There
is a quieter interlude, when the wind has died away to a whisper. But the
miller’s business is safe, the breeze returns, and the sails revolve once more.
It is a perfect miniature tone poem. Loveridge captures the grace and movements
of this music.
Yet this is not to knock this
lovely piece – it is one that has been a favourite of mine ever since I first
bought the original vinyl album. I have often wondered where the ‘summer
valley’ was – but I guess that is a place that exists in the composer’s and the
listener’s minds: I certainly know where mine is – but that would be telling.
It is one of my (many) Desert Island Discs. And Iris Loveridge’s rendition is
top of that list.
The Moeran recital ends with the
early Three Piano Pieces written in
1919. These were the composer’s first published compositions. Interestingly,
Moeran had come to Boyle in County
Roscommon to convalesce
from his serious war wounds. He was smitten with Ireland (country) and was to retain
this affection for the rest of his life.
The first piece, ‘The Lake Island’,
is redolent of W.B. Yeat’s ‘land of fairie’ and may have been directly inspired
by the poet’s similarly named poem. Moeran was acquainted with some of Bax’s
music, including In the Fairy Hills. Once again, this is really a little tone poem
for piano – the water can be heard lapping against the bank or the boat. ‘Autumn
Leaves’ is a more serious piece. Peter J. Pirie suggests that it has something
in it of Farnaby’s Fall of the Leaf,
although pointing out that Moeran’s thoughts extend considerably further and in
a more complex manner than that piece. ‘At the Horse Fair’ is really a little
bit of Irishry that captures the mood of an event that the composer had
attended in Roscommon. This is hardly
complex music – it is largely diatonic but maintained interest with ‘off-beat’
rhythms.
One last thought about Jack
Moeran: the CD cover and the sleeve notes suggest that Moeran was born in 1864.
All enthusiasts know that he was born thirty years later. The official date of
birth is 31st
December 1894 .
It is good that Iris Loveridge’s
recording of Gordon Jacob Piano Sonata has been re-released. It was one of the
earliest Lyrita records that I purchased. Some thirty-five years down the road [now
45 years] it is still (I believe) the only edition of this work available on
CD. It is difficult to understand how such an impressive work can be so
completely ignored by performers. Yet, with one or two exceptions, it is the
fate of most British Piano Sonatas. Bridge and Ireland have considerable
followings. But what are we to make of the masterworks of McEwen, Hurlstone,
Dale, White, Hamilton, Hoddinott, Truscott et al? They are largely represented
by a single recording of their respective Sonatas
made over the past forty or fifty years.
Gordon Jacob is a name who is
familiar to all enthusiasts of English music, yet relatively few of his
compositions are widely known. Over recent years several works have been committed
to CD – most especially the wonderful Symphonies on Lyrita.
The present Piano Sonata was written for Iris Loveridge over
fifty years ago. It is hardly a work of its time: I suppose it could be argued
that Jacob was always on the conservative side of the compositional fence. Yet
there is nothing ‘retro’ about this music. It is a fine example of piano
writing and displays considerable power and invention.
The Sonata is in four movements
with the first being the longest at six minutes. I find it rather difficult to
pin down the stylistic content as each movement explores a different facet of
pianistic style. For example, the finale makes use ‘of the piano’s percussive
quality’ whereas the opening section of ‘adagio’ is painted in dark colours
that border on the impressionistic. The
third movement, another adagio is the emotional heart of the work. This is
truly beautiful music that creates a perfect balance between spontaneity and
control.
This CD is based on mono
recordings that are 60 years old. It would be asking too much to expect a
brilliant sound. Yet the transfer to CD has been well-done. Not all the hiss
has been removed, but that does not matter. Any short-coming in the sound
quality is more than amply made up for in the generally superb playing by Iris
Loveridge. One can only imagine that when these recordings were originally made
they were exceptional for their day.
Other editions of Moeran’s piano
music exist on CD. Eric Parkin’s contribution to the Lyrita catalogue is
complementary to the Loveridge recital –t here are no ‘overlapping’ pieces.
Parkin went on to record the complete works on Ismeron JMSCD2 and Una Hunt has
issued a similar collection on ASV CD DCA 1138. Since this review was originally
written, Duncan Honeybourne has issued the complete piano works on EM
CD0012-13. The present recording of the Jacob Sonata would appear, as noted above, to be the only one.
Yet for my money Iris Loveridge
adds considerable value to any collection of Moeran piano music. Her style and
her sympathy with the composer are self evident. I would not wish to be without
this present recording.
Track Listing:
Ernest John MOERAN (1894-1950)
Irish Love Song (1926)
Theme and Variations (1920)
On a May Morning (1921)
Three Fancies (Windmills; Elegy; Burlesque) (1922)
Summer Valley (1925)
Three Piano Pieces (The Lake Island; Autumn Woods; At the Horse Fair) (1919)
Gordon JACOB (1895-1984)
Piano Sonata (1957)
Iris Loveridge (piano)
rec. The Music Room, July 1958, May 1959 (Moeran); 26 June 1958 (Jacob). Mono. ADD.
first issued on LP as RCS 3 (Moeran); RCS 2 (Jacob).
LYRITA REAM.1103
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review first appeared.
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