Eric Coates is well-known for his
musical pictures of London. Think only of the ‘Knightsbridge March’ from the ever-popular
London Suite. He continued this
success with the London Again Suite
as well as several standalone pieces such as the ‘Holborn March’, the ‘London
Bridge March’ and the ‘London Calling March’. The composer Haydn Wood also
exploited the ‘sights and sounds’ of the Capital. Despite being born in Slaithwaite,
West Riding and an early move to the Isle of Man, Wood spent most of his working
life in London. However, during the war years he ‘evacuated’ to Devon. It was
at this time that he penned his three London Suites: London Landmarks (1942), London
Cameos (1945) and the present Snapshots
of London (1948).
Like many orchestral suites from
this era, Snapshots of London has
three contrasting movements. The first, ‘Sadler’s Wells (At the Ballet)’ is a
highly charged romantic waltz, with an obviously happy memory of many performances
at this great institution. Despite the overall optimism of this piece, there is
just an occasional touch of wistfulness. Exactly as it should be. The liner
notes (CDLX 7357) point out that this movement became famous during the early
years of post-war TV. It was one of the tunes used in the well-known ‘Potter’s
Wheel’ fill-in. Nowadays, all we get are adverts - either for products or even better
future programmes.
Since first discovering them in
the early 1970s, I have loved the beautiful Queen Mary’s Gardens in Regents
Park. This intimate garden was named after King George V’s wife. They opened to
the public in 1932. Two years later, the first rose was planted. It is now London’s
largest rose garden with more than 85 varieties and 12,000 individual roses. I understand that these gardens were only short
stroll from Haydn Wood’s flat. The composer has created a deeply-personal and
often downright moving score, with a lovely heart-felt tune running throughout.
Clearly it reflects many happy hours spent relaxing in this beautiful garden.
The mood changes dramatically with
the third movement’s portrayal of the ‘Wellington Barracks’. Quite naturally, this
is a wonderful quick march tune that sometimes seems to out-Coates, Coates. It
is not hard to imagine soldiers from the Grenadier Guards, the Coldstream
Guards and the Scots Guards who form the garrison here today. These barracks
are located on Birdcage Walk near to the beautiful St James’ Park.
All in all, this is a lovely
suite that will entertain any enthusiast for London. Especially the lovely
Queen Mary’s Garden is guaranteed to bring a tear to the most cynical eye.
Up until the release of the
recent Dutton Epoch survey of Haydn Wood’s Orchestra Suites (CDLX 7357) the only
other recording of Snapshots of London
was played by The Queen's Hall Light Orchestra - Volume 2 (Vocalion CDEA 6061).
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