Saturday 6 July 2019

William Alwyn (1905-85): Fantasy-Waltzes for Piano (1956)


In 1956, around the same time as William Alwyn was composing his great Third Symphony, the composer was at work on the Fantasy-Waltzes for piano: at least various ideas were beginning to gestate in his mind. This was the first piano work to be composed since the Five by Ten miniatures in 1952.
Fantasy-Waltzes was inspired by a visit to Edvard Grieg's lakeside home at Trolhaugen, near Bergen. It was originally to have been a few 'salon' pieces composed to prove that it was still possible to write music that was approachable, enjoyable and fun to play. Unusually for William Alwyn at this time, they are not based on a series or tone row but were written in a free virtuosic style.
They were composed especially for the New Zealand pianist Richard Farrell, who gave their first complete performance at Broadcasting House on 2ndJune 1957. He had already played several of the individual waltzes in New Zealand. Tragically, Farrell was to die tragically in a road accident the following year.

The Fantasy-Waltzes is divided into two discrete parts:  waltzes one to six and seven to eleven. There is no single thematic basis to the whole work. True, there are references in the last bars of some of these waltzes to the following one. What Alwyn does is to take the form and rhythms of various kinds of waltzes and apply his own invention to them. It is not his intention to generate a stylistic unity - in fact the whole work is predicated on a constant creation of diverse material with only a few cross-references. It can be equated to the transcriptions of Franz Liszt - basic material is taken and then reworked in the composer's image. For example, the final waltz is reminiscent of a style once popular with amateur pianists - yet it is worked up into something that is quite definitely the composer's own.
William Alwyn uses a wide variety of styles: he takes them up and throws the away. There are allusions and references to Ravel, Rachmaninov, Chopin and Johann Strauss. However, there are no actual quotes: the work is not pastiche It is very difficult to isolate styles and allusions and that was not the intention of the composer.
Much of this music is romantic - although here and there are nods to the composer’s earlier neo-classical style. Above all, these Waltzes are fun: the composer is clearly enjoying himself and has produced a minor masterpiece that is well-written and enjoyable to hear and to play.

The opening waltz is straightforward - it is written in good old-fashioned ternary form: it sounds a little like Ravel. No.2 is a humorous piece, typically played ‘scherzando’ with variety and contrast provided by a good cantabile melody. The third waltz, a 'moderato,' is a straightforward ‘salon’ piece. It was apparently the first section of this work that Alwyn composed: it was the basis of the entire set. Bearing in mind the inspiration of this work, there are allusions in style, if not in content, to Grieg himself. It is ideally placed third as it acts as a foil to the relative sophistication of the first two waltzes. The fourth number is a lovely 'grazioso,' well-written and again in the 'light' music vein. Waltz No. 5, ‘lento’ is a complex piece - at least harmonically. It pushes the concept of a piano waltz to its limit. The last piece, ‘allegro giocoso’ in the first section is a foil to the previous one. It is much lighter in style and is reminiscent of the kind of music that was popular in the early years of the twentieth century.

The first waltz of the second half of this work has been compared to Debussy. This is more to do with the tones and sonorities produced on the keyboard rather than any reference to specific works by the French master. This ‘lento’ is a profound uttering that needs the context of the surrounding numbers to allow it to be appreciated.
I feel that the Waltz No. 8, ‘vivace ma ritmico’ is the most attractive of the entire set. It has been likened to a Viennese waltz seen through the ‘transcriptive’ eyes of Sergei Rachmaninov.
The ninth piece is a touch unbalanced. It opens with a vague, meandering feel and then proceeds into a 'middle eight' of plunging romanticism. This music is highly charged and very passionate, only to collapse once more into a reprise of the hazy opening music.
After the romantic stress and strain of the previous waltz it is refreshing to be presented with what is ostensibly another enjoyable salon piece played in ‘tempo piacevole.’
The whole work concludes with a wonderful finale that is full of style and pizzazz. The ‘presto’ is really the only movement here that could be construed as pastiche. It is supposedly like the kind of waltz that was popular with the French publishing house of Durand. However, it is a great way to finish and leaves an impression of a highly enjoyable work, quite out of sympathy with much that was happening musically in the late nineteen fifties.

There are currently five versions of William Alwyn’s Fantasy Waltzes available. Sheila Randell on Lyrita SRCD 293, Ashley Wass on Naxos 8.570359, Mark Bebbington on Somm 133, Julian Milford on Chandos CHAN 9825 and John Ogdon also on Chandos CHAN 8399. Several of these waltzes have been uploaded to YouTube.

With thanks to MusicWeb International where this piece was first published in 2002. I have made several minor edits.

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