Arnold Cooke has failed to make a
major impact on listeners for, I feel, one good reason. There is a pernicious
rumour abroad that he owes his entire style to his composition teacher Paul
Hindemith. It has been suggested that Cooke ‘sold out’ his Britishness to
become a clone of the German master. At the time of Cooke’s emergence onto the
concert platform, many listeners felt that English music ought to sound like
English music – either ‘pastoral ramblings’ or post-Elgarian bombast. Yet what
Cooke did was to learn from his German teacher and absorb several musical
lessons from him, but then bring his English tradition to bear on the results.
This is no different to many other respected composers, the Francophile Lennox
Berkeley who studied with Nadia Boulanger, the Frankfurt Group including Roger
Quilter and Cyril Scott. And even Vaughan Williams had lessons from Maurice
Ravel. All these composers managed to learn from their teachers, but also
retained that nebulous ‘English’ quality that is so hard to define but is
manifestly present. Malcolm MacDonald has written that what Cooke ‘really
imbibed [from Hindemith] was a broad framework of technique and a sense of
direction: a view of music as a living polyphonic entity and a feeling for
individual instruments that goes back to the practice of J.S. Bach.’ He was a
consummate craftsman. Furthermore, Havergal Brian wrote as long ago as 1936
that Cooke ‘appears to think and breathe contrapuntally … and he has tradition
in his bones: his working principles are nearer to the Elizabethans and Bach
than to Wagner and Strauss.’ So, Arnold Cooke’s music is a subtle fusion of
German technique with a largely English sensibility. For me, it works remarkably
well.
Cooke’s catalogue lists some 45
works for chamber ensemble of one kind or another. As the liner note correctly
point out, a relatively small proportion has been played by ‘modern’ performers
either in the recital room or the recording studio.
The present disc is the second in the
Mike Purton Recordings series of chamber music CDs dedicated to Arnold Cooke.
Earlier this year, MusicWeb International carried Jonathan Woolf’s
excellent review of ‘The Complete
Violin Sonatas’ issued on MPRS 103. This disc also included the Duo for violin
and viola. The Sonata No.2 had been previously released on the British Music
Society’s own label, BMS432CD and subsequently released on NAXOS 8.571362. This
disc also included the Cello Sonata No.2 (1979-80) and the pre-war Viola Sonata
(1936-37).
The present CD, played by the
Pleyel Ensemble, includes three world premiere recordings: The Piano Trio written
during the Second World War between 1941-44, the Piano Quartet dating from
1948/9 and the late Piano Quinter composed in 1969.
I am beholden to the liner notes
for assisting me to review these three pieces none of which I have heard
previously.
The earliest work on this
remarkable CD is the Piano Trio. The first two movements are serious in tone
whilst the finale is marginally less troubled. The opening ‘poco lento -
allegro’ is dominated by contrapuntal textures that builds pressure up towards
an ‘uneasy’ conclusion. This is exciting music, if at times troubled and
nervous. It is reasonably well-known that Cooke worked on the second movement
of his Trio in ‘quiet moments[!]’ whilst at sea with the Royal Navy. He was the
liaison officer aboard the Dutch tug D.S Thames based at Tilbury. His boat was
tasked with towing part of the Mulberry Harbours across the English Channel during
the Normandy Landings. It is amazing that Cooke found the inner peace to
compose this magical score in these circumstances. The finale is played at a frenetic speed,
with an almost toccata-like drive. It is only slightly-less disturbed in mood. Listeners
who hold to the ‘Hindemith Delusion’ will find little in this work to justify
their claims. If anything, Brahms is the exemplar here.
The Piano Trio was first performed
as part of a BBC broadcast on 11 August 1947. Cooke’s Cello Sonata and
movements from his Suite for piano were also heard during this recital.
The Piano Quartet (1948-9) is
surprisingly conservative for its date. The temper of this large-scale work is
fundamentally Brahmsian, especially the first and third movements. The liner
notes explain the ambiguous tonality of the work: it is never clear whether it
is in a major or minor key. Much of the opening ‘allegro ma non troppo’ is
concertante music. In other words, it is a wee bit like a piano concerto with
the three string players acting as the orchestra and the piano as soloist! The ‘scherzo’ is almost ‘light music’ in
sound. Nothing too serious here, but contrapuntally exciting, often having a
‘swing’ and with some enjoyable harmonic twists and turns. Cooke’s English
lyricism is obvious in the gorgeous ‘Lento’ movement. This is heartfelt music
of the highest order. Largely polyphonic in its working out, the four players
have equal billing. It is hard to imagine that this deeply autumnal music,
harking back to the nineteenth century was composed in the same year that
Olivier Messiaen’s great Turangalîla-Symphonie was premiered. But that’s
musical history and aesthetics for you! The finale is a neo-classical rondo that
fairly bounces along, compete with quixotic episodes and a fugato conclusion. The
echo of Franz Schubert can be heard in these pages.
The work was commissioned by
composer and academic Patrick Hadley. It was premiered on a BBC broadcast on 11
August 1949. during a BBC Broadcast from St John’s College, Cambridge during
that year’s Summer Festival of Music and Drama.
Due to lack of historical and
analytical information about Arnold Cooke it is difficult for the listener to
pin down stylistic changes, if any, in the chronology of his oeuvre. The same
applies to the general paucity of recordings currently available. I feel that
there is comparatively little ‘development’ in style between earliest and
latest works on this CD despite being separated in time by quarter of a
century. Certainly, Cooke has gone nowhere near avant-garde techniques
developed by many composers in this period.
One important influence on Arnold
Cooke was his ‘business’ connection and personal friendship with the Welsh
composer, Alun Hoddinott. This was particularly important in several works
commissioned by Hoddinott for the Cardiff Festival of Twentieth Century Music,
which included the Sonata No.1 for organ and the Sonata for solo violin.
Independently of the Festival, Hoddinott commissioned the present Piano Quintet
for the Cardiff University Music Department. It was premiered there on 13
October 1970.
Harvey Davies notes the ongoing
influence of Paul Hindemith, but also Dimitri Shostakovich. Perhaps it is not
surprising that Alun Hoddinott is also a source of musical style. This is
probably at a constructive level of composition. Both men were ‘magpies’ who
made use of ‘powerful influences’ around them. In Hoddinott’s case it is
Bartok, the Polish School (Henryk Górecki, Witold Lutosławski, Krzysztof
Penderecki et al) and native Celtic music.
An important shared compositional practice was their idiomatic use of
‘tone rows’ coupled with definite centres of tonality. Neither were bound by a
strict application of the serial technique. Both included passages of great
lyrical beauty in their music.
The Piano Quintet (1969) balances
considerable energy and vibrant motion. Listeners will notice that Cooke’s
musical language is a little more ‘austere’ than in the earlier chamber works
on this CD. It is music that is
immediately approachable but does benefit from repeated hearings. (I listened
twice within a day or so). The slow movement which is placed after the
‘scherzo’ is the emotional heart of the work. The finale is a subtle balance of
seriousness and ‘frivolity’ which I guess is a characteristic of the entire
Piano Quintet.
The playing on this disc by the
Pleyel Ensemble is excellent. The performances are vibrant and full of life.
They are ideal advocates for Cooke’s music. The recording quality is excellent.
The liner notes are outstanding.
They give a lengthy introduction to Arnold Cooke’s life and achievement as well
as detailed programme note for all three works. They are written by the Pleyel
Ensemble’s pianist Harvey Davies. Davies is currently studying Cooke’s music
for his Ph.D. thesis. Hopefully, this will be published in book form as soon as
possible. At present there is no major study of the composer, with the
honourable exception of Eric Wetherell’s booklet-length study issued in 1996
and published by the British Music Society. The CD insert includes brief notes
on the performers, their photos and a list of subscribers who made this CD a
reality. I appreciated the haunting booklet cover, eloquently reflecting
pre-war skies over Berlin, complete with the Brandenburg Gate and a civilian Zeppelin.
I hope that this is genuinely part
of a long-running series of CDs planned by Mike Purton. So far, he has ‘laid
down’ seven chamber works on CD. There is only about another 38 to go! Based on
the performance of these three world premiere recordings, the ongoing project
promises to be both exciting and revelatory.
Track
Listing:
Arnold
COOKE
(1906-2005)
Piano
Trio in C (1941-44) [24:46]
Piano
Quartet (1948-49) [28:50]
Piano
Quintet (1969) [25:23]
Sarah
Ewins (violin), Heather Bills (cello), Harvey Davies (piano), Susie Mészáros
(viola) (quartet and quintet); Benedict Holland (violin) (quintet)
Rec.
The Carole Nash Recital Room, Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, 30
August 2017 (Trio), 3-5 April 2018 (quartet and quintet)
Mike
Purton Recording
MPR 105 [79:06]
With
thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
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