One of my most recent discoveries on Classic
FM was a performance of William Lloyd Webber’s short ‘prelude’ for string
orchestra, The Moon. Although this piece has been available on CD for
four years, I had just not come across it.
It is a short but deeply felt miniature that adds to Lloyd Webber’s small
but near-perfect catalogue of works.
The Moon was originally written in 1959 as
a part-song based on the eponymous poem by William Henry [W.H.] Davies. The
same year, Lloyd Webber made a version for string orchestra. Both pieces remained unperformed until the
composer’s centenary year in 2014.
W.H. Davies was born in Newport Monmouthshire
on 3 July 1871. As a young man, he emigrated to the United States. His
experiences there as a ‘gentleman’ vagrant and labourer were epitomised in his
once popular The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp, published in 1908.
Davies’s most
anthologised poem is ‘Leisure’, written in 1911 beginning with the immortal
lines:
What
is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare?
We have no time to stand and stare?
These words epitomise
much of the poet’ character and his ability to capture a child-like response to
nature. Yet, these was another side to
Davies’s character. Many poems rail
against poverty and injustice. He is characteristically
classified as a ‘Georgian Poet’ but much of his output did not reflect the aims
and aspirations of this ad-hoc group which emphasised ‘romanticism,
sentimentality and hedonism.’ Davies contributed 32 poems to the five-volume
collection of Georgian Poetry.
The Moon
Thy beauty haunts
me heart and soul,
Oh, thou fair
Moon, so close and bright;
Thy beauty makes
me like the child
That cries aloud
to own thy light:
The little child
that lifts each arm
To press thee to
her bosom warm.
Though there are
birds that sing this night
With thy white
beams across their throats,
Let my deep
silence speak for me
More than for them
their sweetest notes:
Who worships thee
till music fails,
Is greater than
thy nightingales.
Fortunately, the Royal
Holloway Choir has uploaded a
beautiful performance of Lloyd Webber’s The Moon in its original choral
version. It ranks with Stanford’s ‘The Bluebird’, Sullivan’s ‘The Long Day
Closeth’ and John Ireland’s ‘The Hills’ as a flawless choral miniature.
The realisation for
string orchestra is equally faultless. There is nothing here to disturb the
listeners mind. Like the child in the poem, Lloyd Webber reflects the timeless
beauty of the moon in silence rather than with a triumphant shout. The progress
is slow and simple. It is composed in a largely diatonic style with just a few
chromatic slips here and there. The entire piece is typically restrained, from
the first bar to the last. There is no ‘breath-taking’ climax here, just the
creation of a mood of wonder and peace. There is no attempt at musical onomatopoeia:
there is no birdsong, just the most profound expression of a quiet, but deep
wonder.
In March 2015, Naxos
Records issued a performance of ‘The Moon’ on an attractive CD of English
String Music, subtitled ‘And the Bridge is Love’ (8.573250). This title
track refers to a work for solo cello and string orchestra by Howard Goodall.
Other music includes several works by Edward Elgar, Two Pieces for strings from
Henry V by William Walton, Frederick Delius’s two Aquarelles (arranged by Eric Fenby)
and the now hackneyed ‘Minuet’ from John Ireland’s A Downland Suite.
Julian Lloyd Webber conducts the English Chamber Orchestra. There is currently
no YouTube upload of The Moon in the string version.
In his review of this
CD for MusicWeb International, (July 2015) John Quinn writes that ‘family
connections are…explicit with [Julian Lloyd Webber’s] inclusion of The Moon’
on this disc. Quinn considered that this piece adds to the ‘list of pleasing
discoveries’ by William Lloyd Webber and is ‘a charming miniature…given here in
a sensitive performance.’
Andrew Achenbach (The
Gramophone, April 2015) simply states that The Moon is a ‘sweetly
lyrical miniature.’ I would disagree with the ‘sweet’ description: there is
nothing saccharine here. It is just quite simply beautiful music.
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