Welsh composer William Mathias
(1934-92) composed Vivat Regina, Suite for brass band, op.75 as a
contribution to Her Majesty the Queen’s Silver Jubilee celebrations in 1977. The
piece was commissioned by The London Celebrations Committee, in association
with Harry Mortimer and the British Federation of Brass Bands. This was the
composer’s first and only excursion into the world of brass band music. The
manuscript score is dated February 1977 and was first published in 1978, in a
facsimile of the composer’s holograph.
Around this time, Mathias
had completed his major orchestral work, Helios, op.76 for orchestra.
This was dedicated ‘In memory of Grace Williams.’ Williams was a remarkable
Welsh composer who died in February 1977. The previous year had seen the
completion of the dynamic Dance Variations, a work that has not been
given a professional recording. It was
premiered in June 1977. Other relevant works from this de facto ‘Welsh Master
of the Queen’s Musick’ included a setting of ‘Land of Our Fathers’/’God Save
the Queen’ and the A Royal Garland for unaccompanied double mixed
chorus.
Vivat Regina
– Long Live the Queen - consists of four short movements bookended by two contrasting
fanfares. It lasts for about ten minutes. The work opens with a breezy ‘Fanfare’
(allegro) in full ceremonial mood. This
is followed by an ‘Air’ (andante maestoso) which seems to hint at several
well-known tunes, but never quite quotes one in full. An exuberant ‘Jig’
(allegro alla danza) is written in Mathias’s signature dance music style. It is
bouncy and full of joie de vivre. The ‘Mountain
Song’ (lento sostenuto) is the heart of this work. This is moody and introverted
music, reflecting the deeper meaning of the commemoration. The penultimate section
reminds the listener what the piece is all about. ‘Jubilate’ (allegro ritmico e
vivace) is quite simply ‘shouting for joy’. And finally, the closing ‘Fanfare’.
The faster music is written in a buoyant style, that is helped using mixed
metres (time signatures) whilst the slower numbers are sustained and thoughtful.
All four main ‘movemnets’ have ‘simple and memorable melodies.’ The entire work
is brilliantly imaginative and resourceful. Despite being Mathias’s only
venture into this genre, he handles the scoring and instrumentation with the
skill of a brass band master.
Vivat Regina was
premiered on Saturday 11 June 1977 at an event of massed brass bands at the
Royal Albert Hall, conducted by Walter Suskind. The bands were Black Dyke
Mills, Cory, Fairey Foden’s and Handwell and Morris. For the record, the number
one hit record in the Pop Charts was Rod Stewart’s ‘I don’t want to talk about
it’ with the anarchic Sex Pistols’ song ‘God Save the Queen’ at Number 2.
The score of Vivat
Regina was first reviewed in The Musical Times (February 1979) by
Niall O’Loughlin. He considered that this ‘six-movement suite of about ten
minutes' duration [has] interesting parts for many of the players. The faster movements have a lively wit and some
imaginative rhythmic irregularities.’ In
1981 it also was reviewed in Music & Letters (April 1981) by Jim
Simpson. He began by making a generalised statement about Mathias’s brass band
music: ‘We must be grateful for any music which keeps our leading brass bands
away from grotesque transcriptions of Mendelssohn and Berlioz overtures and the
like. There is something to be said too for Mathias's respect for traditional
groupings within the brass band medium, as opposed to the approach of
Birtwistle or Payne, who treat it as a reservoir from which an infinite variety
of timbral combinations might be drawn.’ Clearly, he is thinking about Harrison
Birtwistle’s outstanding Grimethorpe Aria which was written in 1973 and
possibly Anthony Payne’s Fire on Whaleness (1976).
A recording of the Black
Dyke Mills Band conducted by Roy Newsome has been uploaded to YouTube.
It has been extracted from the album Black Dyke Mills: Champions of Brass,
CHN 4160. The CD also includes music by Granville Bantock, Ralph Vaughan
Williams, Edward Gregson, and Gordon Langford. Vivat Regina was
originally issued on the RCA Victor Label in 1977 (PL25143).
Reviewing the LP for The
Gramophone (September 1978) Malcolm McDonald thinks that: ‘Mathias comes
off [well], with a Silver Jubilee piece of five or six short movements with
again some lively moments alongside some less lively, rather surprisingly
conventional ones.’ He concludes his critique by stating that the entire album
‘is truly the very best of traditional brass-band sound.’
I understand that an
orchestral version of these Dances has been made by Philip Lane in 2004 and
retitled Jubilee Dances. To my knowledge, this has not been recorded.
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