Richard Stoker's attractive
Regency Suite op.15 was composed over several years during the 1950s. It is a
composite work - with a few early pieces being mined to produce what is a surprisingly
well integrated result.
The opening Scherzo - is a little toccata, in fact, is supposedly based on Picasso line drawings and circus paintings. It was the last piece to be completed for this suite. It is full of little figurations and has a definite and deliberate chaos of tonality. The following Minuet on the other hand was written when the composer was yet a boy. It is quite a concentrated little piece complete with cunning key changes at the cadences. I wondered if it was worked over by Stoker for this suite, as it seems to fit perfectly into the prevailing style. Again the tonality is very free- one almost feels that there is a little tone row somewhere amongst the rather sweet tune.
The Pastoral Andante was
written in 1958. It is quite a desolate landscape that this Yorkshire born composer is
reflecting on. It is nearer the moors above Huddersfield or the strange country
around Spurn Point rather than the smiling fields near York. The 'Gigue' is a
fun piece. Lots of contrast and a few sequences, ties this nicely into the
old-fashioned feel to the work. The oldest piece of music is the Gavotte, composed when Stoker was a mere 14 years old. Yet it is a piece that deserves
to be preserved. Absolutely perfect here. The last piece is a Toccata, and it
is apparently very dear to the composer. A fine finish.
There is an interesting little
bit of musical history here - the Gavotte and the Minuet were given their first
Broadcast Performance on the BBC Home Service in 1953 - by none other than
Violet Carson - later to become famous as Ena Sharples in Coronation Street. I
never knew she was a pianist.
A critic once wrote that “this is
not silk shirted music!" The title Regency Suite "aptly reflects the
slightly neoclassical nature of each piece.”
Richard Stoker’s Regency Suite can be heard on SoundCloud. It is played by Erik Parkin.
Violet Carson was the pianist on the old radio programme, Wilfred Pickles' "Have A Go".http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Have_a_Go#:~:text=off%20TV%20special)-,Synopsis,about%20their%20lives%20and%20memories.
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