Walter Legge (1906-79), an
influential recording executive, writing in an extensive article for the Hinrichsen's
Year Book 1944 (p.175) described ENSA’s achievement in presenting classical
music to civilian workers and the forces. He explained that “I have found that
in building programmes for these concerts much of the success of the whole
evening depends on the choice of the first work; These audiences like first of
all, to hear the maximum splendour and brilliance of the orchestral sound. The
best pieces we have yet found are [Berlioz’s] Carnaval Romain, [his] Hungarian
March from the Damnation of Faust, [Wagner’s] Meistersinger Overture,
[Borodin’s] Prince Igor Overture and Chabrier’s España. British
music is unfortunately poor in works of this type. Elgar’s Cockaigne Overture
and Ireland's London Overture are both rather long for the purpose and Elgar's
adherence to Sonata form in his Overture perplexes the direct-minded audiences
even more than it pleases those with an academic approach.”
To remedy this, he explained “so
that these concerts may begin with British works I have invited Sir Arnold Bax,
Arthur Bliss, E. J. Moeran, Alan Rawsthorne and [Ralph] Vaughan Williams to
write works of anything from six to nine minutes in length, particularly
designed to open these concerts. The Bax work called Work in Progress is
already complete and will have its first performance in February [1944]. The Bliss
and Moeran works are well on the way and have their first performances in the
same month. ENSA is not only building audiences of the future - it is helping
to add to the repertoire of British music.”
Sadly, only Moeran's Overture for a Masque, Rawsthorne's Street Corner and Bax’s Work in Progress were finished. Subsequent posts will investigate these three works.
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