Sunday, 24 November 2024

William Walton: Donald Brook’s Pen-Portrait from 'Composer's Gallery' Part I

Donald Brook wrote a series of books presenting attractive short studies or pen-portraits of a wide variety of musicians and literary authors. Clearly, he had met these people and had a chance to speak to them about their achievements and interests. Sir Granville Bantock endorsed Composer’ Gallery (1946) by insisting that it “will be welcomed by music lovers and the larger public throughout the civilised world.”

At the time of writing, Walton had reached just over the halfway stage of his life. There would be many more compositions to come. These included the major opera Troilus and Cressida (1954), the Cello Concerto (1957), the Symphony No.2 (1960) and the Crown Imperial March (1953).

On a personal note, this was one of the earliest second-hand books about music that I bought in the days before the internet, it served as my introduction to a wide range of composers and their music. I include several footnotes to Brook’s pen-portrait of William Walton.

STILL IN HIS EARLY FORTIES is William Walton, another of our contemporary composers whose works are now being played all over the world. He was born at Oldham, Lancashire, on March 29th, 1902, son of a music teacher, [1] and proved to be unusually sensitive to music when he was a child.

Throughout his boyhood the music of Handel exercised a strange charm upon him, and he spent many hours in turning up this composer's songs and learning to sing them. His father taught him to play the piano, but he showed no great interest in this instrument during his childhood: he infinitely preferred the violin. It was his voice, however, that started him on his musical career. At the age of ten he won a choral scholarship to Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, and became a chorister there under Dr H. G. Ley. [2] He says that at school he was bad at almost everything except music.

[Walton] began composing when he was about thirteen, writing chiefly hymn tunes and anthems, and then he began to take rather more interest in the piano, so he went to Dr. Basil Allchin [3] for lessons. His outstanding musical ability came to the notice of Sir Hugh Allen [4], who from that time followed the boy's progress with great interest. Some idea of his precocity in music may be gained from the fact that he passed the first part of the Mus. B. examination when he was only fifteen. He did not matriculate until he was sixteen, and when he became an undergraduate it was chiefly through the influence of the Dean of Christ Church [5], who was anxious that he should take a degree. While he was at Oxford his friendship with Edward J. Dent [6] brought him into touch with Busoni, who gave him valuable advice. He also met Ernest Ansermet [7], and through Sacheverell Sitwell soon became one of the most popular guests of the eminent Sitwell family.

It is both interesting and highly significant that from the age of sixteen Walton was entirely self-taught: he felt no inclination whatever to spend years at the feet of eminent composers, and least of all, those of other countries. He has always known his own mind and has always been determined to follow his own course in music. He wrote a great deal at Oxford but scrapped most of it shortly afterwards: the only works of this early period now surviving are a Litany for soprano, alto, tenor and bass written in 1916 and two songs composed during the last year of the war, Tritons (1920, words by William Drummond) and a setting of Swinburne's poem The Winds (1918).

Having said that, I must hasten to add that his Piano Quartet [1918-21] was started when he was only sixteen, but it was not finished until two or three years later. Shortly before his twenty-first birthday he sent it to the Carnegie Trust in the hope that they would publish it. To his horror it was lost in the post! For two whole years it was maturing in the hands of the G.P.O. but eventually reached its destination. After he had given up all hope, the Trust published it in 1924, describing it in their report as being "clear and transparent in texture, restrained in feeling, well written throughout, and rising at moments of climax into a strain of great beauty and nobility. It is a work of real achievement."

In the meantime, he had completed his Facade [1922-29] in its original version: a very clever setting of poems by Edith Sitwell that was first performed privately in Chelsea, but later at the Aeolian Hall. Since that time, it has undergone many revisions and has also been adapted for ballet purposes. It originated from an idea for which the Sitwell family were responsible. They painted a huge head on a curtain, with a large mouth fitted with a megaphone through which these poems by Edith Sitwell were recited. The music was required for a general accompaniment or background. Little did they realize that Walton's effort would become so popular. The original music was scored for flute, clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, 'cello and percussion, but it was afterwards made into an orchestral suite. It was used during a ballet season at the Lyceum in 1927, and first heard as a concert piece at the Leeds Festival in the following year.

Walton's next important work was the String Quartet (1920-22) which made a very favourable impression upon the International Society for Contemporary Music despite the fact that Ernest Newman described it as "horrible." It was first performed under that Society's auspices at the Salzburg Festival in 1923.

Two years later Walton composed his famous overture Portsmouth Point, and the credit for giving the first performance must once again go to the International Society for Contemporary Music: it was a tremendous success at their Zurich Festival in 1926. This excellent work won him many thousands of admirers when it was brought home and performed almost immediately as an interlude by Diaghilev's Russian Ballet at His Majesty's Theatre. In the same year it was first performed at the Queen's Hall. Undoubtedly one of the best modern orchestral works of its type, Portsmouth Point was inspired by a print of that name by Thomas Rowlandson, the eighteenth-century English caricaturist, who depicted a lively scene of merrymaking at the waterside between the old Ship Tavern and the money-lender's premises. In the background there are several stately sailing ships. The rollicking fun in this scene chiefly concerning the seafaring men and their lady friends is cleverly portrayed in Walton's music. It has been revised slightly in more recent years. In 1926 he wrote Siesta for chamber orchestra, which was first performed that autumn under the direction of Guy Warrack at one of the concerts being run by that conductor at the Aeolian Hall. Then if we pass over various minor works, many of which he has now withdrawn, the next of Walton's more important works is his Sinfonia Concertante for piano and orchestra, first heard at a Royal Philharmonic Society concert in 1928 with York Bowen as the soloist and revised in 1943. It is in three movements dedicated to Osbert, Edith and Sacheverell Sitwell, respectively.

One of the best works we have ever had from Walton was the Concerto for Viola and Orchestra; a remarkable work in three movements which was conducted by the composer himself when it was first played in London. The occasion was a Promenade concert on October 3rd, 1929, and Paul Hindemith was the soloist: the critics were almost unanimous in their praise, and as a result, it was chosen for the festival of the I.S.C.M. at Liege in 1930, when Lionel Tertis played the solo part. This concerto contains some very fine writing in the dynamic, colourful style that Walton has made his own and will undoubtedly stay in the repertoire of the leading artists for generations.
Donald Brook, Composer’s Gallery (London, Rockcliff, 1946)

Notes:
[1] Charles Alexander Walton (1867-1924) was a singing teacher and organist at St John’s Werneth, sadly now demolished. He had been trained at the Royal Manchester College of Music, under Sir Charles Hallé. William’s mother Louisa Marie (née Turner) (1866-1954) had been a singer, before her marriage to Charles. William Walton was born at 93 Werneth Road, Oldham.

[2] Henry George Ley MA DMus FRCO FRCM Hon RAM (1887-1962) was an English organist, composer, and music teacher.

[3] Basil Allchin (18781957) was an organist, music teacher and administrator. When Walton was at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, Allchin was Assistant to Henry Lee.

[4] Sir Hugh Allen (1869-1946) was an English organist, conductor, and teacher. During William Walton’s time at Christ Church Cathedral, Allen was organist at New College Oxford.

[5] The Dean of Christ Church at that time was Dr Thomas Strong (1861-1944).

[6] Edward J. Dent (1876-1957) was an English musicologist, critic, and translator. He was Professor of Music at Cambridge University and known for his work on opera and music history. Dent also translated several operas and was involved with the Sadler's Wells and Covent Garden opera houses.

To be continued…

No comments:

Post a Comment