Wednesday, 27 November 2024

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

The second and final part of Donald Brook's pen portrait of William Walton published in his book Composers Gallery.

I suppose it was inevitable that Walton should follow the example of most of the older English composers and write an oratorio. There was a time when no English composer was considered to have "arrived" unless he had swept the dust off the family bible and dredged in it for a libretto; indeed, it was one of the very few means he had of making a reputation (unless he had a foreign name), for the choral societies were then in their prime. But how different was Walton's effort from those that oozed from the pens of our Victorian composers. Belshazzar's Feast was introduced at the Leeds Festival in 1931 by Dr Malcolm Sargent and repeated in London soon afterwards. The text was compiled from the scriptures by Sir Osbert Sitwell, and the whole work dedicated to Lord Berners. This amazing oratorio demands a huge orchestra to provide the barbaric colour to the tumultuous paeans of the heathen, for in addition to all the usual instruments of a full symphony orchestra, an alto saxophone, E-flat military clarinet, and if possible, a couple of brass bands are required! The percussion department must be augmented by a tambourine, glockenspiel, gong, xylophone, anvil, slapstick, and Chinese block. The piano is used merely as an orchestral instrument, by the way.

Owing to the "unsuitability" of certain passages of the text, this work was rejected when efforts were made to get it performed at one of the Three Choirs Festivals. Commenting on a performance of it, William McNaught said in the Musical Times "The oats may be wild, but they are British. Our Mr. Walton has written a thrilling work out of a music that is entirely his own."

Much of his time during the next few years was spent in working out his Symphony, one of his most adventurous efforts. It took considerably longer than he had anticipated, and he allowed Sir Hamilton Harty to perform its first three movements at a concert given by the London Symphony Orchestra on December 3rd, 1934, much to the surprise of many of his friends, for very few composers permit the performance of uncompleted works. The final movement was written some time afterwards, and the first performance of the complete symphony was given at a BBC concert in the Queen's Hall on November 6th, 1935, under the direction of Sir Hamilton Harty.

The success of this symphony brought Walton into the front rank of British composers; a position well summed up in the Musical Times in March 1937 by A. J. B. Hutchings [1] with the words: "There can be few more effective ways of realising the debt which English music owes to Walton than to imagine what it would be without him. In Bax the youngsters see one whose fecundity and brilliance they admire, but one who does not pretend to lead them anywhere. Without him or William Walton, all-British programmes during the past decade would have shown little advance from the emasculated precocity which has been served in Paris since the war. There would have been, not attenuated Debussy, but Delius and water (although Vaughan Williams and vinegar was the taste of most of the post-war academicians who had lived thirty years and seen the futility of it); for dessert there would have been Handel with a few wrong notes, or an at-all-costs-decent cantata on a Greek text, begotten by Stravinsky out of Bliss. Yet to-day, English music holds a place of dignity and distinction, with promise of a rising school of composers under an exemplary leader . . . When all is allowed for insular prejudice, one can say for certain that we shall from now wait for every new work of Walton, as we once did of Sibelius, in the certainty of getting something of permanent value.”

If a general note may be interposed here, it is perhaps worth recording that Walton joined the music committee of the British Council in 1933, and it was at about this time that he began to take an interest in film music. In the ensuing year he wrote the score for the film Escape Me Never and has been associated with the film industry ever since. He has written the music for such films as As You Like It (1936); Major Barbara and Next of Kin (1941); The First of the Few, for which he wrote his famous Spitfire Prelude and Fugue; and Went the Day Well (1942). His latest at the time of writing is the excellent score he has written for Henry V, in which he had to capture the musical atmosphere of the period without producing a pseudo-Tudor effect. He succeeded in embodying sequences of plainsong and the Agincourt Song into a remarkably effective and dramatic score: a masterpiece of virile English music. Particularly noteworthy is the quaint and singularly appropriate music that accompanies the scene in the old Globe Theatre, and the fine passacaglia played at the deathbed of Falstaff (George Robey).

The advent of the Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth inspired Walton to write his splendid march Crown Imperial, a tremendously popular Elgarian work commissioned by the BBC and first played by their Symphony Orchestra under Sir Adrian Boult on May 9th, 1937. It is scored on generous lines and provides for the addition of an organ at the end. At about the same time he wrote his cantata In Honour of the City of London, a setting of words by the Scottish poet William Dunbar (circa 1460-1520).

In 1938 Walton wrote a second suite for his Façade, and then Heifetz commissioned the Violin Concerto, reserving it exclusively for his own performance for two years, so in the spring of 1939 Walton went to America to confer with the great violinist. The concerto was completed in New York on June 2nd, 1939, and first performed in the following December at Cleveland, Ohio, with Arturs Rodziński [2] conducting. About eighteen months later the score was sent to England for a performance at the Albert Hall, but it was lost on the journey over owing to enemy action. Fortunately, a photographic copy had been made in New York, and this was flown to London in time for a performance given under the auspices of the Royal Philharmonic Society on November 1st, 1941, when Henry Holst [3] was the soloist. Walton conducted personally, and a criticism worth quoting was the one written by [William] McNaught in the following month's issue of the Musical Times. "This is a difficult work for the listener. The composer's vocabulary has advanced since his Viola Concerto. It has probably become more chromatic, if the test be a counting of accidentals; certainly, if the test be the impression on the ear . . . there are many solitary clumps of incompatible notes; there is more independence and incongruence among the lines of counterpoint, and the music is very contrapuntal. In short, the technique has been screwed up to a higher pitch." The majority of listeners, McNaught feared, would find some difficulty in appreciating certain parts of this concerto, and he concluded "Walton is important to us, not only as one who has sought out new things in the art of music, but as one who has helped towards the growth of that modern phenomenon, the enjoyment of British music by a British audience; and we may view with apprehension any signs that in the search for his inmost self he is likely to lose touch with a large part of the audience. We want to hear the crowds, not the groups, saying how much they enjoyed the latest Walton. Perhaps a quarter of the music in the Violin Concerto provokes such thoughts as these. The remainder of it is music to be thankful for, toughness and all. A great deal of what Walton has to say really calls for his highly wrought vocabulary and could not shape itself otherwise…Speaking generally, the Concerto is a work for British music to be proud of. Granted the idiom and the means and plane of expression, the work explores its orbit with completeness and mastery. So many modern works mark out an orbit and then get lost in it."

Among Walton's minor works [4] we find his Scapino, a comedy overture suggested by an etching from Jacques Callot's Balli di Sfessania (1622); the Music for Children (1941), which is an orchestration of two books of children's duets written a year or so previously; the incidental music to Macbeth (1941) and to a radio play Christopher Columbus (1942). In 1943 he wrote The Quest, a ballet for the Sadler's Wells Company [5]
Donald Brook, Composer’s Gallery (London, Rockcliff, 1946)

Notes:
[1] Arthur James Bramwell Hutchings (1906-1989) was an English musicologist, composer, and professor of music. His books include Delius: A Critical Biography (1948), Church Music in the Nineteenth Century (1967) and the BBC Guide to Purcell (1982).

[2] Artur Rodziński (1892-1958) was a Polish American conductor known for his work with major orchestras like the Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He rejuvenated many orchestras and was praised for his energetic, sometimes volatile, performances.

[3] Henry Holst (1899-1991) was a Danish violinist and conductor. He led the Berlin Philharmonic under Wilhelm Furtwängler and later the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. Holst also taught at the Royal Manchester College of Music and the Royal Danish Academy of Music. He founded the Henry Holst String Quartet in 1931, which gained recognition in the UK.

[4] I guess that the short orchestral Scapino (1941) would not now be regarded as a minor work. In fact, it remains one of Walton’s most popular pieces.

[5] Composed in 1943, The Quest is a ballet score by William Walton. Choreographed by Frederick Ashton, it was inspired by Edmund Spenser's epic poem, The Faerie Queene. The ballet, performed by the Sadler's Wells Ballet company, features a storyline involving knights and allegorical figures. Walton's music is known for its dramatic and evocative qualities, making it a significant piece in his oeuvre.

Concluded.


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