I
recently reviewed Philip Sawyer’s magisterial Second Symphony on Nimbus 6281. I
was seriously impressed with this work and also the Cello Concerto and the
Concertante. Sawyers is an important composer that has not shied away from the
vital twelve-tone technique that held music in thrall through much of the
twentieth century. Yet, like Berg he is not a slave to any particular
compositional technique or method of construction. I was delighted to receive
this present CD in the post and regard it as a pleasure and a privilege to
review these three works. I hold my hand up and admit that I am an enthusiast
of ‘twelve-tone music.’ Ever since hearing Berg’s Violin Concerto as part of
school studies I have enjoyed and appreciated this approach to musical
composition. Searle, Lutyens and Wellesz count amongst my favourite British
composers: I guess that it acts as a corrective to my pastoral leanings
exemplified by Finzi, Butterworth and RVW.
For
listeners who require information about Philip Sawyers there is an excellent website giving extensive biographical details
as well as details of his music and forthcoming events. However, a few key points may help to define
his life and career. Sawyers was born in London in 1951 and began composing in
the early 1960s. He had formal lessons in violin from Colin Sauer, Joan Spencer
and Max Rostal. Compositional skills were developed by Helen Glatz who was a
onetime pupil of Ralph Vaughan Williams. He had additional lessons from Buxton
Orr, Patric Standford and Edmund Rubbra. Much of Sawyer’s career has been away
from the composer’s desk: between 1973 and 1997 he was a member of the Royal
Opera House Orchestra at Covent Garden.
Although he is now dedicated to writing music, he also performs as a
free-lance violinist, music teacher and adjudicator for the Associated Board of
the Royal Schools of Music. It is only in the past two decades that Sawyers has
begun to be regarded as a major composer.
Philip Sawyers musical language is characterised by the highly creative use
of tone-rows, a subtle balance of tonality and atonality, excellent orchestral
colouring, rigorous development of his musical material and a general
confidence that transcends much that passes for ‘contemporary music.’
I
was bowled over by ‘concert overture’ ‘The Gale of Life’. This work was conceived shortly after the
first performance of Sawyer’s First Symphony. More about that work later, but
it is important to note that the dynamic scherzo of the Symphony was the
inspiration for this overture. The
work was commissioned by the Albany Symphony Orchestra which is based in New
York State. The title of the overture is derived from the well-known poem by A.E. Housman ‘On
Wenlock Edge’:-
There, like the wind through the woods in riot,
Through him the gale of life blew high;
The tree of man was never quiet:
Then ‘twas the Roman, now ‘tis I.’
This work is also closely related to the Symphony
in so far as the opening chords are a direct quotation from the finale of that earlier
work. I feel that the form and the
orchestration of this overture admirably reflects the sentiment of the
‘unsettling and disturbing’ words of Housman’s great poem. This is powerful
music that evokes Sawyers’ trademark balance of juxtaposing ‘quite
traditional chords and a highly chromatic, freely dissonant harmonic
vocabulary.’
The
earliest work on this CD is the Symphonic Music for Strings and Brass which was
composed in 1972 whilst Sawyers was studying at the Guildhall School of Music.
It was first performed at that time with the composer on the rostrum. In the early ‘seventies, musical experiments
were all the rage – Boulez’s ‘integral serialism’, aleatory procedures,
electronic music and novel playing techniques of instrument were all regularly
utilised. Sawyers writes that he wished to compose something modern that broke
‘from traditional tonality without throwing it overboard.’ He was also
interested in writing an absolute work, free of ‘programmatic overtones.’ The composer notes influences from Bartok,
Mahler and Hindemith. He has synthesised these affinities and has created a
confident work that is both lyrical and powerful in its exposition. There is a
good balance between intense string writing, Mahlerian brass interruptions and
reflective moments such as that with which the work closes. It is hard to
believe that this complex, well-constructed, and often moving work is that of a
21 year old student.
The
Symphony No. 1 is an impressive work. Sawyers notes that the methodology of
symphonic writing is more conducive to him than that of a ‘rhapsodically or programmatically’
derived subject. In the early years of the 21st century he was given a
commission to write a symphony for the Grand Rapids Symphony Orchestra and
their conductor David Lockington.
The
opening movement of this work is based on a ’12-note’ row which is manipulated
in both lyrical development and a ‘more driven fugal section.’ Nick Barnard, in his review on MusicWeb
International
has noted that the serial nature of this work is not an abandonment of tonality
as such, but is an effective structural device. The overall effect of this
opening movement is of a long, dramatic march with some terrific outbursts and
a few pauses for reflection.
The
second movement, an adagio, is the longest movement of the symphony. It begins
and ends in a ‘pure D major.’ The composer states that he had ‘in mind’ to
write an adagio as found in the symphonies of Bruckner and Mahler. Add to this
some nods to Sibelius and Wagner and we have a deeply introspective movement
that explores a huge emotional canvas. This must rank as one of the great
‘adagios’ in modern symphonic literature.
The
scherzo and trio are in ‘traditional form’ and showcases the superb technique
and virtuosity of the orchestra. It fairly zips along presenting dazzling
passages and tunes toppling over each other without ever becoming naïve or inconsistent
with the profound music that has preceded it. Rhythmical diversity gives
considerable punch to the proceedings with just a little frisson of the ‘sinister’
creeping in here and there.
The
finale is once again structured on a tone-row which balances two thematic
groups – the first, some disconcerted, edgy music and the second, a chorale-like
tune. The progress of the music is really a dialogue between these two elements
with a few quieter episodes. The work concludes with a stunning peroration,
ending on a not altogether unexpected D major chord.
The
liner notes, written by the composer, are excellent, clear and legible. They
include a brief note about the orchestra and the musical director. The cover
picture is taken from Philip Groom’s effective Landscape of Angels 3: it is strange that I can find no internet
reference to this clearly talented artist.
I
guess that the present recording was made at the premieres of each of these
works. The engineers have (wisely in my opinion) retained the applause and the
odd cough from the auditorium. One
cannot help feeling that the skill and the enthusiasm of the orchestra and
their conductor is palpable.
I
echo Nick Barnard’s sentiments when he declares that ‘fortunate indeed [is] the
composer whose music receives such dedicated and well prepared first
performances.’ This is a fine CD that
deserves detailed listening and study.
Track Listing:-
The
Gale of Life (2006)
Symphonic
Music for Strings and Brass (1972)
Symphony
No.1 (2004)
Grand
Rapids Symphony/David Lockington
rec.
DeVos Performance Hall, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA, 11-12 January 2002 (Symphonic
Music); 19-20 November 2004 (Symphony No.1); 9 September 2008 (Gale of Life)
NIMBUS
ALLIANCE NI 6129
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
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