Modern Opinion
In Michael Hurd’s 1962 study of
Rutland Boughton, he was less than complimentary to The Skeleton in Armour. He insists that it was ‘an accomplished exercise
in high-flown twaddle.’ He continues by pointing out that ‘it is worth
labouring the weakness of the text (presumably he does not like Longfellow) if
only to point the enormous distance in taste Boughton eventually travelled.’
The music, Hurd feels, is ‘a mixture of Mendelssohn and Gounod [that]
underlines the bathos of the words with a precision that might be mistaken for
mockery were it not for the composer’s youth and inexperience.’
In Rutland Boughton and the Glastonbury Festival (1993) Hurd
expands his views on The Skeleton in Armour. He suggests that Boughton’s choral
music for voice and orchestra must be considered in the context of the large
number of choral festivals and competitions that ‘played so vital part in
English musical life before the First World War.’ Hurd reflects that these ‘occasions… [were]
not primarily the breeding grounds of great art’. He concedes now that this is
an ‘interesting work’ and that it ‘has moments of real power and charm.’ He feels
that ‘Boughton is at his best when tackling the poem’s grimmer aspects...’ On
the other hand Hurd believes that ‘the love element reduces him to teashop
sentimentality.’ Finally, he concludes
that it ‘is a bold, ambitious work, orchestrated with real aplomb, and an
impressive achievement for a 20 year old.’
In his thesis A Survey of New Trends in English Musical Life
1910-1914, (1981) Richard Charles Hall writes that The Skeleton in Armour
and The Invincible Armada…were competently-written, run-of-the-mill festival
cantatas, simplistic narrative tests provided with vivid settings, in no way
out of the ordinary and certainly not representative of the composer's mature
style.’
Conclusion.
The Skeleton in Armour is an early piece by Rutland Boughton which
predates his Glastonbury operas and major orchestral works. This is quite
definitely a Wagnerian work in its use of chromaticism and ‘leitmotivs’,
although Hurd (1962) as noted above does raise Gounod and Mendelssohn as
exemplars for the musical style.
It is doubtful that present day
(2015) concert-goers or listeners will ever hear this work. As a composition it
is likely to be near the back of the queue for any contemporary recording
project or full-blown concert performance.
However, I think that it would be an ideal candidate for a ‘chamber’ recital
with a small ‘scratch’ choir and pianist. Certainly the short notice of this
work in The Self-Advertisement of Rutland
Boughton (1911) declares that although it is scored with orchestral
accompaniment, ‘the work will be effective with an accompaniment of strings and
piano only, or even of piano solo. (My italics). It further notes that ‘a fairly
good pianist will be necessary, as the vocal score contains a real pianistic
transcription of the orchestral part’. My study of the score suggests that this work
is worthy of being regarded as being more effective than merely an ephemeral
‘Morecambe Festival’ work.
Appendix 1
Other settings of Henry W.
Longfellow’s ‘The Skeleton on Armour’ include:
Arthur Foote: The Skeleton in Armour: ballad for chorus and
orchestra, op.28 c.1892
Joseph Holbrooke: The Viking: tone poem for orchestra, op.32 (1899).
This work was originally called The Skeleton in Armour and was occasionally
known as The Corsair.
George Elbridge Whiting: The Tale of the Viking: a Dramatic cantata
for 3 solo voices, chorus and orchestra, 1881
Brief Bibliography:
Hurd, Michael, Immortal Hour, The Life and Period of
Rutland Boughton, (London, Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1962)
Hurd, Michael, Rutland Boughton and the Glastonbury
Festivals, (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993)
Files of various contemporary
newspapers and journals
1 comment:
As said in the concluding paragraph, there have been no recent performances nor recordings of this cantata (or "Symphonic Poem"), although the vocal score is available through the Petrucci Music Library (imslp.org). This is, sadly, the case with many of Boughton's works - some of which are yet unperformed - and, despite all efforts of the Rutland Boughton Music Trust and its former secretary Ian Boughton, a grandson of the composer, it doesn't look too likely that we will see a revival any time soon. The BBC has shut this composer out of their repertoire list, not least because he used to constantly criticise the Corporation. But this does not mean that his music should not be heard much more frequently!
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