I have had several enjoyable
pints of beer at The George public house in Great Portland Street. There was
always a wonderful atmosphere that seemed to exude history. I am not particularly
sensitive to the supernatural, but I could not help being conscious of the
‘ghosts’ of virtually every 20th century composer that I admire. The
nickname ‘The Gluepot’ was coined by Sir Henry Wood: he was always ‘frustrated’
by his orchestral players’ reluctance to drag themselves away from the bar and
back to rehearsals at the Queen’s Hall.
The name ‘stuck.’ The litany of
composers frequenting the bar include Arnold Bax, Peter Warlock, Alan Bush,
Jack Moeran, John Ireland, Alan Rawsthorne, William Walton, Constant Lambert,
Humphrey Searle and Elisabeth Lutyens. And it was not just composers. Poets
Louis MacNeice, Randall Swingler, Roy Campbell and Dylan Thomas (what pub did
Dylan not frequent?) were habitués. Although I tended to think of
musicians and poets when drinking in The George, it is fair to say that it was
also popular with employees from the BBC’s Broadcasting House at Langham Place.
If only the walls could talk: what fascinating crack and conversation they could
recall.
Elisabeth Lutyens wrote in her
autobiography A Goldfish Bowl that ‘I
remember at one lunch someone remarking that if a bomb dropped on The George a
large proportion of the musical and literary world would be destroyed.’ For
Lutyens, this pub was the ‘focal
point’ of her social and professional life for several years. It is a testament
to a largely lost era.
This impressive CD is a perfect
introduction to some of the most evocative choral music composed by 20th
century British composers -all with connections to The Gluepot. There are some
old favourites here, alongside some new discoveries (at least for me).
The programme opens with Peter
Warlock’s lovely setting of Robert Nichols poem, ‘The Full Heart.’ This piece was
surely written in response to his discovery of Delius’s music whilst he
[Warlock] was still at Eton College.
A new work for me is Alan
Rawsthorne’s Four Seasonal Songs
composed in 1956. This is a premiere recording.
The liner notes describe Rawsthorne’s choral writing here as a ‘bracing,
tightly constructed style.’ Certainly, there is a vibrancy about these songs
that derive from the mood of the four late sixteenth/early seventeenth century
poets. Sebastian Forbes has remarked on ‘the cleaner, mostly diatonic harmony
and crisper almost baroque rhythm.’ It is a work that deserves to be in the
choral repertoire. Poems set include ‘Now the Earth, the Skies, the Air’
(Anon), ‘To the Spring’ (Sir John Davies), ‘Autumn’ (Joshua Sylvester) and ‘Now
the lusty Spring is seen’ (John Fletcher).
I enjoyed the perfect fusion of
words (James Kirkup) and music of John Ireland’s ‘The Hills’ written in 1952 as
part of A Garland for the Queen. One
of my favourite part-songs on this CD is John Ireland’s ‘Twilight Night’. This
was composed in 1922, setting a text by Christina Rossetti. The music reflects a friendship sundered
by distance and obligation but retaining an optimistic hope of meeting at some
future date. A perfect conceit.
Equally effective, is Fred.
Delius’s ravishing ‘On Craig Dhu’ with its extensive use of chromaticism making
this music hang in the cool air, mirroring Arthur Symons’s thoughts as he sits
high on this Welsh[?] Hill surveying the surrounding landscape.
And then there is ‘Verses of
Love’ by Elisabeth Lutyens herself. This
gorgeous setting of words by Ben Jonson is the perfect antidote to those who
still rail against the music of ‘Twelve Tone Lizzie.’ This is a longish work
that explores a wide-range of choral possibilities, including tone-clusters and
glissandi. It was originally published in the Musical Times in 1970. Her ubiquitous serialism has been put to one
side for something infinitely more universal.
The major work on this CD is E.J.
Moeran’s Songs of Springtime. This collection
includes some delightful texts by William
Shakespeare, John Fletcher, Thomas Nashe, Samuel Daniel, William Browne and
Robert Herrick. These part-songs are influenced by Peter Warlock and reflect a
charmingly English atmosphere. They are characterised by their appealing rhythmical
diversity and piquant harmonies and never lapse into pastiche of their
Elizabethan exemplars. ‘Songs of
Springtime’ are not easy to sing: the Londinium Chamber Choir give a perfect
account.
William Walton’s ‘Where does the
uttered Music go?’ (John Masefield) written for the unveiling of a memorial
stained-glass window in St Sepulchre’s Church, Holborn Viaduct dedicated to Sir
Henry Wood is given a fine performance. This is an appropriate ‘tie in’ to The
Gluepot!
The settings by Alan Bush are
first hearings for me. ‘Like Rivers Flowing’ was composed in 1957 and was
dedicated to the ‘people of Llangollen and all who sing there.’ Cleary this
reflects the annual Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod which was
inaugurated in 1943. It was originally ‘For the WMA [Workers Musical Association]
Singers, Welsh Festival’ reflecting the composer’s socialist ideals. The text of this tender, idyllic piece was by
the composer’s wife Nancy Bush.
Bush’s other part-song on this CD
is the ‘powerful response’ to the German destruction of the village of ‘Lidice’
in what is now the Czech Republic, during June 1942. This is a deeply moving
and often desperately intense setting, as the events suggest, of words by Nancy
Bush. The premiere was given by the WMA Singers, conducted by the composer, on
the site of the destroyed village. There is a picture of this event included in
the liner notes.
Although the immediate
inspiration of Arnold Bax’s massive ‘Mater ora filium’ was hearing William
Byrd’s Five-Part Mass at Harriet Cohen’s house at Wyndham Place, he has not
indulged in parody. This work for double choir is a splendid example of Bax’s
individual contrapuntal style. This is an extremely difficult piece to ‘bring
off’: it does not defeat the Londinium Chamber Choir. This version is superb.
Bax’s setting is timeless: it needs no argument about musical allusions or
influences.
The other Bax work is ‘I sing of
a Maiden that is makeless’, being a mediation on the Virgin Mary. This lovely
chromatic piece is largely through-composed. It is an ideal evocation of Our
Lady’s perfection.
I cannot fault anything about
this recording. The choice of music is inspirational. The singing by the Londinium
Chamber Choir is near-perfect and the presentation of the CD is ideal. The
liner notes give a good introduction to the repertoire and to ‘The Gluepot.’ The texts of the part-songs are
included. Composer and works dates would
have been helpful in the track listings.
I understand that The Gluepot,
itself has now closed (as in shut for good, not just Time, Gentlemen, Please!).
It appears to be ‘under development’ so one wonders what will appear in its
place? It is [probably] the end of an era. I am privileged to have drunk
there and shared good conversation with friends in that iconic watering hole.
Track Listing:
Peter WARLOCK (1894-1930)
The Full Heart (1916 rev. 1921)
Alan RAWSTHORNE (1905-1971) Four Seasonal Songs (1956)
John IRELAND (1879-1962) The Hills (1953)
Arnold BAX (1873-1953) I sing of a Maiden that is makeless (1923)
Alan BUSH (1900-1995) Like Rivers Flowing (1957)
Frederick DELIUS (1862-1934) On Craig Dhu (1907)
Elisabeth LUTYENS (1906-1983) Verses of Love (c.1970)
Ernest John MOERAN (1894-1950) Songs of Springtime (1931)
William WALTON (1902-1983) Where does the uttered Music go? (1946)
John IRELAND Twilight Night (1922)
Alan BUSH Lidice (1947)
Arnold BAX Mater Ora Filium (1921)
Londinium Chamber Choir/Andrew Griffiths
Rec. 21-23 July 2017, All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London
SOMM SOMMCD 0180
Alan RAWSTHORNE (1905-1971) Four Seasonal Songs (1956)
John IRELAND (1879-1962) The Hills (1953)
Arnold BAX (1873-1953) I sing of a Maiden that is makeless (1923)
Alan BUSH (1900-1995) Like Rivers Flowing (1957)
Frederick DELIUS (1862-1934) On Craig Dhu (1907)
Elisabeth LUTYENS (1906-1983) Verses of Love (c.1970)
Ernest John MOERAN (1894-1950) Songs of Springtime (1931)
William WALTON (1902-1983) Where does the uttered Music go? (1946)
John IRELAND Twilight Night (1922)
Alan BUSH Lidice (1947)
Arnold BAX Mater Ora Filium (1921)
Londinium Chamber Choir/Andrew Griffiths
Rec. 21-23 July 2017, All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London
SOMM SOMMCD 0180
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
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