It
is always interesting to look at the Promenade Concert Premieres for any given
year – and see what has survived. In this case I look at 1968. I have only
considered British works.
British Premieres
Malcolm
Arnold: Peterloo Overture
Arnold
Bax/John Barbirolli Oboe Quartet arranged for oboe and string orchestra
Arthur
Bliss: Morning Heroes
Benjamin
Britten: Overture-The Building of the House (1967) ‘Come you not from
Newcastle’, ‘O Waly Waly’, ‘Oliver Cromwell’
William
Byrd: Motets- ‘Ne Irascaris Domine’, ‘Civitas sancti tui’, ‘Laudibus in sanctis’,
‘Sing Joyfully unto God’.
Frederick
Delius: Requiem
Henry
Purcell: Te Deum and Jubilate
Alan
Rawsthorne: Concerto for two pianos (BBC Commission)
William
Walton Philharmonic Overture N.Y. (Capriccio Burlesco) 1968
The
first thing to say is that there are several levels of survival for works premiered
at the Promenade Concerts. Few of the ‘novelties’ for 1968 have entered the
mainstream classical ‘charts’. I doubt that any piece will have featured on Classic FM, apart from Malcolm Arnold’s Peterloo Overture (possibly) and
Britten’s ‘O Waly, Waly.’
The
next level up is those works that were premiered at the 1968 Proms several years
after their composition and original first performances elsewhere. Presumably Byrd’s
motets and Henry Purcell’s Te Deum
and Jubilate fall into this category.
Certainly, there are several recordings of these in the CD catalogues.
A
more problematic work is Frederick Delius’ Requiem
(1916). Never one of his more popular pieces, this setting of texts by Heinrich
Simon has received very few performances. It had to wait until 1968 before a
commercial recording was forthcoming. (HMV ASD2397). At present there are only three CDs of the Requiem listed in the catalogue. One of these is a live performance transferred
to disc.
Sir
Arthur Bliss’s Morning Heroes is given
the occasional performance and has been recorded at least four times. It seems
to me that 2018 would have been a great time for a Proms performance of this
deeply moving elegy inspired by the horrors of the First World War.
The
next group (the largest) is where one or more recordings have been made, and
where the work is (relatively) well-known to enthusiasts of the composer.
William Walton’s Philharmonic Overture
N.Y was originally composed to the 125th Anniversary of the New York
Philharmonic. The name was later changed to Capriccio
Burlesco. This is a bustling, energetic work that has echoes of Portsmouth
Point. There are at least four recordings currently available.
Arnold
Bax’s Quintet for oboe, 2 violins, viola and cello was written around 1922 and was dedicated to Leon Goossens. It was arranged as a Concerto for oboe and
string orchestra by Sir John Barbirolli and was premiered in this guise at the
Free Trade Hall, Manchester on 21 April 1968. The concept of the reworking was
approved of by Bax himself, although it was not completed until sometime after
the composer’s death. It is available on CD (BBC Legends BBCL 4100-2).
Stephen
Lloyd on MusicWeb International (2
September 2002) wrote: ‘The Bax is certainly the most valuable item as it is
otherwise unrecorded (and rarely performed). While Barbirolli’s arrangement of
the quintet is no improvement on the original, it might at the time have given
the work a wider circulation. It is a welcome rarity.’
Benjamin
Britten is always popular, yet his Overture-The
Building of the House is hardly well-known. It was
composed in 1967 for the inauguration of the Snape Maltings concert hall and
received its Proms Premiere on the ‘Last Night.’ It is a splendid work that
deserves to be better known. The other Britten pieces, ‘Come you not from
Newcastle’, ‘O Waly Waly’, ‘Oliver Cromwell’ were performed in arrangements for
voice and orchestra. The original piano version has held its own since they
were first published. All these works have been recorded, with at least five
versions of the Overture currently available.
Equally
successful in the recording studio but not in the concert hall is Alan
Rawsthorne’s Concerto for Two Pianos. It was written for, and premiered
by, John Ogdon and Brenda Lucas. This Concerto has often been regarded as
‘reflecting the decline’ of the composer’s last years: he died in 1971.
Certainly, I do not believe that it stands up to the his two earlier piano
concertos. Yet this ‘economic’ work is
full of excitement and good craftsmanship. Maybe it is time to reappraise what
is clearly an intimate and sometimes dark work. There are one recording
currently available, with the soloist Geoffrey Tozer. There is also a deleted
BBC recording of the work’s Prom premiere.
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