Howard
Riley’s (b.1943) Textures for string quartet has disappeared from the
repertoire. I was unable to find many references to this work, except in the
context of the 1970 Cheltenham Festival.
Riley is a musician who now performs in the avant-garde jazz and experimental
music world. However, he did crossover between genres in the late 1960s with
the present Textures for string quartet and his Three Fragments
for flute and piano which was also performed at Cheltenham. The Birmingham Post (13 July) noted
that Textures was played by the Welsh String Quartet ‘and did what it
set out to do with commendable brevity and a corresponding increase in our
respect for its achievement.
One
of the most impressive works heard at the 1970 Festival was the ‘concert
premiere’ of Scottish composer Thea Musgrave’s Night Music. This
18-minute work is presented in a single movement with cascading and sometimes
interlocking sections. The composer has written that ‘As so often in dreams,
there are quickly changing moods — frightening, eerie, peaceful, romantic,
stormy – and in this work highly contrasted musical sections quickly follow on
from each other, interchanging and even at times overlapping.’ (Liner Notes
NMCD074, 2002). The work involves a degree of ‘controlled freedom’ as well as
normal performance disciplines. A novel
aspect of this ‘dreamscape’ is the ‘seating arrangements’ for the two
peripatetic horn players. If they are sat close together, the music is lyrical,
but when they stand either side of the conductor, the sound is more dramatic
and dissonant. There is a third horn player, ‘off stage’ who creates various
echo effects. This is a highly charged, atmospheric piece that is both
challenging and immediately attention grabbing.
On the other hand, the reviewer in Musical Opinion (September
1970) thinks that the work presents a ‘Dark Night’ which is a ‘dangerous,
unquiet country.’ This Festival performance
as given by the BBC Welsh Orchestra conducted by Carewe. The same musicians had
given the premiere broadcast from Cardiff City Hall on 25 October 1969.
In 1973 Thea Musgrave’s Night Music
appeared on an LP of contemporary music released by Argo (ZRG 702). This album included
Roger Sessions’ Rhapsody for orchestra and his Symphony No. 8 as well as
Wallingford Riegger’s Dichotomy for chamber orchestra. In Musgrave’s
piece Barry Tuckwell and Alan Chidell were the horn soloists and the London
Sinfonietta was conducted by Frederik Prausnitz.
Two
CDs of Musgrave’s Night Music have been subsequently released. In 1987,
the Scottish Chamber Orchestra conducted by Nicolas Kraemer issued an album
devoted to her music in the now deleted Collins Classics series (15292). Along
with Night Music it included the oboe concerto, Helios and orchestral
The Seasons. All three Collins’s recordings were subsequently included on
the NMCD074 retrospective mentioned above. This album also incorporated Memento
Vitae. Night Music has been uploaded to the internet in the
NMC version. The 1973 Argo edition has been uploaded to YouTube.
Another
superb work heard at the 1970 Festival was ‘serial’ composer Humphrey Searle’s Zodiac
Variations for small orchestra, op.53. The title is a little bit of a
misnomer. The listener will hardly be conscious of any huge musical difference
between, say ‘Capricorn’ and ‘Cancer’. Searle does not seem to have used any
esoteric ideas for the characterisation of the various ‘star signs’: the piece
never strives for pictorial realism.’
The
theme, which is a short passage of 12 bars is followed by 12 short
variations. Searle has explained that
each succeeding variation uses notes from the preceding one, but also adds new
material, thus making the entire work ‘cumulative’. The structural organisation
is largely serial, but not pedantically so. Zodiac Variations is scored
for two oboes, (second doubling for cor anglais), two horns and strings. The work,
composed as a festival commission, was dedicated to the Festival Director, John
Manduell.
The
Variations were premiered at Cheltenham on 7 July 1970 by the Orchestra
Nova conducted by Meredith Davies who was deputising at short notice for
Lawrence Foster. Gerald Larner, clearly finding no musical correlation with he
heavens has gone as far to suggest that ‘a new title may reveal a different
work.’ (Musical Times September 1970). He was not impressed with the ill-prepared and
discouraging performance.’
In
2016, Lyrita Records (REAM 1130) issued a CD dedicated to Searle’s music. It
featured the Third and Fifth Symphonies, Labyrinth for orchestra and a
remastering of the premiere of the Zodiac Variations. Listening to this
work today, seems to defy Larner’s negative comments. I find that it is an
exhilarating and often quite beautiful work, that sounds to me admirably
realised.
To
be concluded…
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