Of all the Olivier Shakespeare
films,
Henry V has to be my favourite – and the
music which Walton wrote for it has to take precedence
over his
Richard III and
Hamlet. There are
moments where Olivier distorts Shakespeare in all three
plays – as much Colly Cibber as Shakespeare in
Richard
III, for example – but they are less irksome in
Henry
V. One which has misled generations of exam candidates,
the Bishop and Archbishop fooling around with the papers
which ‘prove’ Henry’s claim to the French throne, does
not impinge on the music.
Muir Mathieson prepared
a five-movement
Henry V Suite, recorded by Walton
himself and Olivier in 1963, but Christopher Palmer’s Scenario
gives a much fuller selection: just about all the music
that could be used from the film, eked out in places with
other Walton music. The excellent performances on this
Chandos recording, reissued in 2007 at budget price, bring
the Scenario so fully to life that the images from the
film flood back into the imagination – after all, isn’t
that what Shakespeare’s own Prologue bids us do: “let vs
... / On your imaginarie Forces worke / ... And make imaginarie
Puissance.”
Christopher Plummer delivers
that exhortation from the Prologue in a manner worthy of
Olivier himself at his declamatory best. Olivier, of course,
did not speak the Prologue himself, but Plummer is equally
at home in the master’s style in the words of Henry himself
at Harfleur, Agincourt and the French Court.
Samuel West and the BBC
Symphony Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin recorded the Scenario
for Radio 3 in 2001, a recording subsequently made available
on the cover CD of
BBC Music Magazine (MM215). Though
Slatkin’s overall timing of 68:09 is close to Marriner’s
60:59, he gets there by very different means:
|
Marriner |
Slatkin |
Prologue |
9:20 |
8:59 |
The Boar’s Head |
4:29 |
5:58 |
Embarkation |
3:29 |
3:23 |
“Touch her soft lips” |
2:13 |
2:15 |
Harfleur |
3:48 |
3:48 |
The Night Watch |
5:21 |
5:21 |
“Upon the King” |
3:46 |
3:43 |
Agincourt |
15:15 |
14:43 |
The French Court |
5:16 |
5:11 |
Epilogue |
7:52 |
6:59 |
What is remarkable is
not so much the fact that neither is consistently faster
or slower than the other, but that they agree almost to
the second in the four central sections and at the French
Court – sections which are, to my mind, more successful
in the film than Agincourt, for all one’s admiration for
the making of that scene in an age long before CGI, and
where the music so perfectly accords with the mood.
The Slatkin version is
well worth obtaining if you happen to see a second-hand
copy - it is, of course, no longer generally available
- but the Chandos has a clear edge. Though Marriner’s Prologue
clocks in at 21 seconds longer than Slatkin’s, it doesn’t
take so long to come to life: Slatkin just sounds a little
sluggish until his performance gets underway. Both handle
the pseudo-bethan dance section well, but again Marriner
just has the edge and he is more clearly recorded – the
BBC recording is a shade backward. And when Samuel West
speaks the Prologue, though he is closer to the way in
which these lines are spoken in the film, he doesn’t quite
match Plummer’s sheer impact. The choral contributions
to both recordings are excellent but it is Plummer and
Marriner who more clearly summon up the wonderful opening
of the film, where the model of the Globe theatre segues
into the scene on the stage at Olivier’s reconstruction
of the playhouse – an imaginary reconstruction which, of
course, predates the actual restoration of the Globe by
several decades.
In the Boar’s Head section,
Slatkin gets just the right mood – first, the drunken roll
of the music and then the lament for Falstaff: I think
he is just slightly more successful here than Marriner,
assisted by West’s more feeling rendition of the words
spoken by and about Falstaff and by his giving the music
a little more time to breathe.
Thereafter the odds are
all in favour of the Chandos recording, especially as Timothy
West’s Harfleur speech is no match for Plummer’s – generally
too quiet, and, when he does raise his voice, he tends
too much towards shouting. Plummer gets this and the Agincourt
speech just right. Both orchestras offer fine accounts
of the Agincourt music, but it is Plummer who wins the
day here again for Chandos.
There is also a version
on Naxos (RTE Concert Orchestra/Andrew Penny 8.553343)
which I haven’t heard but which has been well received
in some quarters. From its listing on the Naxos website
it appears to omit the important “Upon the King” section
of the Harfleur music. With no coupling it is, therefore,
rather short value at 54 minutes.
When I first saw Henry
V, I didn’t know either the Farnaby piece or Canteloube’s Chants
d’Auvergne; nowadays their appearance brings a moment
of pleasant recognition and it is good to have them performed,
together with the anonymous Watkin’s Ale, as appendices
to the Chandos recording. I have to admit that I’m something
of a sucker for 20th-century re-workings of
earlier renaissance and baroque music – Respighi’s Gli
Uccelli and Ancient Airs and Dances, for example – and
Walton’s Shakespeare music certainly comes into that
category, whether taken from music like the Farnaby,
or composed in a pastiche of that style. How wonderfully
Walton weaves that Canteloube into his score, the magic
well captured on both recordings.
And what a rousing finale
Walton’s updated Agincourt Carol makes. The film
and the music were, of course, part of the wartime effort
to boost morale and this musical finale certainly played
its part.
I have already indicated
that the Chandos sound is very good – slightly brighter
and more forward than the BBC CD. I downloaded this and
the other two Chandos recordings of Walton’s Shakespeare
music, some tracks in mp3 format and some as lossless wma.
As always with Chandos downloads, I found the mp3 more
than acceptable and the wma fully up to CD standard. The
only question, as always, is whether one wishes to take
the time to download in view of the small savings to be
made on Chandos’s budget-price recordings – often available
for little more, and sometimes for slightly less than the
download price, on CD.
On this occasion, downloading
from eMusic would be a more economical proposition – thirteen
tracks of your monthly allowance – but you get the original
full-price cover shot, not the more attractive cover of
the reissue. You can also get the Alto reissue of Walton’s
own mono recording of Henry V (1946) coupled with
the incomparable Pears/Sitwell Façade on eMusic
but, as this amounts to 29 tracks, it’s cheaper to buy
the super-budget CD. eMusic also offer the Delos recording
of the Mathieson Suite conducted by James dePreist, and
the Naxos recording of the Palmer Scenario.
classicsonline also offer
mp3s of the dePreist and Naxos recordings; their price
for the Chandos recording, £7.99, is actually more expensive
than many online dealers are offering the CD – and, as
with eMusic, you don’t get the notes, merely a high-res
shot of the original full-price cover.
All three of the reissued
Chandos recordings sound much better in whatever format,
than the scratchy sound on the original films – even modern
DVD re-masterings, which have much improved the picture,
can’t do much for the thin sound.
I’ve mentioned those other
Shakespeare scores, Richard III on CHAN10435X, coupled
not entirely appropriately with music for Shaw’s Major
Barbara, and Hamlet on CHAN10436X, coupled with
the music for a performance of As You Like It. Both
are equally recommendable, except for Sir John Gielgud’s
disappointingly sub fusc rendition of Richard’s
opening speech. Gielgud’s creamy tones just aren’t suited
to Ricardian villainy, but we don’t even hear much of the
cream here; probably it was a mistake to reverse Olivier’s
decision to omit or reduce to inaudibility the music written
to accompany this speech – it just drowns the actor out.
Otherwise all is well on both these recordings – Gielgud
is in much better form on the Hamlet CD – and they,
too, may be recommended with confidence. All three rightly
find a place on Ian Lace’s recommended list
of film music recordings, under their original full-price
catalogue numbers: at their new price they are even more
worthwhile.
Brian Wilson