GEORGE LLOYD – SYMPHONY No. 6
                   
                  by Peter Fender
                   
                  
Last year 
                  I had the immense privilege of conducting the English première 
                  of George Lloyd’s very fine cello concerto. In May this year 
                  I will conduct Lloyd’s sixth symphony - the first performance 
                  of one of his symphonies in London for something like 20 years. 
                  Next year I plan to perform one of his longer symphonies (possibly 
                  the 4th or 5th), and I’m working on a 
                  longer term project to resurrect his opera John Socman. 
                  I wrote about the cello concerto in the British Music Society 
                  Newsletter and would now like to share with you some thoughts 
                  on the 6th symphony.
                   
                  Last September I spent three wonderful days in the Cumbrian 
                  rain – well not literally in the rain, you understand, but inside 
                  William Lloyd’s farmhouse. George’s nephew William owns all 
                  of George’s scores and many other items belonging to his uncle, 
                  and has housed them in a beautiful library which forms a part 
                  of his farmhouse. I was given free access to all the materials 
                  and a complete set of CDs of George’s music. Whilst the rain 
                  hammered down I blew off the dust, listened to CDs, played on 
                  George’s piano and violin, and looked at scores of a number 
                  of unperformed works. I even had a moment to write a Lloyd-inspired 
                  theme for an overture I was working on at the time! I was able 
                  to see the scores which George himself conducted from, many 
                  of which contained the composer’s hand-written notes. On departure, 
                  William presented me with one of Lloyd’s batons – I shall use 
                  it to conduct the 6th symphony in May.
                   
                  The more I get to know Lloyd’s music, the more I find it extraordinary 
                  that it is so rarely performed. I suspect I may soon have conducted 
                  more Lloyd than any other living conductor. That is quite bizarre. 
                  My purpose here, however, is not to lament this situation but 
                  rather to give some insights into the wonderfully tuneful, terse, 
                  and tremendously enjoyable sixth symphony.
                   
                  Before going any further, I recommend that you listen to the 
                  piece. It is available on CD for around £12, coupled with the 
                  10th symphony and the ‘John Socman’ overture AmazonUK 
                  AmazonUS. 
                  I don’t think you can get it as a download. I am quite confident 
                  that you will think it money well spent. And after doing that, 
                  you should get out your diary and make a date to come and hear 
                  it live on 26th May 2012 in St John’s Church, Waterloo, 
                  London, played by Philharmonia Britannica. Come and say ‘hello’ 
                  at the end of the performance!
                   
                  Whilst chatting with some musicians in an amateur orchestra 
                  recently, I was surprised to find that one of them knew Lloyd’s 
                  6th Symphony. Then I remembered that Classic FM have 
                  aired the slow movement a good number of times, and it has become 
                  the most broadcast of all Lloyd’s works. It is not hard to see 
                  why. That movement is deliciously simple, interweaving two singing 
                  melodies and displaying that wonderful skill so prevalent in 
                  Mozart and Schubert of combining a beautiful melody with melancholic 
                  depth. But before talking any more about the music itself, let’s 
                  look at the historical origin of the 6th symphony. 
                  For this I am particularly indebted to William Lloyd, who has 
                  supplied me with his own programme notes on the piece.
                   
                  George Lloyd completed his sixth symphony in 1956. His 4th 
                  and 5th symphonies (1946 and 1948) had been completed 
                  in Switzerland whilst his wife nursed him back to health from 
                  the shellshock he suffered in the Second World War. Both symphonies 
                  are large scale works. The 4th is an emotive and 
                  haunting piece with Lloyd struggling to come to terms with the 
                  torpedoing of his ship, HMS Trinidad, on an Arctic convoy in 
                  1942. The 5th shows a brighter tone as he started 
                  to emerge from the shadows. On returning to this country he 
                  was commissioned to write an opera for the Festival of Britain 
                  in 1951 along with Britten and Vaughan Williams. The resulting 
                  opera John Socman was plagued with problems. After 
                  hearing a shambolic performance, Lloyd vowed that he would never 
                  set foot in an opera house again – a resolution he was to keep 
                  for over 20 years.
                   
                  By 1956, Lloyd established a market garden in Dorset, growing 
                  carnations which he sent off to Covent Garden market every day. 
                  His diary notes that it was hard physical work and that the 
                  only way he had the time and energy to compose was to rise at 
                  5.30am and put in a couple of hours at his scores before starting 
                  work on the business.
                   
                  These factors certainly contributed to his explicit desire to 
                  write something concise, bright and lively, with a minimum of 
                  development. There is an interesting note in the file for the 
                  first performance on 12th October 1980 with the BBC 
                  Philharmonic under Ted Downes. The text is crossed out and heavily 
                  revised, but Lloyd kept the original:
                   
                  “It is 25 years since I wrote this symphony, and this is 
                  the first performance. I tried once or twice to have No 6 played 
                  in the late 1950s, but I was told it was a worthless work because 
                  it had no contemporary significance. At that time ‘significance‘ 
                  meant swimming along with the tide, and no one seemed to understand 
                  that it was just as legitimate for a composer to react against 
                  the current trends as to go with them, or even that a composer 
                  can write what they like, which is what I did with this symphony. 
                  Perhaps I was naïve to think that I could try and forget the 
                  horrors of this world by escaping into the simplicity and happiness 
                  of a private fairyland.”
                   
                  Here we are face-to-face with two contrasting but complementary 
                  sides to Lloyd’s composition. In the 4th symphony 
                  he was very much confronting the ‘horrors of this world’ but 
                  in the 6th, ten years later, he takes delight in 
                  writing happy and carefree music.
                   
                  After its 1980 première, the 6th symphony was played 
                  at the Proms in 1981, a last minute addition to the programme 
                  by Edward Downes after a commissioned composer failed to deliver 
                  a score on time. Lloyd used to point out the irony that his 
                  first and only Promenade concert happened by accident! As far 
                  as I can ascertain, it has subsequently been played by the Plymouth 
                  Symphony Orchestra in 1983, the Slaithwaite Philharmonic early 
                  in the 1980s, the BBC Philharmonic in 1988 (just before they 
                  recorded it on CD), and the Susquehanna Symphony Orchestra, 
                  Maryland, USA, in 1996. Waterloo in 2012 may well be the sixth 
                  ever performance.
                   
                  What of the music itself? Words can’t really do music justice, 
                  so I again urge you to listen to the symphony.
                   
                  Despite the lightness of the piece (in contrast with the preceding 
                  two symphonies) it is still scored for an orchestra with triple 
                  winds. The use of the various sections of the orchestra is, 
                  however, quite different – Lloyd employs considerable restraint 
                  and circumspection in an almost Ravelian manner.
                   
                  The symphony begins with bright and upbeat unison staccato chords. 
                  They are slightly syncopated, giving an extra little bit of 
                  jauntiness. The violins then launch into a laid back and slight 
                  cheeky tune. The general mood is of elfin lightness, of scampering 
                  through the woods playing games, and this is aided by the fact 
                  that there are over 3 minutes of music at the one fast tempo. 
                  The sun is out and hardly a cloud crosses the sky. In a model 
                  moment of restraint the movement ends softly, perfectly foreshadowing 
                  the following movement.
                   
                  You may feel you have already heard the haunting F minor melody 
                  that opens the second movement. I’m not suggesting by this that 
                  you will have heard it on Classic FM, although this is entirely 
                  possible, but rather that it is one of those inevitable and 
                  satisfying tunes which the listener feels they must have heard 
                  before. It is beautifully proportioned, like a simple English 
                  folk song, combining nostalgia and nobility. The cor anglais 
                  plaintively sings a second melody, and then plunges into the 
                  only truly dark moments of the symphony over painful low-lying 
                  wind chords with stopped horns. Continuous upward triplets in 
                  the woodwinds propel the movement towards its conclusion, where 
                  the cor anglais resolves its earlier angst, yet ends on a yearning 
                  upwards appoggiatura which the harp is left to resolve. A marvellous 
                  movement of just 65 bars length.
                   
                  In the final movement we return to another version of the games 
                  being played in the first movement. There is a sense of the 
                  fun of the fair, and although there are moments when you wonder 
                  if there are clouds approaching, the fun and games are never 
                  far away. Notable are the swirling and lightning fast demands 
                  on the flute section. The piece accelerates to a joyful and 
                  powerful close.
                   
                  It is worth quoting Paul Conway, from his survey of Lloyd’s 
                  12 symphonies on MusicWeb International (http://www.musicweb-international.com/lloyd/index.htm), 
                  where he says:
                   
                  “George Lloyd's Sixth Symphony is a model of formal 
                  perfection and emotional restraint … by any standards a fine 
                  symphonic achievement … [the 2nd movement] 
                  is the perfect introduction to George Lloyd’s individual sound-world, 
                  encapsulating its rare brand of resilience without acrimony 
                  and a courageous message of hope for all who listen with open 
                  ears.”
                   
                  As a postscript I would like to put on record that the performance 
                  of Lloyd’s 6th symphony this May (as with the cello 
                  concerto last year) has been made possible by a donation by 
                  a private individual who knew George Lloyd. What a fantastic 
                  thing to do. Should you be interested in contributing towards 
                  a revival of Lloyd’s opera John Socman in 2014 - an 
                  expensive venture - I would love to hear from you!
                    
                Peter Fender
                   
                  peterfender@hotmail.com