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British Song
Peter DICKINSON (b.1934)
Surrealist Landscape (1973) [9:49]
Jonathan HARVEY (b.1939)
Correspondances (1975) [17:19]
Lennox BERKELEY (1903-1989)
Chinese songs Op.76 (1971) [10:05]
Gordon CROSSE (b.1937)
The New World (1969) [20:45]
Peter DICKINSON
Extravaganzas (1963/69) [6:15]
Elisabeth LUTYENS (1906-1983)
Stevie Smith Songs (1948-53) [13:10]
Meriel Dickinson (mezzo); Peter Dickinson (piano)
rec. 18 March 1974, Conway Hall, London (Berkeley, Crosse, Dickinson
‘Extravaganzas’); 14 October 1978, Rosslyn Hill Unitarian
Chapel, Hampstead (Dickinson ‘Surrealist’, Harvey and
Lutyens). ADD
HERITAGE HTGCD240 [77:45]
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This CD gets off to a fantastic start with Peter Dickinson’s setting
of the enigmatic Gerald Hugh Tyrwhitt-Wilson’s (Lord Berners’)
equally enigmatic Surrealist Landscape. This poem was
dedicated to Salvador Dali. As my late father would have said,
both poem and song are a little bit ‘long-haired’.
However, bearing in mind the eccentricities of the poet and
the dedicatee it could be little else. Dickinson has created
a soundscape to match the ‘landscape’. I do not
know if copyright allows me to quote more than a handful of
words from the poem, but just three short lines will give the
flavour for most listeners - ‘And a Bicycle Seat/ And
a Plate of Raw Meat/ And a Thing that is hardly a Thing’.
Do not ask me to analyse the musical or verbal progress of this
song in any detail. However, the programme notes assure the
listener that three strands are active - a simple setting of
Lord Berners’ poem in a style that ‘milord’
would have related to: this is recorded. Then the ‘live’
singer performs five vocalises, rather like improvisations,
but precisely noted against the recording. Finally, there is
a piano part utilising slow chords and plucked strings from
inside the instrument. All of this is overlaid one on top of
the other. It sounds like a recipe for chaos; however, it sounds
great! Martin J. Anderson in a review in Tempo (December
1980) suggests that this compositional process is both ‘affecting
and a shade unnerving’. It is a good description. Finally,
it ought to be recalled that Peter Dickinson is a great advocate
of Lord Berners and has produced an important musical study
of that composer (see
also his article).
From this particular listener’s point of view, the hardest
work to come to terms with was Jonathan Harvey’s Correspondances
(1975). These are settings of four poems by the French poet
Charles Baudelaire (1821-67). The songs are separated by a number
of interludes and fragments for solo piano. The ‘novelty’
of this work is that it is left up to the performers to decide
in which particular order the songs are sung. Just let us hope
that pianist and singer agree before the recital! Harvey has
intellectualised this ‘aleatory’ process by suggesting
that it is ‘variable, just as in Baudelaire new life may
precede or succeed death, and life and death are both contained
in love…’ The ‘blurb’ in the Arkiv CD
catalogue states that Jonathan Harvey can be ‘thought
of as an English Stockhausen’. I would need to hear more
of his music to decide if this is a true or fair assessment.
Certainly, based on the present offering, his style seems to
be more approachable than the German ‘meister’.
Much of this song-cycle is moving and often quite beautiful.
Baudelaire’s poetry has never been a favourite of mine:
it is dark, ‘satanic’ and often depressing. However,
as Paul Verlaine wrote, (Baudelaire’s poetry represents)
‘powerfully and essentially modern man in all his physical,
psychological and moral complexity.’ He is a poet who
transcends the stylistic hiatus between ‘romanticism’
and ‘modernism’. Harvey’s music is distinctly
modern with its emphasis on symbol and suggestion - however
there is a strong infusion of the more romantic qualities of
emotion and straightforward musical statements. Whatever my
personal tastes are, there is no doubt that one is in the presence
of a masterpiece with Correspondances. I understand that
this was Harvey’s first recorded piece.
I have never heard Lennox Berkeley’s Chinese Songs
before. I was completely impressed. They were commissioned by
the Park Lane Group for Meriel and Peter Dickinson and were
first performed at the Purcell Room on 22 March 1971. There
is a stylistic imbalance between the first four songs, which
are set in Berkeley’s then-contemporary style, and the
last one, which harks back to a simpler more diatonic mood.
However, this seeming disparity does not cause any disruption
to the coherence of this beautiful, if melancholic, cycle of
five songs. The first three numbers consider the plight of separated
lovers whilst the final two address the issue of loneliness.
It is a perfect balance between the simplicity of the text,
and the complexity of the emotions that these words engender.
I have never been able to read any of Ted Hughes’ poetry
without seeing a dead sheep in my mind’s eye: it was something
to do with one of the images (page 42, opposite a poem entitled
‘The sheep went on being dead’) in his book Remains
of Elmet (1979). I guess that this somewhat morbid image
sums up the darkness of much of Hughes’ poetic output.
However, praise where praise is due: there is nothing of the
rotting carcasses in these poems set by Gordon Crosse in his
excellent The New World: Six Poems by Ted Hughes. In
fact, these poems were written especially for the composer.
The liner-notes state that they have not been separately published
without the music - however, I have checked the Collected
Poems (2003) and discover that they are included there in
the ‘Uncollected (1971-1973)’ section. Additionally,
there are some discrepancies between the text in the book and
those published in the liner-notes. For example, ‘When
the star was on her face’ is given in the book and ‘When
the star was on her brow’ in the song. The track-listing
gives ‘I said goodbye to the earth’: the
Collected Poems omits the word ‘the’ as does
the printed poem in the liner-notes. However, the singer includes
the word ‘the’! Not serious stuff, but it makes
one wonder if there was a new recension of these poems when
they were published.
There is depth to these words, and considerable bleakness, however,
every so often there is a flash of light - of hope. Appropriately,
this work was written in 1969 the year that man landed on the
Moon.
I was very impressed by the music. As Peter Aston has noted,
the composer has managed to find a musical equivalent for every
emotional nuance of the text: Crosse has created a magical sound-world
that truly complements the poetry. Without a perusal of the
score, it is impossible to analyse the form of this cycle -
however with just a couple of hearings it is clear that the
work is tightly knit. The musical texture at times feels Spartan.
Nevertheless, there are moments of considerable effusion and
drama. This work is another ‘classic’ example of
why Gordon Crosse should hold a far higher place in the pantheon
of British composers than has so far seems to have been the
case. ‘The New World’ was commissioned by Lord Dynevor
and is dedicated to Meriel and Peter Dickinson. The work was
first performed at the 1972 Three Choirs Festival in Worcester.
I guess everyone of a certain age has read Jack Kerouac’s
On the Road. Many people will have progressed to read
other ‘Beat’ authors including the ‘visionary’
Allen Ginsberg and explored (in a literary manner) the drug-fuelled
universe of William S. Burroughs. One of the poets closest to
the heart of the movement was Geoffrey Nunzio Corso (1930-2001).
Kerouac wrote that he was ‘… a tough young kid from
the Lower East Side who rose like an angel over the roof tops
and sang Italian song as sweet as Caruso and Sinatra, but in
words … amazing and beautiful, Gregory Corso, the one
and only Gregory, the Herald.’ Ginsberg, writing in Gregory
Corso’s ‘chap-book’ Gasoline, suggested
that the reader ‘Open this book as you would a box of
crazy toys, take in your hands a refinement of beauty out of
a destructive atmosphere.’ In June 1963, Peter Dickinson
selected eight of these poems and created a cycle called Extravaganzas
for unaccompanied voice. Six years later he added a piano part
and the new version was duly performed by Meriel and Peter Dickinson
at the Purcell Rooms on 16 October 1969.
These songs are effective - their brevity is part of the charm.
Dickinson uses a variety of neo-jazz, popular and contemporary
idioms to deliver these attractive numbers; however, I am not
convinced by the ‘American’ accent that is used
in the delivery of these songs.
Ask a hundred ‘music-lovers’ for their opinion of
Elisabeth Lutyens and the words ‘scary’ will be
mentioned by any that have come across her music. I was put
off her style by a performance of O Saisons, O chateaux
that I heard some forty years ago. I still recall feeling that
this was the most appalling music I had heard up to that time.
Yet since then, I have dug a bit deeper. For one thing, I discovered
the delightful En Voyage - a piece of real, quality ‘light
music’. Then there are the film scores. Who would have
believed that ‘twelve tone Lizzie’, who railed against
the ‘cowpat’ school of compositions, would have
collaborated with that arch neo-Victorian John Betjeman in a
somewhat bucolic film depicting The Weald of Kent. There
is also the gorgeous ‘Magnificat’, which is well
within the bounds of Anglican Church music, if a little modern
for some ears. Therefore, it hardly came as a surprise to discover
that I thoroughly enjoyed the Stevie Smith Songs on this
CD.
The relationship between Elisabeth Lutyens and the poet Stevie
Smith deserves a major dissertation in its own right. However,
it is fair to suggest that they were friends and mutual admirers
of each other’s art - up to a point. The present set of
poems are ‘cabaret songs’ - with no pejorative comment
intended. Nine of these ten numbers were composed in 1948 with
the final song, ‘Be Off!’ completed in 1953. They
were specially written for Hedli Anderson, who was a well-known
‘chanteuse’. Anderson had sung a number of Britten’s
‘cabaret’ songs including the delightful and hackneyed
‘When you’re feeling like expressing your affection’.
These present settings manage to capture the heart of Stevie
Smith’s poetry. There is an excellent balance between
humour, simplicity and wistfulness. They are essentially ‘light
music’ and are easily approachable by anyone who enjoys
British song.
Meriel Dickinson graduated from the Royal Manchester College
of Music and had further studies in Vienna. She has devoted
much time to the music of modern and contemporary composers.
As well as those represented on this CD, she has worked with
Berio, Boulez Britten, Cage, Copland. She has had works dedicated
to her by many composers including by Andrzej Panufnik and John
McCabe. Another aspect of her career is an interest in musicals:
she has appeared in shows by Sondheim, Bernstein, Ivor Novello
and Vivian Ellis; the latter of Coronation Scot fame.
I have already given a thumbnail
sketch of Peter Dickinson in my review of his complete solo
organ works released on Naxos. Stylistically, he explores a
number of trajectories at one and the same time. His music covers
a wide range: ‘from jazz to serialism and from aleatory
writing to electronic manipulation and playback.’ Then
there is ‘ragtime’ and the Americanisms of the Gregory
Corso settings on the present CD. Sometimes more than one of
these elements is present in the same work: to use an overwrought
word, his style is truly eclectic. Peter Dickinson’s partnership,
as accompanist, with his sister Meriel lasted for over thirty
years.
The CD is well-packaged. The liner-otes are helpful for any
listener approaching these less-than-familiar works. The texts
of the songs are included. However, for non-French speakers
and readers, the translations of the Charles Baudelaire songs
are presented on the record company’s web
page. The recording history of these pieces is a wee bit
complex: the sleeve-otes explain when each piece was first released
and on what album or CD. All the tracks have been engineered
to give perfect reproduction.
Typically, I enjoyed this CD. I concede that the musical style
of these songs is often a little removed from my usual comfort
zone (Orr, Finzi, Moeran and brethren). However, British art
song did not die with those above-named nor even with Benjamin
Britten. The tradition lives on as is evidenced by all of the
pieces on this CD.
John France
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