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Ronald Stevenson Sing a Song of Seasons - Song Cycles  A Child’s Garden of Verses (R L Stevenson): Nine Haiku (Keith Bosley): Border Boyhood (MacDiarmid) The Art Song Collective: Richard Black Piano/Wills Morgan Tenor/Moira Harris Soprano. Musaeus MZCD100 (Obtainable from The Ronald Stevenson Society 3  Chamberlain Road, Edinburgh EH10 4DL)


In an essay ‘Composing a Song Cycle’ (first published in the Ronald Stevenson Society newsletter (Vol 3/2 Autumn 1996) and subsequently  in the double issue of ‘Chapman’ vols 89/90) Stevenson propounds some fascinating even heretical ideas on the perennial subject of ‘words for music’ which reveals the fact that, as a composer, his respect for the words, and for their form, whether Poem or Prose is highly individual and shows a creative sensitivity uncommon enough today. He writes:-

"Another problem of setting words to music is this: every musical motif or theme contains the germ of its own development: set words to it and the development of the musical idea has to be subjugated to the development of the verbal idea. The music has to yield to the words: like a creeping plant, it has to be trained to a trellis. This problem can be overcome partially by a careful selection of the text."

He goes on, like an enthusiastic child to divulge the intensity of his inspiration (speaking of the ‘Border Boyhood’ cycle in particular): There are recurrent references to the wood throughout the cycle. Can you remember the first time you ente../graphics/red a wood as a child? I can. Suddenly to be encircled by shadows and to see the shadows become luminous with blue-bells - this was magic ! I’ve tried to evoke the suddenness of this experience by a single chord in the opening song.

… The emerging melody is treated in variation-form in a piano interlude. Another recurrent motif is the river. It meanders in and out of the music of my song-cycle as it does in the Border landscape.’

This essay illuminates this particular cycle which was commissioned by Peter Pears for the 1971 Aldeburgh Festival. A setting of the prose writings of MacDiarmid, it is symphonic in scope, with an arch-like form built around the central Intermezzo for piano alone - a moment of hushed stillness in the midst of the cathedral-like woods. Here ‘even the robin hushes his song in these gold pavilions’

Stevenson again, whose sense of formal coherence is well demonstrated in the huge 80 minute long Passacaglia on DSCH, constructs his cycle of verses from Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘A Child’s Garden’ with a judicious selection of poems which reflect the passing of a day, and of the pageant of the seasons - choosing verses that deal with the sensual (wood-smoke, train travel, bed in summer, the swing) and in which the child is engrossed in solitary play, his only companion the Shadow!

The formal element of the 17th century Japanese Haiku also attracted  Stevenson who describes them as suggesting ‘the use of pentatonic and heptatonic scales, completing a twelve-note sound spectrum’ These fine performances by the Art Song Collective are authoritative - the group very close to the composer, and attendant at the annual July symposium of the Society at Garvald. I cannot help however yearning for the first broadcast performance of the RLS cycle when, with a characteristic touch, the composer employed the voices of two children with the tenor. Nevertheless this welcome disc must win many new friends to the music of this fascinating composer.

Reviewer

Colin Scott Sutherland

Reviewer

Colin Scott Sutherland

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