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Arnold BAX (1883-1953)
Violin Sonata No. 2 (1915) [30:55] Ballad for Violin and Piano (1916) [6:48] Legend for Violin and Piano (1915) [9:28]
Sonata in G minor: Allegro appassionato (1901) [7:34]
Sonata in F major (1928) [18:45]
Laurence Jackson
(violin)
Ashley Wass (piano)
rec. Potton Hall, Westleton, Suffolk, England; 4 December 2004 NAXOS 8.570094 [73:30]
Arnold Bax’s Second
Violin Sonata, written in 1915 but revised and concentrated in
1920, is a far cry from the immediacy and exotic romanticism
of his First. The woodland light and fairy dreaming have given
way to reality and concerns about a world plunged into the horrors
of the Great War. The principal motif, familiar from November
Woods dominates the whole sonata. The opening movement, marked ‘Slow
and Gloomy’ is anguished and despairing, with little relief from
the violin’s sinking lines and passionate protests, and the piano’s
doom-filled bass tread. “The Grey Dancer in the Twilight’ is
Bax’s title for the second movement. Lewis Foreman states that
it might also be called ‘The Dance of Death’. It is a waltz,
bleached of joy - shades of Liszt’s Totentanz and Ravel’s La
Valse. It comes to a full stop, in desolation, about half
way through the movement to be followed by the violin’s melancholy
statement of the main motif over piano arpeggios. The music eventually
drags almost to a stop to merge into the third movement marked ‘Very
broad and concentrated’. Here violin mourns and the piano writing
seems to move in circles, turning in on itself as though lost
and bewildered. The concluding movement marked ‘Allegro feroce’ is
just that, for the most part. Bax seemingly shaking his fist
in defiance at the madness consuming the world. Elsewhere the
music escapes into a hoped for serenity, a nostalgic looking
back to an ordered pre-war world. Jackson and Wass deliver a
passionate, committed and finely shaded performance, the emotional
impact of which is appreciated all the more on repeated hearings.
Just what this darker, deeply-felt music richly deserves.
The other major work
in this programme is the two-movement Sonata in F major completed
in September 1928. Bax suppressed it during his lifetime because
he soon afterwards re-scored it as his Nonet (January
1930). It was not performed in this form until the Bax centenary
celebrations in 1983. This Sonata is, sunnier, more settled and
serenade-like, yet there is, too, a discomforting edginess to
some of its pages. Back to 1901 for Bax’s student work, the Allegro
appassionato of the Sonata in G minor. It is an attractive
piece, a confident and assertive work, passionate and romantic.
It is not without wit, and was inspired by, and written for Bax’s
Academy girlfriend Gladys Lees.
The Ballad for
Violin and Piano begins very turbulently, the violin writing
particularly agitated. This is Bax’s reaction to the tragedy
of the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916. The music clearly reflects
how these events must have affected the composer for he was
passionately fond of all things Irish. Some of the people caught
up in those terrible events were known personally to Bax – particularly
Padraig Pearse who was one of those executed after the event.
Balancing the turbulence is romantic reflective music with,
again, some waltz measures. Legend for Violin and Piano from
1915 is said to have reflected the first months of the Great
War and is elegiac in character. In the main the music does
not suggest the horrors of war, apart from passages like the
piano’s final pounding chords. Bax prefers to mourn, in some
quite lovely pages, the passing of an era.
Committed and thoughtful
performances of some of Bax’s most deeply-felt music concerned
with the horrors of World War I and the tragic events of the
Easter Uprising in Dublin.
Ian Lace
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