A
                      couple of years ago I 
reviewed a CD of music by the Severnside
                      Alliance of Composers. I was particularly impressed with
                      some piano pieces by John Pitts. I noted that his “music
                      reminded me of Herbert Howells’ 
Lambert’s Clavichord;
                      not in idiom so much as his ‘picking up’ an older style
                      of keyboard composition and re-presenting it for our times”.
                      I concluded by suggesting that “this is lovely music to
                      listen to and shows a deep absorption of earlier styles
                      but with a large degree of originality added for good measure.”
                  
                   
                  
                  
A
                      few days ago, the present CD dropped into my letter box
                      and I was delighted to be introduced to a larger selection
                      of his music. My original thoughts about his style, ability
                      and technique held up well throughout the near-eighty minutes
                      of this recording.
                   
                  
It
                      is not really the place to give a biography of John Pitts.
                      However a few brief notes will help the listener and the
                      potential CD purchaser gain some understanding of this
                      interesting composer and his music.
                   
                  
John
                      Pitts studied with a galaxy of teachers including John
                      Casken, Robert Saxton and John Pickard. In 2003 he won
                      the prestigious Philharmonia Orchestra Martin Musical Scholarship
                      Fund Composition Prize: his Piano Quartet was performed
                      by the Fidelio Quartet in the final stages of the competition
                      at the Royal Festival Hall.
                   
                  
Pitts
                      is interested in composing for Christian worship and for
                      the stage. He has written incidental music for a number
                      of stage plays and two short operatic works – 
Crossed
                      Wires and the strangely entitled 
3 Sliced Mice!  Other
                      interests include working with the Bristol Savoy Operatic
                      Society as a conductor and arranger. 
                   
                  
The
                      music on this CD consists of a major cycle of piano music – the
                      7 Airs & Fantasias, which I believe is well worth regarding
                      as an entity, and two additional pieces for good measure. 
                   
                  
The
                      disc opens with a piece called Changes
 – for 20 nifty
                      fingers. On this recording the pianist Stephen Kings
                      is assisted with a further ten fingers by the composer.
                      It is definitely a minimalist work that is vibrant and
                      even rock-based in its driving rhythms. Like much of Pitts's
                      music it develops bell-like changes – a campanologist's
                      delight. After many adventures it ends abruptly on a loud
                      violent chord. A great opener – or encore for any pianist. 
                   
                  
The
                      massive Toccata is subtitled 
Blue Frenzy. This is
                      a considerable work lasting near ten minutes. I found this
                      work to be pleasantly modern in style. I see it as complex
                      and even disjointed but I am not sure if ‘frenzy’ is a
                      good adjective. The idiom would seem to be rhythm piano,
                      boogie-woogie, rather than the ‘blues’. This music is technically
                      involved; it shows a great command of pianistic style and
                      sounds extremely difficult. I can hardly believe that it
                      is played by just one player! 
                   
                  
The
                      main event on this CD is the group of seven Airs interspersed
                      with seven Fantasias. This is a colossal musical project
                      that deserves admiration. Pitts achieves a structure that
                      manages to be both diverse and unified at the same time.
                      That is no mean achievement in a cycle lasting more than
                      an hour.
                   
                  
The
                      opening Air (1) is subtitled 
Gently Interweaving.
                      This is not minimalist in ethos, but is gently meditative
                      music that exploits shifting harmonies. There is almost
                      a ‘pop’ feel to this piece. Its companion Fantasia –
Clockwork
                      5/4 is constructed from gently shifting patterns of
                      music and cross-rhythms. Initially played on the high octaves
                      of the piano this music moves into the lower register.
                      I was impressed by the interesting pedal effects in this
                      piece. 
                   
                  
Air
                      (2) carries the title 
After Satie. In fact, Pitts
                      almost manages to ‘out-Satie’ Eric - if that is possible.
                      Perhaps it could be seen as the fourth 
Gymnopédie?
                      There is naturally a decided French feel to this music
                      that is at all times very beautiful and quite relaxing. 
                   
                  
After
                      this ‘Parisian’ interlude the composer turns to the 
Westminster
                      Chimes for his Fantasia (2). This is composed for prepared
                      piano. I am never too convinced by this ‘faux’ alteration
                      of the instrument’s sound – but in this case it allows
                      the composer to contrast two completely different tonal
                      centres in the exposition of this piece – the ‘prepared’ and
                      the ‘normal’. The chimes pervade most of this work and
                      it becomes almost like a toccata. There are even suggestions
                      of ‘Chinoiserie’ in some of the later passages. This is
                      a mystical, mysterious, and novel exercise that cannot
                      fail to please the listener. Furthermore it manages to
                      bring the ‘prepared piano’ from the specialised ‘Cage-ian’ milieu
                      into more a more traditional and universal setting.
                   
                  
The
                      third Air, 
On an Anagram is a delicious, totally
                      laid back piece of music that exudes evocative chords,
                      felicitous melodies and pianistic devices. The melting
                      harmonies give this piece an almost timeless feel. And
                      lookout for some nods (probably not deliberate) to Sir
                      Malcolm Arnold! What the anagram is, I have no clue. And
                      I do not really care, and I guess the listener does not
                      need to understand this device to enjoy this lovely piece
                      of music.
                   
                  
The
                      Fantasia (3) is entitled 
Parallel Octaves. However
                      the music is not all what this title suggests. This is
                      no technical study designed to reinforce the right or the
                      left hand in coping with a difficult device. The Octaves
                      are only a part of the design of this piece; the music
                      does have a minimalist feel to it with structural changes
                      occurring slowly and subtly. 
                   
                  
The
                      next Air; Sarabande is actually a meditative and exploratory
                      piece. It is sometimes quite a hard-edged example of the
                      baroque dance form that goes beyond the usual dynamic and
                      range. 
                   
                  
The
                      corresponding Fantasia is a long piece that is designed
                      to be hypnotic in effect. 
Wind Chimes hardly give
                      a clue to the clever aural effects that Pitts creates in
                      this Debussy-like work. He manages to reduce the music
                      to a virtual standstill – a near perfect equilibrium – stasis.  I
                      have not seen the score of this piece, but I guess that
                      the entire Fantasia is constructed from some very simple
                      material that is worked up and used with skill. It is a
                      quite lovely piece. However, one word of warning: the listener
                      will need to be in the ‘right’ mood to hear this piece.
                      It requires a balance of attention and a certain letting
                      go. These ‘wind chimes’ are not sounded by a hurricane – just
                      a stiff breeze that blows through the listeners mind.  After
                      a livelier and faster second section the piece ends quietly,
                      almost hesitatingly.
                  
 
                  Calmly
                        Contented, the fifth Air
                        is probably the most ‘traditional’ of pieces in this
                        cycle. To my ear at any rate, it is reminiscent of Gerald
                        Finzi, though I imagine he was not a conscious model
                        for the composer.  The attentive listener will perhaps
                        feel that the contentment is not quite as perfect as
                        the title suggests. The calmness is disturbed now and
                        again by something less serene. However the general impression
                        of this air is of a concentrated introspection. 
                   
                  
The
                      fifth Fantasia, 
Bells in 9/8 is another poetic piece,
                      evoking a variety of images in the hearer’s mind. It opens
                      very quietly, minimalist and almost like a flower unfolding.
                      Yet appearances can be deceptive. This piece develops into
                      a little toccata that becomes more complex – both harmonically
                      and rhythmical – until it reaches a mid-life crisis. Some
                      parallel chords allow the music to slip back into the opening
                      mood. Gently ‘clanging bells’ are heard before the work
                      ends just a little more fraught that it opened. 
                   
                  
                  I
                      felt that 
Modal Twists (Air 6) was reminiscent of
                      music from the 1950s. In particular I was reminded of the
                      music of Franz Reizenstein.  It is a good balance
                      between consonances and dissonance and also between varying
                      tempi. For a definition of a ‘twist’ it is essential to
                      look at Pitts’s 
website.  
                  
                   
                  
                  
The
                      associated Fantasia is called 
Half-Second Hand.
                      Once again this piece explores Pitts’s interest in bells
                      and bell-ringing. Somehow, amongst the reiterated notes
                      and the high register there is a definite Spanish feel
                      to this music. And look out for the intriguing little downward
                      scale figure that permeates this piece.
                   
                  
The
                      last Air is called 
Cantabile Mist. I felt that it
                      was a little slower than I would normally play cantabile.
                      However this is a very beautiful piece that could almost
                      be regarded as an essay in the use of the sustaining pedal.
                      Naturally the ‘mist’ effect suggests impressionism – and
                      this ‘-ism’ is never far away from what is a reflective
                      piece. The final Fantasia –
All in a Chord is all
                      about chords – and their reiteration. The chordal structure
                      varies between more or less complex harmonies. I was reminded
                      of the music Steve Reich here. It is a perfect and decisive
                      conclusion to a great work. 
                   
                  
The
                      playing on this CD is both stunning and seriously impressive.
                      I alluded earlier to the Toccata sounding as if it were
                      a piece for four hands. Steven Kings is obviously committed
                      to this kind of music and makes a distinguished performance
                      that does both composer and music proud. My only criticism
                      is that I could have done with fuller programme notes.
                      That said, however, this music is quite capable of standing
                      on its own without a supporting commentary. 
                      
                  
I
                      look forward to watching John Pitts’s career with interest
                      and certainly will be privileged to review any subsequent
                      CDs if they are up to the compositional and performance
                      standards of this one.
                   
                  
                  
John France