Ian VENABLES (b.1955)
On the Wings of Love, Op.38 for tenor, clarinet and piano (2005-2006)
[23:15]
Venetian Songs - Love’s Voice, Op.22 (1994-1995) [15:37]
Midnight Lamentation, Op.6 (1974) [3:42]
Break, break, break, Op.33, No.5 (1999) [2:24]
The November Piano, Op.33, No.4 (1999) [2:56]
Vitae Summa Brevis, Op.33, No.3 (1999) [3:24]
Flying Crooked, Op.28, No.1 (1997) [1:03]
At Midnight, Op.28, No.2 (1997) [3:51]
The Hippo, Op.33, No.6 (1999) [1:28]
At Malvern, Op.24 (1998) [4:22]
A Kiss, Op.15 (1992) [4:01]
Andrew Kennedy (tenor); Iain Burnside (piano); Richard Hosford (clarinet)
rec. Wyastone Concert Hall, Monmouth, UK, 23-25 November 2009. DDD
English texts included
NAXOS 8.572514 [66:04]
At Midnight
Ian VENABLES
Invite, to Eternity, Op.31 (1997) [24:21]
Four Songs with String Quartet (arr. Graham Lloyd): A Kiss Op.15; Flying
Crooked, Op.28 No.1; The Hippo, Op.33 No 6; At Midnight,
Op.28 No.2 (?) [12:15]
String Quartet, Op.32 (1998) [21:01]
Andrew Kennedy (tenor); Dante Quartet (Krysia Osostowicz (violin); Giles Francis
(violin); Judith Busbridge (viola); Bernard Gregor-Smith (cello))
rec. 1-3 June 2009, St Paul’s Church, Deptford. DDD
English texts included
SIGNUM SIGCD204 [58:04]
In May I am planning to review a concert in Malvern for Seen and Heard which
will include the première of a new cycle of songs by Ian Venables,
The Song of the Severn, for baritone, piano and string quartet
(details).
In preparation for that event I’ve been listening to some more of his
music.
These two CDs, which were recorded within a few months of each other, feature
the tenor Andrew Kennedy and both display Ian Venables’ talents as a
songwriter. I don’t know what it is about English music that so often
announces itself to the listener as English, even if, as here, the music is
neither modal nor inspired by English folk song. Venables’ music does
seem to me to breathe a definite air of Englishness, even when he is not setting
texts by English writers. However, I noted with some interest that Ionian
Song, the first of the Op. 38 set, is dedicated to the great American
composer, Ned Rorem. He is one of the finest of twentieth-century art song
composers - and, happily, continues to compose songs in the twenty-first century
- and after reading that dedication I hope I wasn’t being suggestible
in hearing resonances of Rorem’s music - I wouldn’t put it more
strongly than that. Perhaps my thinking is influenced by two traits that these
two composers have in common: a genuine melodic gift and a discerning eye
for suitable literary texts to set to music.
The Naxos disc includes Venables’ first song, Midnight Lamentation.
Though he was only 19 when he wrote it one can find even here the traits which
characterise so many of the subsequent songs that I’ve heard. The vocal
line is expressive and borne along on a very natural melodic line. The musical
style is direct and communicative. Incidentally, the words that are sung are
not quite as printed in the booklet.
Ian Venables has several song cycles to his name. Six are mentioned in the
Naxos booklet, including the very fine The Pine Boughs Past Music,
Op. 39, the first performance of which I reviewed
back in 2010. A few months later I reviewed
a repeat performance at the Three Choirs Festival. Two other cycles are included
on the Naxos disc, while the Signum recital offers a third. On the Wings
of Love is written for the rather unusual combination of voice, clarinet
and piano, the same forces so wonderfully brought together by Schubert in
Der Hirt auf dem Felsen. Ian Venables makes the combination work equally
well, albeit in a different way; the voice and the reed instrument often complement
each other - as, for instance, in their echoing lyrical phrases in the second
song, The Moon Sails Out - at other times the different timbres contrast
most effectively. As well as The Moon Sails Out, a delightful song,
I enjoyed very much the third of the five songs, Sonnet XI which is
gentle at the start and at the end yet rises to great intensity and ardour
in the middle. I was also very taken with the concluding When you are Old,
a Yeats setting, in which Venables’ music conveys very acutely the wistful
reminiscence of times past.
All five songs in Op. 38 use texts by non-English writers, four of them in
English translation. For Op. 22 Ian Venables has taken four poems by the English
poet and literary critic, John Addington Symonds (1840-1893), on whom he is
an acknowledged authority. The set is dated 1994-5 but perhaps the rest of
them were added to the last one, Love’s Voice, which was commissioned
in 1993. I see this is dedicated to Ian Partridge. I wonder if that fine tenor
ever sang the song; I could imagine its expressive melodic line and intense
mood suiting his voice very well. I don’t think that, in reviewing,
I’ve come across a piece dedicated to someone who I’ve met but
I have had the pleasure of meeting at several concerts the music-loving lady
to whom the third song, The Invitation to the Gondola, is dedicated.
It’s a fine setting, fervent in its outer sections and though the middle
section is more reflective one can sense that fervour remains present, albeit
below the surface. This is a very good set of songs and Andrew Kennedy does
them very well.
Among the other songsBreak, break, break, a Tennyson setting,
is more vigorous than most in this programme. Vitae Summa Brevis is
a deeply-felt response to the poem by Ernest Dowson. Here the vocal lines
are long and expansive and the piano part is highly atmospheric. Flying
Crooked, to a poem by Robert Graves, is unusual in this collection in
that the music is light in tone and heart; it’s an engaging song. That
brings me to the one observation - not criticism - that I would make about
the songs by Ian Venables which I’ve heard to date. Most of them are
quite serious in countenance, often tapping that peculiarly English vein of
melancholy. His serious songs are very fine but I wonder if the mixture might
be leavened occasionally with a few more light-hearted, even cheerful offerings.
There may well be a fair number of such songs within his portfolio but to
date I’ve heard some twenty-six by him and, among these, songs that
are serious in nature and slow or moderate in tempo seem to predominate.
That point is emphasised in the Signum booklet where the note by Graham
J. Lloyd quotes Stephen Banfield’s view that Ian Venables possesses
“a genius for melancholy”; that is on display in much of the music
on this disc. The cycle Invite, to Eternity is an impressive collection
of four settings of poems by John Clare (1793-1864) for tenor and string quartet.
Venables’ instinctive ability to write effectively and expressively
for the human voice will not be doubted by anyone who has listened to the
Naxos CD. Here his affinity for the string quartet is shown to be just as
strong. Perhaps it’s the inclusion of strings in the scoring but I thought
that in the opening song there was more than a whiff of the - wholly beneficial
- influence of Finzi, most markedly at the harmonic resolution on the words
“Love so divine”. The second song, which gives the cycle its title,
starts innocently enough, as does Clare’s poem, but the burden of the
words soon becomes more poignant, even dark, and the hue of Venables’
music darkens in sympathy with the words. The short third song is scherzo-like
after which the most extensive song, I am, involves, in Graham Lloyd’s
words, “desolate harmonic language”. There’s even greater
depth here than in the other songs. It’s a deeply introspective setting,
often aching in its emotional response to Clare’s verses. At the very
end, in the last three lines, the poet’s mood seems more accepting but
Venables’ music remains unsettled. This is a distinguished and eloquent
set of songs.
It will be seen that there is an overlap with the Naxos disc in that Signum
have included four of the same songs. However, here they are presented in
arrangements by Graham J. Lloyd in which a string quartet is substituted for
the original piano in the accompaniment. One presumes that these arrangements
have the composer’s full approval and to my ears they are extremely
successful. Lloyd’s skilful arrangements don’t supplant the piano
originals; rather, they complement and expand the keyboard accompaniments.
Lloyd says that he has taken advantage of the “many different colours
and sonorities available from a string quartet”. He also believes the
arrangements “enhanced the overall mood and emotional power of each
song.” I agree but I’d add that he’s brought to the selected
songs the sustaining capabilities of string instruments and their singing
character. I don’t think it’s an accident that in two of the songs,
A Kiss and At Midnight, the performances on the Signum disc
are quite significantly more expansive than on the Naxos recordings. There’s
an extra depth of emotional response in the Signum performances, fine though
the Naxos versions are. All four arrangements work very well indeed though
the piano versions remain equally valid and important.
The String Quartet is a most accomplished piece, cast in three movements.
The first opens with tense, arresting music which is strongly rhythmical but
soon (at 1:10) broadens into something slower and more lyrical, albeit there’s
no reduction in tension. This passage achieves a big climax before, at 4:12,
great vigour and thrust return. The remainder of the movement is powerful
and taut. There follows a short movement, lasting less than three minutes
in this performance, which is light in texture and essentially genial in character.
This provides a fine foil to the preceding movement and, as we shall see,
a very necessary interlude before the rigours of the third movement.
This final movement, which plays for just over 11 minutes, is longer than
the previous two movements combined. It’s an impressive composition
and begins with slow music in which the cello is to the fore. To my ears the
music is dark and not a little troubled; the tonality is far from certain
yet there’s still a grave beauty to what we hear. There follows (at
2:37) an unsettled section in which there’s a good deal of pizzicato
writing. The argument then unfolds through a number of passages, all described
in the very helpful note. The music reflects a variety of moods; there’s
an undoubted seriousness of purpose at its heart yet one senses a positive
tone is gradually being asserted. It’s an ambitious movement and I’m
still not sure how it all fits together - how the fugal episode fits in, for
example - but I hasten to add that this comment reflects the fact that I need
to get to know the music better; it’s certainly not intended as a criticism
of the compositional skill. This is certainly a movement - and a work - that
will repay careful listening. The quartet is also one that clearly makes significant
demands on the players, though these are more than met by the Dante Quartet.
The standard of performance on both discs is uniformly high with Andrew Kennedy
in particular proving to be an expressive and committed advocate for Ian Venables’
songs. Both discs present the music in excellent sound and Graham J Lloyd
provides notes to match to accompany both releases. Signum provide texts for
all the songs, Naxos for most of theirs, except for a few that set copyright
texts.
If you are an admirer of Ian Venables’ music you will want both discs
but for collectors who are coming new to his art in which disc should you
invest? The Naxos release enjoys a price advantage and will appeal to anyone
whose primary interest lies in songs. However, the Signum programme offers
a wider perspective on the composer’s output. Pressed to choose one
I’d opt for the Signum disc on account of its greater musical range.
However, I strongly suspect that anyone buying one disc will soon join me
in adding the other to their collection.
John Quinn
Two fine collections of the expressive music of Ian Venables.
See also reviews of the Naxos CD by John
France and Brian
Wilson and the Signum CD by John
France
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