rec. Barking Assembly Hall, Essex, 1967 (Symphony); 1977 (piano works); City
Hall, Glasgow, 1986
John McCabe’s Symphony No.1
Elegy was
first performed on 4 July 1966 at the Cheltenham Festival by the Hallé Orchestra
with their conductor John Barbirolli. It is a work that I can hardly believe
is not fairly and squarely in the concert and recorded music repertoire.
Yet it would appear to have been largely forgotten over the succeeding years.
The present recording was originally released in 1967 on a Pye Virtuoso
LP (TPLS 13005) coupled with Kenneth Leighton’s fine Concerto for
String Orchestra and Adrian Cruft’s superb (but forgotten) Divertimento
for string orchestra op.43. John Snashall (1930-1994) conducted the London
Philharmonic Orchestra in all three works. McCabe’s Symphony has never
appeared on CD until the present release.
The contemporary reviewer in
The Gramophone noted wryly that if
the Symphony’s title suggested ‘mourning’ it was ‘certainly
not for the passing of the orchestral symphony, the British symphony, or
the Cheltenham symphony.’ He insisted that this work ‘declares
… in every bar … a continuing life for these things.’
Paul Conway has noted that this work is not a traditional four movement
symphony but suggests it is ‘avowedly symphonic in language’.
It is in three unequal, but ultimately well balanced movements.
A number of reviewers seemed to have some problems with the symphony’s
title –
Elegy. None of the three movements present a particularly
tragic mood although it is not in any way ‘light’ music. One
critic at
The Times newspaper suggested that it was ‘contemporary
music without tears’ and was ‘immediately comprehensible in
argument and full of arresting sonorities to beguile the ear’. Another
reviewer of the work’s premiere considered that it was ‘all
development: no themes’. He felt that it was discouraging for a young
composer to allow ‘procedures [to] take priority over ideas’.
The first movement is almost like a slow march. It is entitled ‘Prelude’
which gives the clue to its part in the symphony’s structure: it serves
as an introduction to what follows. However two subjects are formally declared
and are duly developed. I do not agree with Paul Conway’s assessment
that this movement is ‘tragic, death-haunted (like George Lloyd’s
Seventh Symphony)’. There is certainly a dramatic climax, but the
general tone is reflective and possibly even cool rather than heart-rending.
The second movement is entitled ‘Dance’ and exploits a number
of interesting musical devices including boogie-woogie, jazz and even some
contemporary ‘pop’ sounds. Does some of this music nod towards
Malcolm Arnold – Heaven forfend. There is some ferocity about this
music, yet it is full of positive energy and life. It appears to be almost
kaleidoscopic in its structure. Listeners may feel that this movement could
have been extended a little beyond its brief four minutes.
The third movement ‘Elegy’ is certainly much more profound and
antagonistic than the preceding two. It opens quietly but with double-forte
chordal interruptions. There are beautiful moments including some fine writing
for strings in this movement that are often interrupted by something a little
more sinister. There is a reprise of the ‘dance music’. The
movement ends quietly and appears to have resolved any residual conflict.
This symphony is, I believe, typically reflective rather than disturbing
or crisis-laden.
Listening to this work after half a century seems to blow away the contemporary
reviewer’s criticisms. Unless I am totally naïve, this symphony has
stood up well over the years. It has the wonderful ability to sound ‘modern’
whilst at the same time nodding to a greater musical tradition that includes
Sibelius. It is a work that impresses and moves the listener and holds their
attention. It is not a ‘dance of death’ but something more affirmative.
The Symphony No.1 ‘Elegy’ (the first of seven) was written during
1965 and had been commissioned by the Hallé Society.
The three piano works are totally new to me. The
Fantasy on a Theme
of Liszt (1967) is based on a passage drawn from the Hungarian composer’s
Faust Symphony. Interestingly, this theme uses all twelve notes
of the chromatic scale. McCabe has cast his
Fantasy in sonata form
in spite of the title. Harold Truscott noted that this work comes as close
to being in traditional ‘sonata form’ as McCabe had come at
that time. It is a complex piece that demands a hugely virtuosic technique.
Tamami Honma has written that this work remains a ‘favourite among
pianists and audiences’: I have to admit that I have not heard it
played in the recital room or on radio. The present recording of this work
was issued on the RCA Red Label in 1977 (RL 25076) deleted these many years.
The
liner-notes for the current re-release
suggest that it is often Beethoven rather than Liszt who inspired its pianism.
I was captivated by the sheet explosive energy of this music. McCabe quite
naturally gives an inspiring and dramatic performance.
Equally interesting are the two piano studies dating from 1969. They are
from a set of four that were designed to explore various aspects of keyboard
writing and performance techniques. The first study, a
Capriccio,
is effectively a toccata predicated on rapid repeated notes, an exploration
of staccato chords, a wide range of dynamics with moments of complete repose
and even silence. The second study
Sostenuto has ‘vigorous’
music in the middle section, framed by sustained and reflective sonorities
for the opening and closing material. Honma has noted Debussy as an inspiration
behind this music. In both cases McCabe gives an impressive and rewarding
account of these two studies. It is just a pity that the other two in the
series
Gaudi and
Aubade could not somehow have been squeezed
into the programme: there is only 62 minutes of music on this disc. Those
two works can be heard on a
BMS
CD.
The final work is
Tuning for orchestra which was composed in 1985.
It was a commission by the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust for the National
Youth Orchestra of Scotland to celebrate the 150
th Anniversary
of the birth of Andrew Carnegie. It also marked European Music Year 1985.
Written for a large orchestra it sports a battery of percussion. The British
premiere was given at the Albert Hall in Stirling on 6 August 1985.
McCabe has written that the work was inspired by hearing a chamber orchestra
tuning up for a performance of Mozart’s Serenade for 13 wind instruments.
He noted that by ‘sheer chance they alighted a couple of times on
rich and sonorous chords’. It was this that provided the initial impetus
for this work. In some ways
Tuning appears like a ‘concerto
for orchestra’. The composer creates blocks of sound for woodwind,
then percussion and brass. The piece naturally divides into two sections:
a slow-moving opening followed by a rapid toccata making use of fanfares,
repeated notes and patterns. It is only at the end that the entire orchestra
comes together for the concluding chords.
I found this work immediately approachable in spite of the possible objection
that much modern music has been described as sounding like ‘an orchestra
tuning up’.
The liner-notes have been written by Robert Matthew-Walker and the composer
(
Tuning). They give a comprehensive account of all the works. For
further information, I encourage the listener to explore
Landscapes
of the Mind: The Music of John McCabe, ed. George Odam (2007). The
insert also includes brief notices of the orchestras, the conductor John
Snashall and the composer.
One point of confusion. The rear cover of the CD suggests that all these
pieces are ‘World Premiere Recordings’. This is confusing as
all the recordings except for
Tuning were released on Pye and RCA
Red Label LPs. The piano works have also been recorded in recent years by
Tamami Honma (Studies, Metier MSVCD92071) and Graham Caskie (Fantasy, Metier
MSVCD92004). I concede that the ‘original’ releases of these
works were
then (1967 & 1977 respectively) ‘premiere
recordings’.
Tuning was acquired from the original master
made at the City Hall, Glasgow concert on 4 January 1986.
This is an excellent new release from Naxos that should command the attention
of all enthusiasts of British music. It presents two important works by
John McCabe that have so far eluded release on CD. It is also a pleasure
to hear the composer’s own performance of his piano pieces, his conducting
of
Tuning and the excellent Symphony No. 1
Elegy.
John France