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ARNOLD BAX BIOGRAPHICAL
SKET CH
THE SIR ARNOLD BAX WEB SITE
Last Modified June 22, 2003
Sir Arnold Edward Trevor BAX
by Robert Barnett (c)
mailto:Rob.Barnett1@btinternet.com
Editor of The British
Music Society Newsletter
Editor's Note: Robert Barnett
is this site's chief contributor. He, along with Ian Lace, has
assisted me by providing information on Bax performances and
recordings worldwide, by helping me edit the text and by providing
articles and interviews such as the biographical sketch below. Rob
is the editor of the superb British Music Society Newsletter and a
collector of off-air Bax recordings. He is interested in
corresponding with anyone interested in trading off-air recordings.
Please contact him at his e-mail address listed above.
There is something
deadening about that Knighthood (and a Master of the King's Musick).
What do we expect from such a composer: acres of choral music,
marches, pomp and circumstance? The fact that six of his seven
symphonies, in fact the best of his music, were written before he
accepted his Knighthood in 1937, should reassure us. Here is a
composer whose musical world celebrates the high summer of youth and
beauty and mixes with it a razor-edged sense of their passing.
Darker, violent moods also storm through the music. Irish Celtic
legend, Northern sagas, woodland idylls and the world of faerie
weave in and out. There is none of the hackneyed rural element which
many people, sometimes unfairly, associate with British music.
Bax was essentially a
non-establishment figure liberated from society's conventions by the
accident of his birth into an affluent family. He did not have to
work or teach to survive. After his teenage years he seems never to
have had a conventional home, moving from hotel to hotel and finally
living out his last years at the White Horse pub in Storrington in
Sussex. He spent much time in the Gaelic far west: at Glencolumcille
in Ireland and Morar in Scotland. He was a very fine pianist though
not a conductor. He learnt Irish Gaelic and wrote in the language.
His two children were named Dermot and Maeve. He began his regular
visits to Ireland while at the Academy. He wrote and published
various poems one of which, celebrating the martyrs of the Easter
Uprising in Ireland, was banned by the British authorities as
subversive. His poetry is passionate and vivid to this day. As an
author he wrote various articles and short stories under the
pseudonym "Dermot O'Byrne". The first volume of an
episodic but colourful autobiography was significantly called Farewell
My Youth. Sadly there was to be no second volume.
Bax was born of wealthy
parents in Streatham, London, on 8 November 1883. Their move to
Ivybank in Streatham in 1893 coincided with his father beginning to
take him to August Manns' Crystal Palace concerts. By 1896 Bax had
begun to compose profusely. This compulsion burnt on a high flame
until the mid-1930s. He went to the Royal Academy of Music in
September 1900 where he studied with Frederick Corder (whose son
Paul - another composer, became a firm friend of Bax and who wrote
an orchestral piece Morar and a Violin Concerto). It was during
these years that he discovered the early poetry of W.B. Yeats which,
as late as 1949, he declared "meant more to me than all the
music of the centuries."
Visits to Dresden with Paul
Corder gave an opportunity to hear the music of Richard Strauss: Salome
and Rosenkavalier. But the dominant influence of these
years was Irish legend, particularly Deirdre. Although an opera was
projected, this came to nothing, leaving only a cycle of Irish tone
poems: Eire (Into the Twilight, In the Faery Hills
and Rosc Catha). A romantic visit to Russia in 1910 and the
pervasive exotic influence of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes also left
their mark. His short-lived marriage to Elsita Sobrino evaporated at
the first appearance of the pianist Harriet Cohen for whom he wrote
many pieces. In later years she seems to have had an occasionally
stultifying effect on his music. At the same time, when their affair
was at its height, it also gave birth to his best known work, the
orchestral tone poem Tintagel heard to finest advantage in
Goossens' pioneering 78s recording (crying out for reissue) dating
from the 1920s. This score and performance melds the magic of the
North Coast of Cornwall, the gale-tossed glittering Atlantic, the
Tristan legend and passion of the two lovers in a score of sweeping
drive and urgency.
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