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Biographical
Sketch Continued
Parallels
with other composers are not always helpful however some lines of
comparison and contrast may be revealing. Some of the music may
remind us of the hedonistic side of Delius. Occasionally he does
sound like Delius (e.g. in Summer
Music, Romantic Overture and The
Happy
Forest
).
Bax however conveys a greater sense of drama and urgency. His
symphonies are not pastoral idylls and there is a chillier violence
and a more intense beauty than the chaster accents of the VW
symphonies. The faery music element could easily be off-putting but
those who listen will immediately realise that there is nothing
fake-fey about this material: if there are faerie people in the
music they are not the tame domestic fairies at the bottom of the
garden but more dangerous, unpredictable, sensual and libidinous
creatures. They have more in common with Balakirev's Tamara
than Enid Blyton. His music occasionally smacks of Rimsky-Korsakov
(e.g. one passage in Symphony No. 3 with a brief but
unmistakable echo of Russian
Easter Festival Overture). Sibelius can be heard too but
there is no plagiarism. The occasional and isolated use of the
Finnish composer's musical idiom provides an ideal vehicle to convey
a world that is Bax's alone.
Dukas'
Poème
Dansé La Péri could easily be mistaken for Bax. The
sound world comparison is uncanny. There are similarities with
certain passages in the music of Janis Ivanovs and Eduard Tubin. The
influences can be felt far and wide and are not to be taken as
critical either of Bax or the other composers mentioned. E.J.
Moeran's music is less involved. Its clearer textures occasionally
veer into Bax territory especially in the Symphony
and Violin
Concerto. Another brother in sound is the music of the
American, Edward Burlinghame Hill - listen to his Prelude for Orchestra
on the old Columbia/Bernstein LP. Philip Sainton's tone poem for
orchestra The Island pays Bax a pretty direct compliment as well as
being a most impressive score. It fully matches up to Bax's best.
Occasional echoes of Bax (and Moeran) can be heard in the music of
Patrick Hadley. Hadley's Symphonic Ballad The
Trees So High is a fine, meltingly emotional piece
perhaps nearer to Moeran than to Bax. Conveniently both the Sainton
and the Hadley are on the same Chandos CD CHAN 9181. John Foulds'
also has his Baxian moments. Do try out two magnificent CDs from
Lyrita (SRCD 211 and 212) especially the
Dynamic Triptych for piano and orchestra and two
orchestral pieces: Three
Mantras and April-England.
Arthur
Benjamin's one and only Symphony (a Barbirolli favourite) is a
Baxian canvas which I cannot recommend too highly. It has been
recorded by Lyrita conducted by Vernon Handley. The recording awaits
issue. When it comes out do buy it. The work is not a Bax copy:
impressive, quite distinctive, violent, stormy and with quite a few
hints of Bax, Prokofiev, Walton and even Roy Harris. Benjamin has a
foot in both Bax and Delius camps in his marvellous Romantic
Fantasy for violin, viola and orchestra. The work is
dedicated to Bax. Eugene Goossens' two symphonies also have much in
common though the language is slightly more astringent than Bax's.
If only Unicorn would reissue the Symphony
No. 1 (David Measham) which they issued on LP in the
1970s. Goossens Second
is available on a difficult to get hold of Australian CD
conducted by Vernon Handley (ABC442 364-2). Lastly you should also
try the orchestral music of Joseph Holbrooke. The best introduction,
in a not very crowded field, is the Marco Polo CD (8.223446) of
various orchestral tone poems including Ulalume
a piece fully deserving to stand beside the best of the Bax tone
poems. Bernard Herrmann's Symphony has Baxian resonances. Try
it on either Unicorn-Kanchana conducted by the composer (UKCD2063)
or a newer recording from James Sedares conducting the Phoenix SO on
Koch International Classics 3-7135-2H1.
Bax
was extremely prolific. There is no room to mention everything. One
thing though which becomes apparent after listening to Bax's music
is that his voice is distinctive. The accent may have changed as the
years went by but a Bax score is as recognisable as one by Sibelius,
Shostakovich, VW, Walton or Moeran. If by any chance all the purple
prose, talk about legends and faerie folk puts you off - just forget
the literary effusions and listen to the music. It stands alone,
needing no literary props. The only requirement is to listen and be
willing to enter a world which has the rarest qualities of
enchantment, beauty and strength.
©
Rob Barnett,
88
Barrows Green Lane
,
WIDNES
WA8
3JJ
,
United
Kingdom
,
0151 423 3783
In
addition to my own experience of Bax's music I have drawn heavily on
the following books. The errors are my own. I owe an enormous debt
of gratitude to many people in widening my knowledge of the music.
Above all though special thanks must go to Graham Parlett. (R.B.)
BOOK
LIST (select)
Bax - A Composer and His Times,
by Lewis Foreman, Scolar Press, 1983, second edition 1987. 506 pp.
Music examples. Full biography. Full list of works. The
authoritative biography. Hardback
Farewell, My Youth and other writings by
Arnold
Bax,
ed. Lewis Foreman, Scolar Press, 1987. Bax's autobiography covering the
years of childhood and youth up to circa 1916. Many of Bax's other
writing are also included. 183pp. Hardback. Circa 100 illustrations.
Bax, by Colin Scott-Sutherland, Dent, 1972. (out of print)
Bax, by Christopher Whelen. A chapter (pp25-34) in Vol. 3
of "The Music Masters", Cassell, 1954. Long out of print
but definitely worth borrowing or looking out for in second-hand
bookshops.
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