Graham WHETTAM (1927-)
	Sinfonia Intrepida (1977) [44.14]
	Maestoso intrepido [13.08]
	Lento molto [13.55]
	Maestoso eroico - con fuoco tremendo [17.08]
	 BBC SO/Sir Charles Mackerras
 BBC SO/Sir Charles Mackerras
	rec. 8.10.80, BBC Maida Vale Studio 1, London
	 REDCLIFFE RECORDINGS RR016
	[44.14]
 REDCLIFFE RECORDINGS RR016
	[44.14]
	Crotchet
	 Special MusicWeb/Crotchet price
	
	
	 
	
	
	Why Whettam? British composers born in the 1920s had the roughest deal from
	the Glock era and its fall out, of any this century. Establishing themselves
	after the war, they had a brief efflorescence as Cheltenham, or
	late/post-Cheltenham Symphonists. However this soon turned into a term of
	abuse. Whettam had the worst of it and left the country. In contrast to the
	19th century, Britain in the 20th rarely forgave artists who gained fame
	abroad first. Brian Ferneyhough furnishes a grudging example. Gradually,
	most of the generation including Peter Racine Fricker (1920), Robert Simpson
	and Malcolm Arnold (1921), Anthony Milner (1924), John Joubert, Thomas Wilson
	and Whettam himself (1927), Thea Musgrave (1928), Alan Hoddinott and Kenneth
	Leighton (1929) have gained recognition; though Milner, in particular, is
	still shrouded. Yet, despite the plaudits, Whettam has waited.
	
	It's not all Glock's fault even though he took lifelong revenge for having
	had to play the piano part in Bax's violin sonatas as a student in 1927.
	The Late Sir William, as Constant Lambert used to refer to Walton around
	the time of the First Symphony, had implacable as well as impeccable taste.
	British composers born in the 1930s and after might well have found themselves
	in a bleaker climate and left in some cases for Darmstadt had not Glock radically
	shifted some miasmas of gentility. Much of the resulting high seriousness
	has been defeated by the defeat of minimalism; and attendant post-modernists
	with something they never felt modern about. But it was hard for the Cheltenham
	Symphonists and their successors to be seen as upholding the Gentility Principle
	that Al Alvarez was attacking in '50s poetry at the time.
	
	I've said Glock had implacable taste. But Whettam's isn't English, and there
	lies the lost chord. Simpson had a taste for the inexorable; his symphonies
	are monumental, inevitable and to a degree impersonal. Because of that
	sublimation and the tensions and beliefs around it (a lifelong pacifist for
	example) he's become a classic. Whettam is not monumental but a composer
	of ruined monuments. It was a time, as Paul Dehn wrote (as a 1940s poet,
	before script-writing Planet of the Apes), 'when monuments went mad'.
	This is the point of Sinfonia Intrepida. It's a Programme Symphony,
	when it still wasn't allowed. Other Symphonists could somehow get away with
	analytical notes. But Europe? It's all right now for Schnittke, Kancheli
	et al to perpetrate this kind of thing. The same goes for all that
	Russian Orthodox gloom released in the 1980s like a Russian spring. That's
	why they're more naturally musical, but a British composer? No, somehow vulgar;
	and unnatural vulgarity too. The Russians and the French do it so much better.
	
	Intrepida is an extremely powerful symphony, and the recording here,
	played by the BBC Symphony under the work's first conductor, Sir Charles
	Mackerras, reproduces a stunning performance, in good analogue sound. It
	commemorates the destruction of European cities, Warsaw, Rotterdam, Dresden.
	It's in three movements, essentially destruction, desolation, and rebuilding,
	the Phoenix of Europe as Whettam refers to the post-war reconstruction. Whettam's
	own experiences, filtered through visits to the shattered capitals, are
	unambiguous.
	
	The work centres round C, but this is hardly foregrounded in the violent
	eruptions, the driving tritone that then couples with the long theme quoting
	Tristan in a g# minor chord, and continues throughout the first movement,
	resulting in a climax at 7.00 of Stravinskian proportions. The repeated
	ostinato-like crotchet chord at one-bar intervals sounds straight out of
	Part II of the Rite with a touch of Varèse. It's a tribute
	to Whettam that such bold gestures don't register as such for a few seconds,
	so naturally does he evolve the musical language to accommodate such writing.
	This Maestoso intrepido gives way after 13.00 to Lento molto,
	and the ghost, as in all British symphonies c. 1935-60 perhaps, of Sibelius
	4, picking out solos and forlorn woodwind and string patches of despair.
	Evoking Sibelius tells you what a critically bleak landscape it must have
	been for Whettam too in 1977, when Maxwell Davies's First Symphony was regarded
	as an aberration he'd not repeat. The final Maestoso eroico - con fuoco
	tremendo reasserts the energy of the first movement. The stillness
	brooding out of the solo melodic line in the second movement, breathes brickdust
	and ash. The whole effect is of some vast processional, not entirely removed
	from Birtwistle's The Triumph of Time of five years earlier, and which
	it in some respects recalls in a different language. There is also some kinship
	with Vaughan Williams' Sixth. The intervals gradually shift, a short static
	fourth, then short, scurrying phrases flicker to the same kind of
	scherzo-within-a-slow-movement introduced by Berwald. Whettam re-introduces
	the Tristan chord and the movement subsides to the initial tempo now
	broken into by the winds.
	
	Francis Routh, in his authoritative analysis, points to the finale as the
	centre of gravity of the work, the longest movement at 17'. Antiphonally
	linked material recalls earlier music, the fourth in a reversed dactylic
	rhythm and an arching theme for six horns, and back to Tristan. The
	choral theme follows. In fact the symphony is being unravelled, rolled backwards
	in some senses. Although some buildings are reversed out of the rubble, and
	much of the fabric returns, the abstract of the symphony tends to no such
	neatness. The climactic dénouement as Routh calls it, of the
	work encodes the horn theme in a wind fabric that's ripped by interjections
	from first movement material. The whole possibility of repeat destruction
	is never wholly absent. After a sostenuto section again quoting
	Tristan, on low wind, quite softly, the Con molta affermazione
	al fine closes all in the final re-stated chorale theme. Timpani underpin
	in a miming of a funeral snare-drum approach, which becomes affirmatory.
	It is an extraordinary hard-won victory. A gnarled masterwork. Paul Conway
	contributed excellent notes before the analysis by Francis Routh, and a list
	of subscribers to this BBC Maida Vale recording is provided. Space perhaps
	didn't allow any other mention of Whettam, though this would surely have
	been welcome. The analysis was long and masterly, and the preceding notes
	focused on the work in question. Another Whettam release is promised, and
	one can only hope that far more of Whettam will be released in his lifetime.
	It seems that Redcliffe are his sole champions, and this diversification,
	in leasing recordings outside their recording potential, is an inspired step
	forward. Recommended with all possible enthusiasm, as they say.
	
	Simon Jenner
	
	See also reviews by Paul Conway and Marc
	Bridle
	
	Further details of this compostion