> COLES Music from behind the lines [PB]: Classical CD Reviews- Aug 2002 MusicWeb(UK)

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RECORD OF THE MONTH

Cecil COLES (1888-1918)
Music From Behind The Lines:

Overture: The Comedy of Errors
Fra Giacomo
Scherzo in A minor

Four Verlaine Songs: "Fantastic in appearance", "A slumber vast and black", "Pastoral: The sky above the roof", "Let’s dance the jig"
From the Scottish Highlands
Behind the Lines

Sarah Fox, soprano, Paul Whelan, baritone.
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra/Martyn Brabbins
Rec. City Hall, Glasgow on 12 and 13 December 2001 DDD
HYPERION CDA67293 [62'44]


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Most of us go through life happily discovering composers who are new to us personally but whose music already has a following. We meet these men — and women — at various times and add their works to our collections. We are able to read about them and their achievements either in full-length biographies, articles in journals or in reference books. Occasionally a researcher finds the manuscript of an unknown or lost work by a known composer such as the Berlioz Messe Solennelle as recently as 1992.

But I cannot recall any case that parallels the dramatic and poignant discovery of Cecil Coles, the Scottish composer who vanished without a trace from the musical world despite his friendship with Gustav Holst and the critical acclaim that followed performances of his music prior to the Great War.

Like George Butterworth, Frederic Kelly, Ernest Farrar and Denis Browne, Coles died in the Great War but unlike them he had no committed champions to keep his name alive and his music before the public. Now, 84 years after his death, his star is rising thanks to the combined efforts of his daughter, Penny Catherine Coles, who never knew her father, conductor Martyn Brabbins and Ted Perry at Hyperion Records.

After Coles’ death on 26 April 1918, his widow refused to talk about him and eventually, for reasons unknown, the family became estranged. It wasn’t until ten years ago when Catherine’s elder brother Brooke was dying that he contacted her and told her about their father’s life and his music. Miss Coles, a writer then in her mid-seventies, located her father’s manuscripts at George Watson’s College in Edinburgh, where Coles had studied. After overcoming some legal hurdles, she deposited the music, some of it stained with mud and blood and shrapnel-pocked, at the National Library of Scotland. Indeed two movements of the suite Behind the Lines are presumed (by Holst) to have been destroyed by a shell in March 1918.

In 1995, BBC Radio Scotland introduced Coles music and his daughter to audiences in its Remembrance Sunday program. Four years later, Brabbins and the BBC SSO performed Coles orchestral music in a Studio One Concert and in December 2001, four more orchestral works were introduced. One critic hailed the performances as "an evening of startling revelations".

Brabbins, who completed the orchestration of one of the two surviving movements of Behind the Lines, believes that Coles "was clearly a huge talent cut down in its prime". Brabbins, the BBC SSO and soloists Fox and Whelan serve Coles very well in this revealing premiere recording.

While it might be easy to compare him with the composers whose influences are apparent in his music — Elgar, Wagner, Mahler, Brahms and others — I find such comparisons a bit unfair. Coles was a young man when he died - only 29. The amount of music he left is small and much of it is the work of a developing composer who did not have the time he needed to find a voice that was fully his own. This in no way diminishes his achievement which is quite remarkable given that some of the music on this CD dates from his teens. Consider the music that Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Holst composed at the ages of 17, 21, 23, 26 and 29, measure their musical growth, look at the influences and opportunities that helped them shape their work and find their own voices. What would the legacy of each be if he had died at 29?

Coles was a passionate man with a gift for dramatic expression and scene painting, a musical explorer who embarked on an adventure each time he put notes on paper. He absorbed sensations and ideas and observed and captured beauty with the confidence, daring and purpose of a gifted and determined young man poised to soar.

Coles was essentially a poet, dramatist and painter working in the medium of music. His profound poetic sensibility drove his major gift for writing vocal works. He used an orchestral palette of wide range, depth and nuance to paint evocative scenes and portray human drama. Even as a teenager, he possessed an innate ability to capture the right color, tone and emotion in his compositions. The spontaneous, natural and compelling flow of Coles’ music transcends technical accomplishment and his ideas flow effortlessly and lyrically.

He must have experienced great joy and satisfaction composing his music, experimenting and learning as he went along. Even early works like the three-movement From the Scottish Highlands, a work he began at 17, have a richness and character that is not forced. He had had little musical training by this time so his ability to handle the orchestra with considerable assurance is all the more notable. He was like a sponge absorbing technique, using the music and composers he already knew as guides and teachers to help him shape his composition. The Highlands brood and dance in shadows and shafts of light while Coles, the observer, renders an impression of landscape, love and something darker, more elusive and mysterious in the beautiful but lonely Highlands.

Coles completed the Four Verlaine Songs in 1909 in Stuttgart, Germany, where he had gone to study on a scholarship (Coles had previously studied music at Edinburgh University and the London College of Music). Here we have the first hint of an opera composer in the making. He sets scenes, contrasts moods and casts words to powerful effect with the orchestra surging and swelling as a sumptuous equal partner to create four brief episodes of a mini-drama. Coles had an instinctive feeling for the meaning and intent of words and weighed their value carefully before he set them. His music always seems to fit or express what the words say. "Let’s dance the jig", the last song in the set, is a small gem with its flamboyant introduction that tumbles into a lover’s lament. The structure, daring and colour of "Let’s dance the jig" suggest more than a concluding song in a cycle but serve as a hint of things yet to come from a bold and adventurous young composer.

The Scherzo and Overture: The Comedy of Errors are also early works dating from Coles’ twenty-first and twenty-third years. The overture contains, as Dr. Jeremy Dibble observes in his excellent discussion of the music, a "broad spectrum of emotions" which Coles expresses with confidence, warmth, vigour, playfulness and, at times, majesty. The Scherzo, possibly conceived as a movement for a symphony, stands on its own as a work that sustains its momentum and remains dynamic from beginning to end. Coles never falters nor does he meander uncertainly into flat space to search for ways to connect musical thoughts. He displays confidence throughout. The Scherzo remains alive, vital, and varied with Coles’ own enthusiasm keeping the listener alert and anticipating what comes next.

Fra Giacomo, a monologue or scena, for baritone and orchestra, is an intense and masterful work bathed in a chiaroscuro of sound and mood that is both tender and chilling. It is a dark psychological tale of infidelity, jealousy, murder and revenge, which the 25-year-old Coles handles with insight and sensitivity. Coles was in full control of his orchestral palette and he used it to dramatic effect. The words "Ay Father, let us go down! But first, if it please you, your blessing." seem innocent enough following the disclosure that the speaker’s wife has died but they are underscored by orchestral tones that warn of an ominous turn in the story. Coles turns the line "As I kiss her on the cheek" into a sensual caress while at the same time allowing the husband a moment of quiet reflection before he takes the next step in his deadly plan. There are many beautiful, moving and tense moments in Fra Giacomo as Coles musically juxtaposes the character’s thoughts and actions to achieve exactly the right effect and emotional response.

Behind the Lines, the title work, concludes this superb introduction to Coles. It is half of the full composition that Coles composed and scored while he was "In the Field" of war. He carried the manuscript with him everywhere and as a result lost the two inner movements in the shelling. On the stained title page, he lists all four movements: "Estaminet du Carrefour", "The Wayside Shrine", "Rumours" and "Cortège". What makes this work remarkable is the fact that the "Estaminet du Carrefour" and "Cortège" are the musical equivalent of today’s live coverage of an event. The only other orchestral work of which I am aware that was actually composed during the war is Frederic Kelly’s Elegy for Strings to the memory of Rupert Brooke. Kelly, who died in 1916, began the work the day after Brooke’s burial on Skyros in April 1915.

In Behind the Lines, Coles depicts two subjects that all soldiers knew: the lightness and freedom of being on rest away from the battlefields, enjoying the quiet countryside and the conviviality of the estaminet or café in a village. And the more somber side of war: death, not the immediate horror of it but the aftermath rendered in a scene of the ceremonial cortège known to all soldiers. The music is solemn, poignant and majestic in conductor Brabbins’ orchestration. Coles did not live long enough to complete Behind the Lines. He died on 26 April 1918 of wounds received when he volunteered to bring in casualties from a wood.

A genius? Yes, I think so. A great loss to music? Absolutely.

Pamela Blevins

Ian Lace has also listened to this disc


The manuscript of Behind the Lines is spattered with blood and mud. Cecil Coles was killed near the Somme on 26th August 1918 during a heroic attempt to rescue some wounded comrades. He was in his 29th year. The Great War took its toll on many British composers: it also snatched the lives of Ernest Farrar and George Butterworth and seared those of others like Arthur Bliss (composer of the film score of Things To Come), Ivor Gurney, E.J. Moeran and Patrick Hadley. But the life and work of Cecil Coles has until now lain all but forgotten. However, thanks to the persistence and research of his daughter, Penny Catherine Coles, his manuscripts, some embedded with shrapnel, have been painstakingly put together to create this first commercial recording of these works (or indeed of any of his music!).

Behind the Lines consists of a short pastoral evocation ('Estaminet du Carrefour' - coffee house or tavern at the crossroads) of northern French landscapes with a central waltz that might have been heard at a local town dance and, more importantly, 'Cortège', a moving evocation of a military funeral procession - one of many that Coles must have witnessed in those grim days.

Coles's music shows influences of Wagner, Bruckner, Brahms and Richard Strauss. It is powerful and intensely dramatic and atmospheric. There is much programme music here. Perhaps the most impressive work is Fra Giacomo a setting of some macabre verses by Robert Williams Buchanan. It is a tale of revenge and murder and Coles seizes every opportunity to colour and accentuate its melodrama. A merchant invites the monk, Fra Giacomo to pray over the body of his newly deceased wife. It soon becomes clear that the merchant had suspected his wife of infidelity. Donning the disguise of a priest, he discovered, from her confessions, that the guilty one was none other than Fra Giacomo to whom he now confesses that he had not only poisoned his wife but also the drink that the monk was at that moment quaffing. The work ends with the merchant dumping the body of the guilty monk in the canal. Baritone Paul Whelan and Brabbins interpret these murky proceedings with relish.

Coles was interested in French poetry and the chansons of Fauré, Chausson, Debussy and Ravel. His imaginative and impressive Four Verlaine Songs combine the elegance and refinement of French mélodies with a more darkly trenchant Germanic influence. 'Fantastic in Appearance' is a somewhat harrowing picture of a river gliding 'like death swells…' through a town. 'A slumber vast and black', is an intensely despairing song of lost love is written in a progressive post-Wagnerian style while 'Let's dance the jig' is a more defiant and stoical acceptance of lost love with Sarah Fox savouring its irony. 'Pastorale', is the sunniest song of the set, a quietly bucolic little piece.

The Comedy of Errors Overture, from Shakespeare's play of misunderstandings, mistaken identities and reversals of fortune, covers a broad spectrum of emotions from a darkly turbulent opening, signifying despair to lyrical romantic episodes and comic burlesque. Influences are many and varied from Mendelssohn to Wagner and Mahler by way of Edward German and even a hint of Eric Coates! - but assembled convincingly and entertainingly. The satirical Scherzo in A minor is another evocative work in a similar vein. It is full of sardonic humour with, in parts, a demonic edge and Coles introduces some arresting harmonies and orchestrations. Occasionally, its rhythms might imply a Spanish setting. From the Scottish Highlands comprises a Mendelssohnian Prelude with a bolero-like dance. The central Idyll (Love scene) is unashamedly romantic; akin to Bruch or Tchaikovsky in its lusher moments while the concluding Lament broods darkly and menacingly although its trio is a tender waltz.

In truth, Cecil Coles's music cannot be claimed to be a major find for it is the work of a young man yet to establish his own voice. It is often derivative and thematically none too strong. But it demonstrates Coles's penchant for the dramatic and a gift for writing evocative, atmospheric music. Like George Butterworth, who also died at the Battle of the Somme, he showed great promise. A notable find and a valuable addition to the British music archives. Hyperion and Martyn Brabbins, who contributed to the restoration of this music, are to be congratulated on the release of this enterprising album.

Ian Lace

 

 


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