SOME RANDOM JOTTINGS 
                ABOUT 
              WILLIAM ALWYN’S ELIZABETHAN 
                DANCES
              
              You can bet your bottom 
                Euro that William Alwyn’s Elizabethan 
                Dances is one anniversary that will 
                almost certainly pass unnoticed by the 
                vast majority of music listeners in 
                2007. It is fifty years since this work 
                was first performed at the BBC Light 
                Music Festival at the Royal Festival 
                Hall. It would be easy to justify ignoring 
                this work if we assumed that it was 
                simply a piece of ‘light’ music that 
                was largely ephemeral or belonged to 
                a more innocent era. However, there 
                are four reasons why this view is wrong. 
              
              
              Firstly, there has 
                been a huge rise in the awareness of 
                ‘light music’ over the last ten years. 
                Record labels including Naxos, Marco 
                Polo and Hyperion have issued a large 
                number of important and entertaining 
                CDs, however pride of place must go 
                to the ever-growing catalogue from Guild. 
                Secondly, William Alwyn is one of the 
                United Kingdom’s most important composers 
                in spite of the fact that he is little 
                known in the world-view of Classic FM 
                producers (David Mellor being an honourable 
                exception). The fact remains that few 
                people will have managed to avoid hearing 
                his music. This is largely because of 
                Alwyn’s huge film score output. We need 
                only think of Carve Her Name with 
                Pride, A Night to Remember 
                and Odd Man Out to mention at 
                least three films that will endure till 
                mankind is no longer amused and entertained 
                by moving pictures. Thirdly, the quality 
                of this particular piece of ‘light’ 
                music is second to none. This is a work 
                that exhibits the highest degree of 
                invention, imagination and sheer craftsmanship. 
                To quote Christopher Thomas’s review 
                on MusicWeb – "to describe this 
                as light music would be potentially 
                to trivialise the quality of the composer’s 
                work." And lastly, in spite of 
                the unsurprising fact that it is not 
                programmed for this years Proms it is 
                easily available on three excellent 
                recordings.
              
              The 1950s were an interesting, 
                if somewhat stressful, time for William 
                Alwyn. He wrote in his autobiographical 
                book, Winged Chariot, that he 
                often wondered how he had coped with 
                this hectic period of his life. He had 
                been in constant demand for important 
                film scores which required a vast amount 
                of music. He recalled that, in spite 
                of the hard work, he was grateful that 
                he did not have to spend long hours 
                teaching or equally long hours of practice 
                needed to maintain instrumental virtuosity 
                as a concert performer. At this time 
                Alwyn was seriously involved with the 
                Composers' Guild of Great Britain – 
                "meetings of every kind, serving 
                on and chairing committees," etc. 
                etc. In addition he suffered health 
                problems which seem to have led him 
                close to nervous breakdown. It was at 
                the turn of the decade that he finally 
                decided to stop writing for the cinema. 
                Alwyn was to complete his last film 
                score, The Running Man, in 1961. 
              
              
              Bernard de Nevers was 
                the director of Alwyn’s main publisher, 
                Lengnick: he was also a close personal 
                friend. In the late 1940s de Nevers 
                had persuaded Malcolm Arnold to compose 
                the well known English Dances. This 
                was in response to a suggestion that 
                Arnold should write a suite of music 
                akin to Dvorak’s Slavonic Dances 
                or perhaps Bartók’s Romanian 
                Folk Dances. Six years later, he 
                suggested to Alwyn the ‘Elizabethan’ 
                theme of the present work. The composer 
                had already received the commission 
                from the BBC however it was de Nevers 
                who was largely responsible for the 
                direction and mood of this work. 
              
              William Alwyn had previously 
                composed a series of Scottish Dances 
                in 1946. These had been dedicated to 
                the ubiquitous film music composer and 
                conductor Muir Matheson. It was a seven-movement 
                work that has been described as a pastiche 
                of Handelian Scottishry! Each one of 
                these movements is quite short, entertaining 
                and straight to the point. They are 
                fun and reflect a very Scottish way 
                of celebrating – the whisky bottle is 
                never far away, although the slow movement 
                is romantic and quite sober.
              
              The following years 
                had seen a succession of works that 
                could hardly be described as ‘light 
                music.’ There had been the first two 
                symphonies, the Magic Island Prelude 
                and two concertos. In 1955 there was 
                the radio opera Farewell Companions; 
                the following year saw a number of important 
                works including the Fantasy Waltzes 
                for Piano Solo, the Moor of Venice 
                Overture for Brass Band and the 
                magnificent Third Symphony. This 
                was a "stormy and passionate work, 
                strongly rhythmic in the outer movements 
                but finding tranquillity and repose 
                in the ‘adagio’ and in the closing pages 
                of the symphony." It was first 
                performed at the start of the 1956/57 
                orchestral season when Sir Thomas Beecham 
                conducted the BBC Symphony Orchestra. 
              
              
              In parallel to the 
                ‘art’ music, Alwyn had worked non-stop 
                on film music. Perhaps the best known 
                scores of those years were The Ship 
                that Died of Shame, The Million 
                Pound Note and The Malta Story. 
                It is interesting that the Elizabethan 
                Dances was the only major non-film 
                piece to be written and performed in 
                1957. Film scores from this year included 
                The Smallest Show on Earth and 
                Fortune is a Woman. 
              
              The Elizabethan 
                Dances was first performed on 6 
                July 1957 at the Royal Festival Hall 
                during the 1957 BBC Festival of Light 
                Music. The composer conducted the BBC 
                Symphony Orchestra. The work is some 
                sixteen minutes duration and is scored 
                for a standard orchestra with an exotic 
                array of percussion including castanets, 
                wooden blocks, maracas, celesta and 
                harp. 
              
              Other works produced 
                at that Festival included Rhapsody 
                & Rondo for Horn and Orchestra 
                by Ernest Tomlinson, Malcolm Arnold’s 
                Scottish Dances and Charles Spink’s 
                Concert Toccata for Organ and Brass. 
                The enjoyable London Transport Suite 
                by Sidney Torch and the Cornish Holiday 
                for Brass Band and Orchestra by 
                Dennis Wright added to an impressive 
                programme. Both the Spink and the Wright 
                are unavailable on CD.
              
              The Elizabethan 
                Dances are written in six contrasting 
                movements. The composer’s wife has provided 
                this helpful overview:-
              
              
                
                  
                  
- This suggests the pipe and tabor 
                    of Elizabeth I
 
                  
                  
                  
- A modern slow waltz
 
                  
                  
                  
- A Morris Dance – or perhaps a 
                    "Mock Morris Dance" 
 
                  
                  
                  
- A neo-Elizabethan dance with a 
                    hint of the ‘Blues.’
 
                  
                  
                  
- A dance in the style of a Pavane 
                    as played by a concert of viols 
                    and recorders
 
                  
                  
                  
- A rousing dance. 
 
                  
                
              
              
              Alwyn himself wrote 
                that the title refers to the reigns 
                of both Queen Elizabeths. Unlike Eric 
                Coates’s Three Elizabeths Suite 
                it does not signify the Queen Mother 
                - however much the more reflective music 
                could suggest ‘Lillabet,’ her girlhood 
                and her childhood home and family. Alwyn 
                is at pains to point out that the music 
                is not an attempt at pastiche: he does 
                not wish to imitate the music of the 
                two periods but rather to nod in their 
                direction. Nowhere is contemporary ‘pop’ 
                music quoted or even alluded to – and 
                remember that Elvis had sung Heartbreak 
                Hotel around the time this work 
                was being composed! Furthermore, I feel 
                that Alwyn is being a little disingenuous 
                when he suggests that the second dance 
                is a "lilting and seductive modern 
                (my italics) waltz." It would 
                have been little recognized as being 
                ‘hip’ by the young café society 
                in London or Manchester! 
              
              The first movement 
                is quite definitely a 20th 
                century film composer’s recreation of 
                the ‘pipes and tabors’ of Queen Elizabeth’s 
                court. Yet even here the mood is more 
                1950s than 1550s! Full orchestra is 
                used with great imagination: a surprise 
                upward harp scale reminds us more of 
                the Tudors as seen through Ralph Vaughan 
                Williams’s eyes and ears. 
              
              The Waltz as 
                noted above is ‘modern,’ yet it not 
                a work to dance to. If anything it is 
                a miniature tone poem evoking a depth 
                beyond what was typical of ‘light’ music 
                of the day. It has been described variously 
                as being ‘languorous, lilting, suave, 
                insouciant, beguiling and very easy 
                on the ears.’ Barnett even suggests 
                that it has the "psychological 
                reach of a Prokofiev waltz." I 
                find it an evocative and deeply reflective 
                movement that belies its two minute 
                duration. 
              
              There is no way that 
                any 13th century Morris Dancers 
                heard anything like the attractive third 
                movement. Once again it is the past 
                seen through the lens of Hollywood or 
                Ealing. The main tune is presented by 
                the bassoon before being repeated by 
                the flute and then the strings. Percussion 
                adds an exoticism that distances this 
                dance from its historic frame of reference. 
              
              
              William Alwyn rarely 
                nodded to popular music in his ‘art’ 
                music. Yet the fourth dance is a definite 
                exploration of ‘the blues’: Bernstein 
                would have enjoyed this. Maracas and 
                castanets give it a kind of international 
                feel. The tune is presented firstly 
                on the violins before a great almost 
                Gershwin-like full orchestral climax 
                brings the movement back to a more reflective 
                mood. I detected hints of Ravel here 
                too! Yet soon the boisterous music returns 
                with a great splashy sound before closing 
                enigmatically. This is the longest of 
                the dances. 
              
              The moderato is the 
                heart of the work. It is ostensibly 
                a Pavane which is supposed to suggest 
                the viols and recorder consorts of the 
                16th century. However, if 
                one did not know the source of this 
                piece, if one was listening to it with 
                an innocent ear, it would certainly 
                be seen as a contemporary work – if 
                a wee bit old-fashioned. 
              
              The last movement is 
                quite definitely the big finish that 
                would be required of a work written 
                for the Light Music Festival. Alwyn 
                noted that it starts as a hornpipe and 
                was intended to continue as such – yet 
                something went wrong – it suddenly turned 
                into a kind of Rumba! Lots of brass 
                and the entire percussion department 
                give the movement a lively and impressive 
                conclusion.
              
              There are three recordings 
                of this work currently in the CD catalogues. 
                The earliest is conducted by the composer 
                himself. Unfortunately he did not record 
                all six dances for Lyrita: he chose 
                to omit the third and fourth movements. 
                In 1992 Chandos recorded the entire 
                work with the London Symphony Orchestra 
                conducted by Richard Hickox. The programme 
                notes for this CD were written by the 
                composer’s widow. The latest, and to 
                this listener’s ears the finest recording 
                is from Naxos: David Lloyd-Jones convincingly 
                conducts the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic 
                Orchestra and appears to best represent 
                the shifting moods and reflections of 
                this work. 
              
              Deryck Cooke reviewed 
                the score which was published by Lengnick 
                in 1959. He notes that the music was 
                an ‘amalgam of imitation Tudor and modern 
                popular idioms,’ without further comment. 
                However he states that the modal waltz 
                – No. 2 was, in his opinion a failure. 
                He believes that the two principal melodies 
                were unconvincing. He is impressed with 
                the other five dances stating that they 
                are successful. He reserves special 
                praise for the final "mixture of 
                country dance and rumba."
              
              Listening to this work 
                half a century after it was first composed 
                and performed brings to mind two comments. 
                Firstly this is hardly ‘light music’ 
                in the sense of the ‘potter’s wheel’ 
                type of interlude that was once so popular 
                on TV. This is music that has a considerable 
                depth: virtually ever movement could 
                be presented as ‘art’ music. It quite 
                definitely belongs to the concert hall 
                rather than the soundtrack of a 1950s 
                advert for ‘Holidays in Devon’ Secondly 
                this is a well-crafted piece that exemplifies 
                good composition, fine orchestration 
                and rigorous stylistic balance. It is 
                definitely not pastiche: generally speaking 
                its mood is quite up-to-date if not 
                contemporary. 
              
              Discography
              
              
              
              Lyrita SRCD 229 William 
                Alwyn conducting the London Philharmonic 
                Orchestra (Dances 1, 2, 5, 6 only) (coupled 
                with Derby Day Overture, The 
                Magic Island, Sinfonietta for 
                Strings and the Festival March)
              
              
              
              Naxos 8.570144 David 
                Lloyd-Jones conducting the Royal Liverpool 
                Philharmonic Orchestra (coupled with 
                the Oboe Concerto, The Innumerable 
                Dance - An English Overture, The 
                Magic Island, the Festival Overture 
                and Aphrodite in Aulis)
              
               
              
              
              Chandos CHAN 8902 Richard 
                Hickox conducting the London Symphony 
                Orchestra (coupled with the Symphony 
                No. 4 and the Festival March)
              
              Ó 
                John France, July 2007
              The 
                William Alwyn website