Arnold
Bax (1883-1953)
Chamber
Music
Arnold Bax was the elder
son of a well-off non-conformist family from
south London, whose early signs of musical
talent were encouraged by a sympathetic and
over-protective mother. (Similarly encouraged,
Bax's brother Clifford became a well-known
writer and playwright.) Bax was born in Streatham,
and as he remarked "I cherish a fancy – or
delusion – that Streatham in the 'eighties
was still Surrey… hazily I do recall
a certain mellowness and port-windiness about
some of the older streets". Yet his most impressionable
years, in his teens, were spent in Hampstead,
where his family moved in 1896, his father
buying an imposing mansion, Ivybank, set in
three and a half acres. To all intents and
purposes it was a country house existence,
Hampstead still being semi-rural.
Bax was a student at the
Royal Academy of Music from 1900 to 1905 and
then, having a private income, he was free to
develop his musical career as the whim took him.
He was eager to throw off constraining parental
influence, and adopted a semi-bohemian lifestyle,
travelling widely, including to the German city
of Dresden and Russia. His favourite destination
was the west coast of Ireland, where, as he put
it, 'lorded by the Atlantic' and under the influence
of the early poetry of Yeats, he discovered the
village of Glencolumcille in Donegal, a place
to which, until the First World War, he constantly
returned.
Bax imbibed all things
Irish, wrote poetry, short stories and Synge-like
plays, using the pseudonym of 'Dermot O'Byrne',
and learned Irish Gaelic. When in Dublin he moved
in literary and nationalist circles, and his
friends included the poet and writer Padraic
Colum, founder of the Irish Review, and
Padraig Pearse, champion of the Irish language
who was executed after the Easter Rising in 1916.
It was the Easter Rising which was the divide
in Bax's life; the shocking unexpected event
that brought him face to face with a harsher
reality. There is no doubt that the Elegiac
Trio written immediately after Easter 1916
celebrated a world that was lost, but in a sense
the later works with harp – the harp
being, perhaps, a symbol of Ireland – had
this function too.
The earliest work in the
present programme is the Elegiac Trio, which
Bax wrote for the same combination as Debussy's Sonata for
Flute, Viola and Harp, and at about the same
time. The first performance was at London's Aeolian
Hall on 26th March 1917, when the performers
were the celebrated flautist Albert Fransella,
the composer Waldo Warner on viola, and the harpist
Miriam Timothy. The Debussy sonata was actually
written six months before Bax's score, but it
is difficult to see how Bax could have been influenced
by it, despite textural similarities, for the
Debussy was first heard six months after Bax
completed his score and was not given a public
performance in London until six weeks before
the first performance of Bax's trio, when the
performers were the same artists.
For a memorial piece written
so soon after the event, Bax does not indulge
in histrionics; he does not stamp and rage; and
while the music is imbued with Bax's stunned
reaction to the news from Ireland, he gives us
no clue to its non-musical imagery, not even
a dedication. His first audiences presumably
related it to the war in France, certainly Bax
made no mention of Ireland. Yet, here Bax dreams
of the distant past and presents a bardic song
to 'Cathleen ní Hoolihan'.
Bax made his reputation
as the composer of elaborate impressionistic
orchestral scores, including seven highly individual
symphonies, orchestral tone poems, concertos,
choral music, but also much chamber music, piano
music and songs. After the First World War Bax
emerged as a major figure as these scores began
to be heard in quick succession. Several were
informed by Bax's ongoing reaction to events
in Ireland (and, indeed, a poetry pamphlet, A Dublin
Ballad and other poems, printed under Bax's
pseudonym, had been banned by the censor in Ireland
in 1918).
After the Elegiac
Trio, Bax had written an In Memoriam, this
time scoring it for cor anglais, harp and string
quartet, and he followed it with the Harp
Quintet which was written in 1919, probably
at much the same time that he made his first
visit to Ireland after the War. Again in a
single movement, the sound of the harp is important
in creating the music's character and impact.
Here again the overall mood is sorrowful. However,
the boldly, even dramatically, lyrical opening
by the string quartet (the harp only accompanying
and adding occasional touches of colour) sets
the mood, but with the arrival of the sustained
second subject the harp is now boldly accompanying.
Bax seems to be telling au unwritten story,
with spectral interludes and a dramatic faster
episode with dissonant string accompaniment.
Inevitably none of them last; the harpist muses
again and again on some private grief. Towards
the end Bax writes sonorously for the strings,
the bold harp accompaniment suggesting some
bardic recounting of legends of long ago. Eventually
the music fades in a long-drawn twilight evocation.
Here Bax's first harpist was Gwendolen Mason,
a well-known British player of the period.
Eight years passed before
Bax wrote the next work on the current programme.
In the mid-1920s a new musical influence entered
Bax's life, when another harpist, Maria Korchinska,
became active on the London concert platform,
encouraging him to write more virtuosically for
the instrument. The first musical outcome of
this was Bax's four movement Fantasy Sonata, which
is dated April 1927 and was first performed at
a concert of his chamber music at the Grotrian
Hall on 10th June that year. Bax takes the harp
and viola and treats them as the perfect romantic
medium, writing for the two with great resource,
always alert for an original instrumental timbre.
Although the music plays continuously (with a
brief break between the third and fourth movements)
this is, unusually for Bax, in four movements.
First comes an energetic Allegro molto, and
the listener should particularly note the opening
viola theme; other ideas develop from it and
it signals the progress from movement to movement,
and reappears at the end. Towards the end of
the first movement a cadenza leads into the dancing Allegro
moderato. If this is a scherzo it is a thistledown
impression, soon leading into tender, light and
poetical passages. The slow movement follows,
an elegiac Lento espressivo, a rhapsodic
and passionate song for the viola. In the final Allegro the
main theme returns and the work ends brilliantly.
Soon afterwards Bax was
commissioned to produce a sonata (at first called
'Sonatina') for flute and harp for Korchinska
to play with her husband, Count Benckendorff – the
son of the last Czarist ambassador to London – in
April 1928, but it did not achieve a wider audience
as it remained the property of the Benckendorffs
and was not published. As a result the music
was little known, and when Bax later re-scored
the music as his Concerto for Seven Instruments – in
fact a septet – no-one noticed that it
was an arrangement. The music is in Bax's more
customary three movements. Both themes of the
first movement, an Allegro moderato, have
a folk-like feel to them, the second appearing
to borrow a phrase from the folk-tune 'Down
by the Sally Gardens', but the overall effect
is high-spirited and outgoing. The second movement, Cavatina, is
marked Lento, and is in marked contrast,
surely Bax thinking back to the events of a dozen
years before. Here the chromatic flute line and
wistful overall mood have a strongly elegiac
tinge. Bax pulls himself together in the concluding Moderato
giocoso, where we find one of those dancing
movements which occur in many of his works, and
which are surely derived from his own memories
of Irish folk-dances with his friends in the
west. The contrasted second subject tune is introduced
by the harp, but before he can become too introspective
again, the mood lightens and the work ends exuberantly.
Lewis Foreman |