Herbert HOWELLS (1892-1983)
Chamber Music
Herbert Howells
is known chiefly for his large body of church
music, arguably the finest by any English composer
of the twentieth century, but he also wrote
major choral, orchestral and chamber works.
He was a pupil of Herbert Brewer at Gloucester
Cathedral from 1905 to 1911, then, from 1912
to 1916, studied at the Royal College of Music
under Charles Villiers Stanford and Charles
Wood. Apart from composing he was active in
the fields of teaching and adjudicating, and
taught at the Royal College of Music for over
forty years; succeeded Holst as director of music
at St Paul’s Girls School, and was professor
of music at London University from 1954 to 1964.
He was made CBE in 1953 and became a Companion
of Honour in 1972.
Howell’s voice as a composer drew from
four sources of inspiration: the music of the
Tudor period, the works of Vaughan Williams,
English folk-song, and the landscape of his native
Gloucestershire. His orchestral works include
the Elegy (1917), the Fantasia for cello (1937)
and the Concerto for Strings (1939). Among chamber
works are the Piano Quartet (1916), the string
quartet In Gloucestershire (1916 – c1935
), three violin sonatas, an oboe sonata and a
clarinet sonata. His mastery of large-scale choral
forces is shown by his masterpiece Hymnus Paradisi
(1938, revised in 1950), Missa Sabrinensis (1954)
and Stabat mater (1963). On a smaller scale the
Requiem (1932) and the Motet on the Death of
President Kennedy, Take him, earth, for cherishing
(1964) rank high among his achievements. Outstanding
among his many canticle settings is Collegium
Regale (1945) written for King’s College,
Cambridge. He also made a substantial contribution
to organ literature and wrote many fine songs,
primarily in settings of poems by his friend
Walter de la Mare, including King David (1919).
At the outset of
his career Howells came to prominence largely
through a series of striking chamber works
including the Rhapsodic Quintet composed in
1919 for the clarinettist Oscar Street. According
to the leading Howells scholar, Paul Spicer,
whose book Herbert Howells is a fascinating
study of the composer’s life and works,
Howells was greatly preoccupied with problems
relating to the form of the Rhapsodic Quintet.
He cast it in a single movement, a structure
he explored several times and which reflects
the contemporaneous ambitions of Walter Wilson
Cobbett (1847-1937), a businessman and amateur
musician whose dual passions were chamber music
and the music of the Elizabethan and Jacobean
period. He was particularly interested in the
instrumental fantasy (or phantasy as Cobbett
preferred), a form in which several unrelated
but varied sections form the basis for a single
extended work. In 1905 he established the Cobbett
prize for chamber works in one movement which
Howells won in 1917 with his Phantasy String
Quartet.
Howells described
the Quintet as having ‘a
mystic quality’, which may be sensed at
the outset in the impassioned unison theme that
sweeps upwards. This provides the first principal
idea of the work. In contrast to this is a tender,
tranquil falling theme introduced by the clarinet
and echoed by the violins in longer notes. Shortly
after the first climax a short, puckish subsidiary
idea appears, again on the clarinet, that seems
to turn in on itself. By now the tempo of the
music has quickened for an extended polyrhythmic
passage combining three time signatures in which,
over a pizzicato bass, the second and subsidiary
ideas are developed. This section ends with an
elated climax and a proliferation of polyphonic
lines. Over undulating triplet figures the first
idea is developed, as the music gradually quietens
and slows in tempo, to end with a closing paragraph
of rapt, serene beauty.
The Clarinet Sonata
was written in 1946 for the greatest clarinettist
of the day, Frederick Thurston, who gave the
première in a BBC
Third Programme broadcast on 27th January 1947
accompanied by Eric Harrison. It has links with
the Oboe Sonata of 1942, a work which Leon Goosens,
for whom it was written, had criticized, with
the consequence that the sensitive composer effectively
buried it. It seems possible that Howells may
have viewed the Clarinet Sonata as a revision
and rethinking of the earlier work.
The sonata is in
two movements in which the musical material
is closely connected. Of great importance is
the rhythm of 3+3+2 beats that the piano gently
emphasizes from the very beginning and which
flows under the clarinet’s long-limbed
graceful, lyrical first theme. A more agitated
passage acts as a link to the second group of
ideas, which are introduced by the piano and
are ruminative in character. The development
is underpinned by the insistent rhythmic pattern
and builds to a passionate climax, before a dramatic
pause and the return to the opening ideas. By
contrast the second movement is fiery and rhythmically
energetic with frequent changes of metre that
emphasize its unfettered dynamism. The rhythmic
pattern of the first movement returns emphatically,
as do other thematic references until, after
a brief cadenza-like interruption by the solo
clarinet, the tempo slackens and the main idea
of the first movement’s second group of
ideas returns on the piano. This sets the scene
for the return of the opening of the sonata itself,
which is transformed, though, to a mood of intense
melancholy. The shadows are quickly brushed away,
however, as the fast music returns driving helter-skelter
to the end.
The Prelude for
harp, originally designated as No.1, is Howells’s
only work for the instrument and was written
in 1915 for Kate Wilson, a fellow student at
the Royal College of Music. The manuscript
was donated to the College library on her death
and a Junior College student, Rowena Wilkinson,
played it to the elderly composer in 1976,
although he could remember nothing about it.
It is a haunting miniature, full of modal melancholy.
In the same year that he composed his Clarinet
Sonata, Howells also wrote the charming A Near-Minuet
for the same combination of instruments, which
possibly prompts speculation that he had conceived
it originally as the basis for an additional,
probably middle, movement for the sonata.
In 1915, at the age of 23, Howells was diagnosed
as having a heart-related disease and given six
months to live. Given the seriousness of his
situation, he agreed to try experimental therapy,
which over several years did finally cure him.
In the early twenties, however, he was still
weak from the combination of illness and treatment,
so that in 1923 the Associated Board of the Royal
Schools of Music sent him on two trips examining
in South Africa and Canada in the hope that these
would speed his recuperation. The Third Violin
Sonata arose directly from his Canadian visit
and the overwhelming impact that the Rocky Mountains
made on Howells when he travelled through them
by train. Musically the rugged grandeur of the
terrain is reflected in the more dissonant and
chromatic harmony compared to his other works
of the period. The sonata was composed in the
same year as his visit and dedicated to one of
the great violinists of the time, Albert Sammons.
The beginning of
the first movement, a wide-spaced chord built
around just two notes, followed by a lyrical
arching melody, has an open-air quality suitable
to the work’s inspiration. An
animated passage leads to a quasi march-like
ostinato in the piano against which the violin’s
sonorous melody seems to evoke the vastness of
the mountains. The middle movement is a skittish
scherzo with its main idea played pizzicato by
the violin against the infectious, insistent
tread of the piano accompaniment, which possibly
characterizes the motion and sound of the train
on which Howells travelled making its way through
the mountain passes. It is contrasted with a
broad tune, played on the bow. In the invigorating
finale the music seems redolent of the elated
thrill of witnessing the height and majesty of
the mountains and at the end the sonata comes
full circle with the main themes of the first
movement returning in reverse order.
Andrew Burn