Biographical Sketch Continued
Although Tintagel is
his best-known piece many other works deserve even greater exposure
and are finer. Restricting ourselves to tone poems The Garden of
Fand and November Woods are notable. The latter is
amongst his strongest works. It has magic without being specifically
Irish and a storm-swept fury which is quite overpowering. Fand
too is a magical piece, returning to the spirit of Irish legend.
The numbered symphonies, of
which there are seven, span the high summer of his creativity. No.
1 is turbulent and dark with occasional echoes of Holst. The
composer ambiguously dismissed suggestions that it was inspired by
the Great War. No. 2 is amongst Bax's great works mixing
music of breathtaking beauty with molten savagery. No. 3, which
has been his most played symphony is more pictorial in nature. Its
moods are not as extreme as its predecessors. Only in its epilogue,
which is restrained and contemplative, does the work become
compelling. It has something in common with Bantock's Pagan
Symphony from about the same time. No. 4 conjures up
bright seascapes and idyllic sunlit headlands. There is no violence
here only a breezy, sunlit beauty. No. 5 represents a major
change of gear and mood. This is a different Bax. Here he catches
the Northern atmosphere with a Sibelian accent. Everything is more
Nordic, frenzied, snowy and cold. There is no dreamy epilogue this
time. Instead there is a barbaric splendour and white landscapes.
This has much in common with the three Northern Ballads and
his masterpiece for piano and orchestra: Winter Legends.
The Sixth is the
pinnacle of the symphonies. Here the wildness and Northern ferocity
of the proceedings are conjured up with brutality. The first
movement launches with an overpowering muscular bass figure rising
to an almost shouted climax. The second movement has great beauty
but is never quite carefree. The last movement opens almost
humorously but the mood rapidly changes. There is a towering
culmination which subsides into a perfectly judged epilogue where
carolling, quiet trumpet fanfares and woodwind figures intermingle
with the harp and violas in an enchanted farewell to the world.
There is nothing else to be said; only a fulfilled exhaustion and a
steady peaceful journey into night. Applause would seem out of place
in the face of this stillness. The quality of the Sixth places
it alongside Walton's First Symphony and Vaughan Williams' Fourth
and Sixth. It is inexplicable that it is not played at
least as often as these works. Where some of Bax's works can be
accused of prolixity and a lack of concentration, No. 6 is
a model of emotional concentration. What it has to say it says
economically and inevitably. Its time will certainly come. The
Seventh is picturesque and occasionally ceremonial but catches
the sense of peaceful farewell in its extremely beautiful epilogue.
The Atlantic seascape is dappled with a late bright sun dipping into
sunset and the seagull's cry calls out across the years ... fading
and fading.
Bax orchestrated most of the
symphonies during his annual wintering with his lover Mary Gleaves
at Morar. After No. 7 the only work of remarkable consequence was
the Violin Concerto, originally written for Heifetz but
finally taken up by Eda Kersey. He died on 3 October 1953 at Cork in
his beloved Ireland. Amongst his last experiences was a visit to the
Old Head of Kinsale. He was there for a most magnificent sunset, by
all accounts lost in its glory, his companion had to take Bax by the
arm and lead him back to the car. Perhaps it called up the vivid
memories of another sunset seen by him in 1889 from the top of
Arundel Park in Worthing and recalled as "an unimaginable glory
of flame … sheer all-conquering splendour and majesty."
The promotion of Bax after the
decline following his death in 1953 began in earnest with the BBC's
cycle of all seven symphonies bringing the then ailing Eugene
Goossens back into the studio to conduct the volcanic second
symphony. This cycle was widely taped using the novel wonder of the
domestic tape recorder. These tapes changed hands amongst
enthusiasts and offered the kindling for a revival. Concert
promoters, conductors and broadcasting organisations were caught up
in the atonal revolution. Bax's music did not fit and suffered
appallingly. In the mid-1960s however recordings of piano music
performed by Frank Merrick and Iris Loveridge (Lyrita) gave Bax a
growing prominence. Revolution Recordings recorded onto LP his Symphony
No. 4, Symphonic Variations and Tale the Pine Trees Knew.
The orchestra was the Guildford Philharmonic and the conductor,
Vernon Handley. In the late 1960s Lyrita recorded Boult in Bax tone
poems (including a shattering November Woods), Norman Del
Mar in a still-unmatched Symphony No. 6 and Myer Fredman in
the Symphonies 1 and 2. The latter two recordings
were financed by Ken Russell who contemplated a film about the
composer. In the early to mid-1970s Lyrita pressed ahead with LPs of
Symphonies 5 and 7 in excellent performances
conducted by Raymond Leppard. This was something of a shock as
Leppard was seen as a baroque specialist. (I'd love to know if
Leppard got to do any Bax while with the Indianapolis SO and even
more to hear some tapes). Leppard followed the Lyritas up with radio
broadcasts of the Symphony No. 5, the Violin Concerto (in a
much under-rated performance by Dennis Simons) and in 1979 one of
Bax's towering masterworks: Winter Legends for piano and
orchestra (with John McCabe). McCabe repeated the work with Handley
a few years later. Chandos, a fledging record company, took up Bax's
cause using the Ulster Orchestra and the conductor Bryden Thomson.
They first launched a recording of his tone poems. This was one of
the earliest Compact Discs and was quickly followed by the same
company and artists in Symphony No. 4. The 1983 centenary
was marked handsomely by the BBC with revivals of many orchestral
works including some premieres. All Baxians owe a great debt to the
BBC and the inspiring force behind the generous concert series:
Lewis Foreman. From the mid-1980s for the next decade Chandos
completed the symphonic cycle with Thomson and delved deep into
Bax's many other orchestral and chamber works. The continuing and
growing success of Bax's music coincided with the digital and CD
'revolution' and found an audience sated with multiple cycles of
Beethoven and personality conductors. This same audience,
adventurous and ready to explore, continues to push back the
boundaries of known music well beyond the 'safe' and steady
repertoire of the 'great' orchestras and conductors playing 'great'
music. Bax may well be one of a host of composers whose music will
make more headway in commercial and radio recordings and as the
technology opens up, over the Internet, than it will be allowed to
in the concert-hall. Sad though this might be, anyone who feels
anything for the music of Bax will welcome the fact that the music
seems to be finding new adherents and enthusiasts all the time.
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