Originally posted by Master Jacques
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Britten
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Exactly, musicology can only take one so far, 'feeling' in music is often more important!
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
In the light of the double-focus of this thread, it's amusing to remember that one of the least happy members of the first-night audience of Gloriana was Britten's one-time teacher, John Ireland, who hated the whole thing. That first night was of course by no means the fiasco that has sometimes been painted: the muted applause was down to the fact that the "society audience" of both sexes was applauding through white gloves!
Lord Harewood , who was no doubt there , sums it up in Kobbé : “that is was misunderstood and disliked by a 1953 assemblage of grandees and courtiers provides a rather acid comment on the different standards prevailing in the mid twentieth and late sixteenth centuries when a luminary of the aristocracy could be the author of “Happy were he.”
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
I'm not sure: like Maxwell Davies's Dances in Taverner two decades later, don't they lean more towards "original composition using Tudor forms"? Splitting hairs, I know ... and whether or not, they're wonderful bridges between the old and new Elizabethan ages, I'm sure we'd agree!
The libretto with all its “call me not malapert “ Elizabethanisms is much more parodic sadly…
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
A friend of ours was at that celebrated premiere. It wasn’t just the gloves . The audience was made up of the great and good - few of them opera lovers. The friend said you could “feel the waves of boredom crashing against the orchestra pit throughout the entire performance “ though he might have been quoting a reviewer.
Lord Harewood , who was no doubt there , sums it up in Kobbé : “that is was misunderstood and disliked by a 1953 assemblage of grandees and courtiers provides a rather acid comment on the different standards prevailing in the mid twentieth and late sixteenth centuries when a luminary of the aristocracy could be the author of “Happy were he.”
Anecdotally, an old friend of mine who was singing in the chorus that night told me that it had been a big success, and all the stories were nasty, scurrilous nonsense whipped up by anti-Britten press reviewers and a few jealous old composers such as Ireland. But then, if you were in it, you'd want to remember it as a success. Who knows?
The Britten circle may have contributed to the legend also, as they didn't want the conductor John Pritchard to take too much credit away from the evening.
I suppose the legend that the first night was a failure, redeemed by the work's success on subsequent "democratic" evenings, makes for a better story. It succeeded at least as well as the opening night of Billy Budd, which required a thorough revision to be turned into the successful work we know now.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostAlthough I have to say, that judging from the enthusiastic response at the conclusion of the BBC's own acetate transfer of that world premiere (which was broadcast to the nation, oh happy days!) ....
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
I suppose that evening will always remain shrouded in the mists of controversy. Although I have to say, that judging from the enthusiastic response at the conclusion of the BBC's own acetate transfer of that world premiere (which was broadcast to the nation, oh happy days!, and is now available on CD) the idea of its being coldly received (as it doubtless was by the nobs) is something of an exaggeration. After all, the upper regions of the house were certainly there for the music, not to "be seen".
Anecdotally, an old friend of mine who was singing in the chorus that night told me that it had been a big success, and all the stories were nasty, scurrilous nonsense whipped up by anti-Britten press reviewers and a few jealous old composers such as Ireland. But then, if you were in it, you'd want to remember it as a success. Who knows?
The Britten circle may have contributed to the legend also, as they didn't want the conductor John Pritchard to take too much credit away from the evening.
I suppose the legend that the first night was a failure, redeemed by the work's success on subsequent "democratic" evenings, makes for a better story. It succeeded at least as well as the opening night of Billy Budd, which required a thorough revision to be turned into the successful work we know now.
What a different world it seems now.
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The best story surrounding the premiere of Gloriana is a true one.
Despite the pressures on her, surrounding the upcoming Coronation and everything else, HMQ was determined that she wasn't going to just sit through this modern opera uncomprehendingly. She invited the composer over to Windsor a few weeks before, to take her through the whole piece and explain to her how it was written, how the various musical themes worked, and generally to get a first-hand idea of what to expect. As a result, she felt something of an insider's interest, and enjoyed her commission tremendously on the night.
Now that's dedication!
(Disclosure: I too have a special interest in the piece, as it was the first good opera to be premiered during my lifetime. I was twelve days old.)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... what emerges is a feeling of the bitchiness associated with -
. the world of the Court
. the world of opera
. the world of the court of Benjamin Britten
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
I would say what emerges is how lucky we were to have a composer of the quality of Britten and a Monarch of the quality of HMQE2 !
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