Prom 22: A London Symphony – 31.07.18
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostThe BBC orchestras never do encores at the Proms for some reason.
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Originally posted by makropulos View Post"Never" is a strong word - and it's not true. I was at the Prom on 7 September 1973 and 13 August 1974, both occasions when Boult conducted The Planets in the second half, and both with the BBCSO. At one of them (I think 1974), Sir Adrian did an encore of The Dambusters March.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI can't recall the programme for March 27th 1914 at the Queen's Hall, but I've posted it before. It began:
Delius: In a Summer Garden
RVW: A London Symphony
Bax: Three Songs
Ravel: Valses Nobles et Sentimentales.
And that was the first half!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI remember mention, from a week when RVW and Holst were Composer of the Week, of a correspondence from Gustav to Ralph about that concert, praising his friend in glowing "you've really achieved it this time" terms, having first remarked on the "tawdriness" of Ravel's own orchestration of his Valses!
Here's Butterworth on 28th:
My dear Ralph,
Among all the debauch of last night's congratulations and mutual pattings on the back, I really had nothing much to add, but should now like to tell you how frightfully glad I am that you have at last achieved something worthy of your gifts (I refer to the work & its performance jointly, for after all a work cannot be a fine one until ot is finely played - and it is still possible that the Sea Symphony & the Mystical Songs may turn out equally well - but at present they are not in the same class).
I really advise you not to alter a note of the Symph : until after its second performance (which is bound to come soon) - the passages I kicked at didn't bother me at all, because the music as a whole is so definite that a little occasional meandering is pleasant rather than otherwise. As to the scoring, I frankly don't understand how it all comes off so well, but it does all sound right, so there's nothing more to be said.
One practical result is that you have turned the Ellis concerts from a doubtful into a certain success and I hope he will announce another series soon, & perhaps start a guarantee fund.
Meanwhile here's to Symph no 2!
Yours
George B.
The last quip ("here's to Symph no 2!") is clearly meant as "here's to the next one". It's one of several things that strongly suggest that neither GSKB nor RVW thought of the London as anything but the first. RVW committed two accounts of its genesis to print. First, he wrote to Sir Alexander Kaye Butterworth in January 1918, enclosing an essay for inclusion in the Memorial Volume. At the end of a social evening George rises to leave and says in his gruff way "You know - you should write a symphony..." RVW replies that he never had, and had no intention of starting one. (In 1934 he published this story in his Musical Autobiography, where he adds that, in fact, he had written three movements of one, and one of another - "all now thankfully lost") Nowhere does he acknowledge A Sea Symphony. Of course the years and general usage eroded that position, but RVW was forced to give a number to the D minor symphony in 1956 because OUP insisted - and by then Decca had recorded seven, starting with the Sea. So the new one officially became number 8.
Younger people helped a lot. RVW showed Butterworth all the music as it was written, and acknowledged what a good critic he was (no surprise he asked the young man to "revise" the score before the parts were produced). Arnold Bax wrote a passage or an oboe countermelody (accounts vary) in the slow movement, but RVW changed it because it sounded too Baxian. And Parry (who attended the first performance) records in his diary that Bob Schuster (a friend of Butterworth) sat next to him and told him that parts of the symphony had been written by other young composers. Oh! to find that lost original score!
[Bevis Ellis, who funded the concerts, was a great admirer of Richard Strauss; Bax recalled that Butterworth told him that he (Bax) was the only person Ellis would permit to criticise his idol! Ellis was killed at Thiepval Ridge some five weeks after Butterworth died at Pozières.]Last edited by Pabmusic; 27-07-18, 00:49.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAfter RVWs premier of his Tallis work, didn’t Howells and Holst wander the streets gobsmack?
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The Tallis opened the concert, conducted by RVW. Then Elgar conducted Gerontius. So by the time whoever it was wandered ecstatically round Gloucester, they'd had 2 hours of sublime music, and the Tallis was at the start. So I suspect hyperbole here.Last edited by Pabmusic; 27-07-18, 10:24.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI thought it was Howells & Gurney, but I'll check.
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The Tallis opened the concert, conducted by RVW. Then Elgar conducted Gerontius. So by the time whoever it was wandered ecstatically round Gloucester, they'd had 2 hours of sublime music, and the Tallis was at the start. So I suspect hyperbole here.
The Tallis Fantasia despite being played almost to death on CFM is a glorious work that I never tire of hearing.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostJust bumping this up to the top of the pile in anticipation of tonight's "London Symphony" concert.
Not that I advocate binge/saturation concerts, but I suppose you could have a single concert containing different versions on VW's A London Symphony.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm only aware of 2: an original version, which I have not heard, and the one he considered the official one - would I be right?
Reconstructed version first performed 1915 (original full score lost)
Revised in 1918, 1920 and 1933
'Revised Edition' published mid-1930s.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm only aware of 2: an original version, which I have not heard, and the one he considered the official one - would I be right?
Yes, just dug my copy out: RSNO, Yates, coupled with the 2 piano version of the piano concerto:
This January 2015 recording clamis to be the first ever.
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