Tag: BBC Proms

  • Remembering Sir Andrew Davis: Champion of English Music

    Remembering Sir Andrew Davis: Champion of English Music

    It is with sadness that I learn of the death of Sir Andrew Davis.

    Although Davis had a vast repertoire spanning all eras, he was always a great champion of English music, including the works of Ralph Vaughan Williams. At the time of his death, he was, in fact, president of the Ralph Vaughan Williams Society.

    I was lucky enough to have seen him in concert several times. Most memorably, he introduced and oversaw Olivier Messiaen’s reckless epic erotic mindblower, the “Turangalîla Symphony,” in Philadelphia. (What could be more erotic than the ondes Martenot?)

    On a later visit, he brought more heavy-breathing – this time literally, as there is actual breathing in the score – in the form of Sir Michael Tippet’s Symphony No. 4.

    Both works are rarely done – “Turangalîla,” a 20th century classic, because of its scale, and the Tippett, well, because it’s Tippett. (“Turangalîla” is programmed from time to time, but I never would have guessed that I would hear the Tippett a second time, years later, performed by the New Jersey Symphony!)

    Over the course of his career, Davis served as principal conductor of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (1975-1988), the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (2013-2019), and Lyric Opera Chicago (2002-2021), and chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1989-2000) and the Glyndebourne Festival Opera (1988-2000). He was a regular presence at the BBC Proms.

    He conducted Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony in Baltimore last year, but sadly I was already overbooked that weekend (with, among other things, another performance of Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony!).

    Davis died yesterday in Chicago at the age of 80. He had been living with leukemia. His wife, American soprano Gianni Rolandi, predeceased him in 2021.

    R.I.P.


    Vaughan Williams, Symphony No. 5

    Elgar, “The Dream of Gerontius”

    Walton, “Belshazzar’s Feast”

    From Messiaen’s “Turangalîla Symphony,” “Joy of the Blood of the Stars”

    Andrew Davis interviewed


    PHOTO: At the Last Night of the Proms in 2000

  • Doreen Carwithen Rediscovered?

    Doreen Carwithen Rediscovered?

    On the centenary of her birth, is Doreen Carwithen finally ready for her close-up?

    Carwithen has been lauded as the first female film composer. She was certainly the first to study in the Royal Academy of Music’s film program, instituted by J. Arthur Rank in 1946. Could she have been the first woman in the world to have made film music a career? In all, she composed scores for some 30 films, many of them shorts and documentaries, but six of them were features.

    Alas, her concert works, while well-received, were not embraced with particular enthusiasm by either programmers or publishers.

    Carwithen entered the Royal Academy as a cellist, who could also play violin and piano, in 1941. There, she enrolled in William Alwyn’s harmony class. Before long, he was also teaching her composition. Their mutual attraction was instantaneous, sparking a 30-year romance that culminated in their marriage in 1975.

    Unfortunately, at the time of their meeting, Alwyn happened already to be married. The affair proved deleterious to everyone – Carwithen, Alwyn, and Alwyn’s wife – with stress, depression, and physical health issues all around.

    When they finally did marry (after Alwyn’s doctor gave him a talking to, pointing out that he was killing everyone by not living honestly), Carwithen preferred to be recognized by her middle name. She had always disliked Doreen. Thereafter, she went by Mary.

    In 1961, as her career never really seemed to get off the ground, Carwithen began acting as Alwyn’s secretary and amanuensis. Increasingly, she shifted her focus to supporting and promoting his music at the expense of her own. After all, he was by that time a symphonist of stature, while she wasn’t gaining any traction.

    Following Alwyn’s death in 1985, she devoted herself purely to the preservation of his legacy. When she herself died in 2003, she left sketches for a string quartet (which would have been her third), a symphony, and a cello concerto. One can only imagine that, as a creative artist, Carwithen withered on the vine.

    Now it seems her time has come. Her overture, “Bishop Rock,” was performed at this year’s BBC Proms (alongside Grace Williams’ “Sea Sketches” and Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “A Sea Symphony”). On a separate concert, her Second String Quartet was also played. Another scheduled overture, “ODTAA (One Damn Thing After Another)” was not heard, as the Last Night of the Proms was cancelled because of the Queen’s death.

    I expect, with the increased interest in music by composers marginalized because of race or gender, that we’ll be seeing more recordings and concerts featuring Carwithen’s works.

    Here’s an interesting write-up that contains a lot of information about the composer, beyond that usually drawn from her Wikipedia page:

    History

    I’ve also been looking for an excuse to post this video of her Piano Sonatina for the last few weeks.

    “ODTAA (One Damn Thing After Another),” introduced by Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic in 1947

    Concerto for Piano and Strings, first performed at the Proms in 1952

    “Bishop Rock”

    String Quartet No. 1

    “Suffolk Suite” (1964)

    Carwithen wrote the score for the documentary “Elizabeth is Queen” (1953) at white heat. The film was released in theaters three days after Elizabeth’s coronation. The music under the opening credits is arranged from Walton’s “Crown Imperial.” Keep in mind, this is only reel one!

    https://www.britishpathe.com/video/elizabeth-is-queen-reel-1-1

    Carwithen and Alwyn were the focus of my film music show, “Picture Perfect,” this past Saturday on WWFM – The Classical Network. You can listen to the webcast by following the link below.

    https://www.wwfm.org/show/picture-perfect-with-ross-amico/2022-11-10/picture-perfect-november-12-william-alwyn-doreen-carwithen

    Happy birthday, Doreen Carwithen.

  • Proms Cancelled A Missed Opportunity for Music?

    Proms Cancelled A Missed Opportunity for Music?

    The BBC has cancelled the last two Proms, out of respect for the Queen’s passing. Last night, barely an hour after her death was announced, the Philadelphia Orchestra took the stage of Royal Albert Hall to play “God Save the Queen” and “Nimrod” from Elgar’s “Enigma Variations.”

    Traditionally, the Last Night of the Proms is a raucous affair, marked by audience participation and lots of flag-waving, “popular” in the truest sense. Many people attend the event that ordinarily would never set foot in a concert hall. Certainly, you’re not going to please everyone, but might not the scheduled programs have been altered to include selections of a more suitable mood?

    The music of Ralph Vaughan Williams has been very well-represented on this year’s Proms, as well it should be, in his sesquicentennial year. Interestingly, it turns out that the Queen was an admirer of Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 5. This serene work by a 71 year-old composer bears a message of consolation and hope and has been offering solace to audiences since its premiere in June 1943 – the height of World War II – introduced on a Prom concert at Albert Hall, no less. An air-raid warning sounded before the concert, but was ignored.

    Might not this favorite of the Queen, a symphony of such national significance and great humanity, have been substituted, rather than simply turning out the lights and leaving everyone to pass the evenings at home with their phones and tellies?


    Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 5

    “O Taste and See,” composed for the Queen’s coronation in 1953

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