Tag: Scottish Music

  • Arnold’s Tormented Halloween: Tam O’Shanter

    Arnold’s Tormented Halloween: Tam O’Shanter

    At my bedside this year, as part of my Halloween reading,* is this edition from 1984 of Robert Burns’ “Tam O’Shanter.” It’s a bidialectal edition, the poem given in English translation (by May Kramer-Miurhead), followed by the original, in Burns’ Lowland Scots. I’ve always found Chris Riker’s illustrations amusing. Nothing menacing about them (in keeping with Burns’ tongue-in-cheek tone). In any case, how could I not love that bagpipe-playing devil?

    Burns writes of Tam:

    “…[T]hou was a skellum,
    A blethering, blustering, drunken blellum;
    That frae November till October,
    Ae market-dae thou was na sober.”

    The tone of disapprobation could just as well have applied to composer Sir Malcolm Arnold. Both men were, more or less, fond of the bottle and also driven by demons.

    Arnold was born on this date in 1921. He was hired as a trumpeter with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and promoted to principal in 1943.

    During World War II, he registered as a conscientious objector. However, following the death of his brother, a pilot in the RAF, he had a change of heart. At least for a time. Though he never saw action beyond service in a military band, he quite literally shot himself in the foot in order to be able to get back to civilian life.

    In 1948, he retired from orchestral playing to devote himself exclusively to composition. He had an attractive melodic gift, to be sure, which served him well in the writing of light music and film scores. He won an Academy Award in 1957 for his work on “The Bridge on the River Kwai.”

    However, Arnold also had his dark side, as can be detected in passages of his symphonies. He was frequently cantankerous, often inebriated, and also highly promiscuous. He tried to kill himself at least twice. He was treated for depression and alcoholism, overcoming both, but then in the early 1980s he was given only a year to live. He actually survived another 22, during which he completed his Symphony No. 9, among other works.

    Arnold died in 2006, one month shy of his 85th birthday. He was a brilliant composer of great facility. After Malcolm Williamson was appointed Master of the Queen’s Music in 1975, Sir William Walton remarked that they had given the job to the “wrong Malcolm.” For a man with so many personal demons, he wrote reams of positively delightful music.

    A good example, and one of my favorite Halloween pieces, is the descriptive overture “Tam O’Shanter” (1955), in which Burns’ antihero tarries at a pub, in defiance of his wife, then staggers out into the night. Under ominous skies, he detects the sound of bagpipes emanating from the ruins of an old church. Pressing his face to a chink he espies “Auld Nick,” the Devil himself, “in shape o’ beast,” presiding over a coven of high-stepping witches and warlocks.

    When an unusually comely witch catches Tam’s eye, he, in his drunkenness, roars, “Weel done, Cutty-sark!” (in reference to her short skirt). This brings the forces of darkness down upon him, and there is a hell-for-leather sprint by horseback for a nearby river, since spirits are said not be able to cross running water.

    If you’re interested in the rest, you can read for yourself here:

    http://loki.stockton.edu/~kinsellt/litresources/ayr/tam.html

    Then listen to Arnold’s musical response:

    And for a bonus, enjoy his “Four Scottish Dances” (1957):

    Happy birthday, Sir Malcolm Arnold, you tormented genius.


    • More about this year’s Halloween reads in a future post
  • Maxwell Davies at Princeton Returns

    Maxwell Davies at Princeton Returns

    Sir Peter Maxwell Davies returns to Princeton University! Maxwell Davies attended Princeton on a Harkness Fellowship, which he secured with the help of Aaron Copland and Benjamin Britten in 1962. This morning, from deep beneath Bloomberg Hall, we honor the angry young man of Manchester, who went on to become Master of the Queen’s Music, on what would have been his 82nd birthday.

    The composer lived in the Orkney Islands, off the northern coast of Scotland, for his last 45 years. We’ll have all music on Scottish themes and of Scottish inspiration, whether that inspiration be the Celtic folk traditions of Maxwell Davies’ adopted land or the austere seascapes churning outside his cottage.

    At Princeton, Max studied with Roger Sessions, Milton Babbitt and Earl Kim. His own music could be madcap and iconoclastic, drawing from a dizzying array of sources, ranging from Renaissance polyphony to foxtrots.

    No one during those early years, least of all Max, would have expected him to embrace the time-honored form of the symphony. In the event, he wrote ten of them. They are austere affairs that require careful attention, imbued with the composer’s coastal impressions and frequently compared to the great masterworks of Jean Sibelius. Maxwell Davies is regarded as the foremost British symphonist of his generation. Be that as it may, the symphonies are not exactly an easy listen.

    We’ll be sampling from Max’s Scottish works, whether they be charming or severe, alongside pieces by others who hailed from Scotland, were of Scottish descent, or just plain loved to visit.

    You take the high road and I’ll take the low road, from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. Our love for Max is like a red, red rose, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Remembering Sir Peter Maxwell Davies

    Remembering Sir Peter Maxwell Davies

    Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, the former enfant terrible, who, in his later years, served for a decade in the ultimate Establishment post as Master of the Queen’s Music, died of leukemia on March 14th. He was recognized as one of the leading British composers of his generation.

    Max made his home in the Orkney Islands, off the northern coast of Scotland, for the last 45 years of his life. Though he composed in a multiplicity of forms and styles, many of his most attractive and deeply felt works were inspired by the austere seascapes churning outside his cottage and the Celtic folk traditions of his adopted land.

    September 8th would have been Max’s 82nd birthday. Tomorrow morning on WPRB, I’ll honor the composer with a number of representative works drawn from his prodigious output.

    Since five hours of uninterrupted Maxwell Davies could very well push anyone over the edge, especially when it comes to his more challenging works, I’ll mix things up a bit by interpolating music by other composers who hailed from Scotland, were of Scottish descent, or just plain loved to visit.

    The Scotch will be on the rocks, as we travel from the Highlands to the Orkney Islands, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.org. It will be more appetizing than a plate full of haggis, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Sir Peter Maxwell Davies at 80

    Sir Peter Maxwell Davies at 80

    Happy birthday, Max. I like your style.

    You were an angry young man of English music, but you never lacked a sense of humor. Your “Eight Songs for a Mad King,” inspired by George III, calls for players to perform in large bird cages; “Miss Donathorne’s Maggot,” inspired by the historical figure who became the basis for Dickens’ Miss Havisham, serves up instrumentalists as decorations on her wedding cake.

    You’ve lived in the Orkney Islands, in northernmost Scotland, since 1971. You founded the St. Magnus Festival there in 1977. When a protected swan hit a power line on your property in 2010, you seized the opportunity and planned to eat it. When the police arrived, you offered them swan terrine.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4361079.stm

    You were knighted in 1987, and – thanks to changes brought about in reaction to your predecessor’s erratic behavior – you were the first Master of the Queen’s Music not to die while holding the honor (now a ten-year post).

    Your symphonies, organic and austere, are often compared to those of Sibelius by critics in the British press. Every once in a while I’ll take one of them down from my collection, but can never seem to get into them. However, I adore your music on Scottish themes, which skillfully blends your wild tendencies with folk inflections and listener-friendly programs.

    Keep rocking the boat, Max. I know you’ve done an about-face concerning the monarchy, but you’ve still got that mischievous glint.

    Happy 80th birthday!

    The three faces of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies:

    “Eight Songs for a Mad King”

    Symphony No. 3

    “An Orkney Wedding with Sunrise”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkioMJJaz1I

    PHOTO: Mad Max turns 80

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