In today's (London) Sunday Times:
Forget Elgar the Edwardian. Freed from his period he stands revealed
as a great artist and, as DAVID CAIRNS reports, he is now more popular
than ever, both here and around the world
A MIGHTY RESURRECTION
The immense success of the 50-year-old Elgar's First Symphony in
1908-10 - a phenomenal 100 performances in not much over a year -
was the high point of his career, a final reward for the long
struggles in provincial obscurity.
Nothing was ever quite as good after that. Despite the acclaim for
the Violin Concerto, his popularity followed a declining curve. The
Second Symphony was felt to be a disappointment, and Falstaff appealed
only to the connoisseurs. Then came the war and, when its horrors
had receded, it left a reaction against pomp and circumstance and
the prosperous and complacent values that Elgar's music was assumed
to epitomise.
But now, 90 years on, the triumphs of the First Symphony are being
mirrored in the public response to the Third, the work that Elgar
left incomplete when he died in 1934, and whose voluminous sketches
Anthony Payne elaborated into a grand symphonic statement, a summing-up
of imposing and disturbing force. Nobody who heard the premiere at
the Festival Hall last February will forget the thrill of the encounter
or the atmosphere in the hall during and after the performance - the
sense of astonished discovery, of a voice from the grave speaking to
them in familiar but undreamt-of utterance.
The impact of that memorable evening has reverberated on. In the 10
months since, more than 30,000 CDs of the symphony have been sold and
1,500 copies of the Boosey & Hawkes study score, and there have been 21
further performances, with another 35 scheduled for performance in the
coming year.
Though many of the sounds were new, the voice, in its "heroic
melancholy" (Yeats's words for it), was familiar and well loved. Elgar
has long since sloughed off his Edwardian imperialistic trappings, which
were never more than the thinnest of outer skins protecting a complex,
hypersensitive poetic imagination.
We are at home in the place that Payne has called "the world of
nervous endeavour, noble resignation and lost innocence" and that
Elgar's music inhabits, even as we revel in its fabulous richness
and variety of colour, the eventfulness, the effulgence of the Elgarian
orchestra (how on earth did the piano-tuner's son brought up on the
banks of the Severn and in the shadow of the Three Choirs' Festival
achieve such comprehensive, wide-ranging mastery?). The symphonies
and concertos, not to mention The Dream of Gerontius, the Introduction
and Allegro, and the perennial Enigma Variations, are now part of
the common experience, and not only in English-speaking countries:
the Cello Concerto, seized on by more and more cellists, has begun
to spread Elgar's fame abroad - a movement that is likely to grow
when Hilary and Jackie, the film about the great cellist Jacqueline
du Pre, famous for her passionate interpretation of the concerto,
opens this month. Elgar's music is heard regularly, though not so
often that its emotional power and physical presence are lost.
This is music that does not age. When conductor and orchestra are
in tune with it (and orchestras love playing Elgar, because he writes
such wonderful parts for every section of the orchestra and every
instrument) each new hearing uncovers further layers of feeling and
fresh subtleties.
There is so much in these scores - notonly in their fantastic intricacy
of texture and tone but in their ambiguities, the constant intimations
of mortality that lurk beneath.
I have never been more intensely aware of the darker tones than in
the magnificent reading of the Second Symphony given last month by
Colin Davis and the London Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican. Over
four concerts Davis and the LSO performed Gerontius, Falstaff, the
two concertos and all three symphonies, as well as touring No 1 in
the provinces. The orchestra has never sounded better, its strident
trumpets apart, than in the magical coda of the First Symphony's
Adagio.
It was the Second Symphony, however, that cut deepest for me. For
the first time in my experience, the tragic implications of the work
were laid bare - not only in the second-movement funeral march, given
a shattering performance, but throughout. Elgar prefaced the score
with a quotation from Shelley: "Rarely, rarely comest thou, Spirit
of Delight!" We feel its precariousness in the violins' pianissimo
melodic line reaching yearningly upwards near the middle of the first
movement, and echoed at various points thereafter. The work closes
with an allusion to the harmonic progression that ends Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde - as though Elgar is saying that delight is not
realisable in this world. The music's splendours are threatened by
inimical forces, from within and without.
This is the theme of much of his finest music: the struggle to
recapture an ideal, glimpsed once and never forgotten, for ever
drawing him on in quest of it but rarely held within his grasp. In
the First Symphony the ideal, embodied in the noble, striding melody
of the opening, then fading from sight, is finally possessed, even
as it is assailed ferociously from all sides. In the Second it has
to be yielded up, remaining only a memory. That surely is the meaning
of the vision of destruction, presaged in the first movement and
flaming up terrifyingly in the Scherzo. It is as if Elgar were
unconsciously prophesying the war that, three years later, would
annihilate his world and make such dreams no longer possible.
In the clashing sonorities and desolate harmonies of Elgar 3 we hear,
surely, an idealist's bleak acceptance of lost illusions. The boy
on a white horse riding the Malvern hills, the abiding image in Ken
Russell's BBC film (shown during the LSO's festival), has gone for
good. The symphony can only end as Payne has made it end, with a
passage based on Elgar's late miniature, The Wagon Passes - a long
crescendo, ominous, visionary, a coruscating fortissimo, a diminuendo
dwindling irrevocably, then the resolution of the cadence left
incomplete in the poignant last bar of the slow movement, and a final
soft stroke of the tam-tam. Payne describes in his book, Elgar's
Third Symphony: The Story of the Reconstruction (Faber), how: "The
blaze of a consuming vision would somehow bridge the gap between
Elgar's death and the present day, and finally the music would
disappear as a vapour."
For Elgar it was the end; but not for his music. That lives on.
There have never been so many conductors eager to perform it (and it
is conductors, above all, who ensure the survival of a composer's
work): Colin Davis; Andrew Davis, who conducts the NMC recording of
Elgar 3 and in December gave the American premiere; Vernon Handley;
Rattle; Norrington, who has just been performing the First Symphony
in Berlin; Barenboim, Slatkin, Sinopoli, Andrew Litton, Mark Elder;
Adrian Brown, whose Stoneleigh Youth Orchestra (average age 16) gave
two performances of No 3 last month. Elgar's splendours and
complexities, his longings and griefs, speak directly to people who
have forgotten or have never heard of the age he was once supposed
to embody. David Cairns
Tony Duggan
Staffordshire,
United Kingdom.
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