THE HAVERGAL BRIAN SOCIETY
President
BRYAN FAIRFAX
|
Vice-Presidents
OLE SCHMIDT
HARRY NEWSTONE
SIR CHARLES MACKERRAS
LIONEL FRIEND
MYER FREDMAN
DAVID J BROWN
|
The Havergal Brian Society exists to promote public knowledge of the work of William Havergal Brian (1876-1972) and, to this end, to support and sponsor its publication,
performance, and recording.
The Man
Brian was born on 29 January 1876 into a working-class Potteries family in Dresden, Staffordshire. He gained his first musical experience in
church choirs and after leaving school at the age of 12 he was in some demand as a church
organist. He learned the violin and 'cello, and played in local bands and orchestras. A
local teacher gave him a thorough theoretical grounding, but he was virtually self-taught
in composition. Nevertheless he rapidly acquired an invincible desire to be a composer and
in thefirst decade of the 20th century began to make a name for himself.
Some of his music was admired by Elgar, works of his were performed by conductors such as
Henry Wood and Thomas Beecham, and for a number of years he and his family were supported
by a wealthy Staffordshire businessman so that Brian would be free to compose. All this came
to an abrupt end, however, just before the outbreak of World War 1, when various personal
crises forced him to leave his home and family. In London he failed to consolidate such
musical reputation as he had gained, and for many years he supported a growing second family
with a series of menial jobs, often in some poverty.
By the late 1920s Brian gained an assistant editorship on the journal Musical Opinion,
through which he gained a clearer understanding of and greater sympathy with the latest
Continental developments than almost any other British composer. The musical establishment,
however - with the exception of his close friend Sir Granville Bantock - passed him by and his
own growing body of mature work remained almost entirely unknown and unperformed. This, although Richard Strauss (to whom the Gothic Symphony is dedicated) took him seriously,
and despite Sir Donald Tovey being moved to write in 1934 that 'even for the recognition of
his smaller works he is being made to wait... far longer than is good for any country whose
musical reputation is worth praying for'.
With the death of Bantock in 1946, Brian lost his last advocate for performances of his music until the early 1950s, when his work came to the attention to a young BBC music producer
named Robert Simpson, himself destined to become one of Britain's foremost symphonists.
Starting with Brian's Eighth Symphony in 1954 (the first time that Brian, already 78, heard
any of his symphonies), Simpson gradually brought about over the next quarter of a century a growing number of performances, mostly in radio broadcasts, which began to initiate a
recognition of Brian's achievement.
The composer moved from London to Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex, in 1958, where he embarked upon a
final, immensely rich, 10-year Indian Summer of composition, which included no fewer than
20 symphonies. He finally ceased original creative work in October 1968 with the completion
of his 32nd Symphony, but for the remaining four years of his life he retained full mental
vigour and it always seemed possible that he might return to composition. His death came on 28
November 1972 as the result of a fall, two months short of his 97th birthday. Though he knew that the BBC were committed to broadcasting in due course all of his symphonies, not a note
of his music was commercially issued on record during his lifetime, and he died without
having heard many of his finest works.
The Music
Brian's output comprises a large body of orchestral music including overtures, suites, tone-poems, concertos, and 32 symphonies; five operas; a few large-scale choral-and-orchestral
works; a great many part-songs, both accompanied and a cappella; a similar number of
solo songs; a small quantity of solo piano music; and a few works in other genres - though
several pieces, major ones included, are missing. Only a few of his most important works have been published, notably by Cranz & Co. in the 1930s, in the 1970s by Musica Viva, and
currently by United Music Publishers; some even now have never been performed, and many have
yet to be heard in public.
Like that of many composers, Brian's oeuvre can be divided very approximately into a number of creative periods, in his case three. The first lasted from just before the turn of the century
to the first years of World War One. Much of Brian's music from this time is lost, but that
which has survived is, generally speaking, characterized by two parallel, contrasting, and
often cross-fertilising modes of expression: the first a grotesque, sometimes satirical, vein
of humour, as in the English Suite No.1 (1903-04) and the Comedy Overture Doctor
Merryheart (1911-12); the other a mood of grand seriousness, in works like the orchestral
tone poem In Memoriam (1910) and the choral By The Waters Of Babylon (1905) and
The Vision Of Cleopatra (1907).
Between these early works and the post-war compositions of his maturity stands the opera
The Tigers (1916-19, orchestrated 1928-29). Drawing upon much from his earlier
burlesque vein, its action satirises war, patriotism, soldiering, and many other targets in
contemporary English society, in a manner unknown in 'serious' music of its time. But a darker
dreamworld repeatedly breaks through the nonsensical surface, and the powerful, elegiac,
sometimes nightmarish music of the opera's substantial ballet sequences foreshadows much that
was to come in later years.
Although humour never entirely left Brian's music, its manifestation was far less overt from now on. After writing some of his most searchingly expressive songs and part-songs (genres
he virtually renounced forthwith), he returned with a new depth and intensity to his vein
of grandeur and seriousness. The work in which he first gave full reign to this became his
most famous and notorious - Symphony No.1, The Gothic (1919-27), one of the longest
symphonies ever composed, and the work commonly regarded as being written for larger forces
than any other known composition. It eventually gave him his greatest public triumph at its
first professional performance in 1966, but was most responsible for the damaging and
undeserved reputation he acquired as an eccentric composer of huge and unperformable works.
The Gothic is a creation of great seriousness of purpose, in which the inspiration
of Gothic architecture, expressed through the Latin text of the Te Deum, combines with many
elements from the whole history of Western music from mediaeval plainsong to the 20th century
to form a vast and immensely varied musical fresco.
The Gothic was a crucial work of Brian's career. Four more symphonies and a violin
concerto - major works by any standards - followed in the 1930s, and his 'second period'
drew to a close with the composition between 1937 and 1944 of Prometheus Unbound, a
setting for many soloists, chorus and orchestra of the uncut text of the first two Acts of
Shelley's verse-drama. Its full score, however, is the most serious casualty amongst Brian's
lost manuscripts. He seems to have regarded Prometheus as his masterpiece and the
climax of his life's work, but he experienced a renewed onset of creativity in 1948 after
four years' quiescence. An early fruit of this 'third period', the one-movement Symphony No.8,
represented by far his most radical approach to symphonic form so far. His style, grown to
maturity through many years of private exploration, was now vastly different form that of
any other surviving members of his generation.
In the 24 symphonies which followed No.8 and which, with his four late operas Turandot
(1949-51), The Cenci (1951-52), Faust (1955-56), and Agamemnon (1957),
were by far the most important products of his 'third period', he continued his uniquely
wide-ranging exploration of the possibilities of the form, in harmony, linear structure, and orchestration. In common, however, with most genuinely creative artists, this approach seems
to have been the natural form of expression for his creative personality, and not a
self-conscious imposition. Though he often worked with vestiges of traditional structures, his
symphonic language is most often rooted in a highly allusive kind of metamorphosis through developing variation which amounts almost to a musical 'stream of consciousness'. The products
of this language are amazingly diverse in their procedures and atmosphere, and they display a
trend to ever-greater concentration of though as well as an almost unparalleled capacity for
self-renewal at the most fundamental creative levels. The music of Brian's 80s and 90s,
therefore, far from being a nostalgic swan-song or an old man's trifling, in fact forms in
some ways the most forward-looking, original and satisfying body of music in his entire output.
The Havergal Brian Society
The Society is possibly the third of the name that has existed: one may have been formed after the publication in 1945 of Reginald Nettel's Ordeal by Music, the first biography of
the composer, and another certainly existed in the early 1960s. The present Society, which
enjoyed the distinguished Patronage of Sir Adrian Boult until his death in 1983, was founded
informally in 1974. With the clarification of its principal aims and objectives (see below), a more formal structure was established in 1977, and charitable status was granted in 1978.
Membership has continued to grow, and is now multi-national.
Aims and objectives
- To act as an information source about the composer and his music for both the general public and for musicians. The Society is currently looking at ways in which it may play a more
active educational role.
- To promote and sponsor recitals, concerts, and recordings of Brian's music. Piano and song recitals have been given, a major contribution was made towards the first performance of
The Tigers, and numerous recordings have been sponsored, including the current series
of CDs on the Marco Polo label which is intended to encompass all of Brian's extant choral
and orchestral music, including the 32 symphonies.
- To advise and assist prospective performers in their choice of works and in the acquisition of performing materials.
- To publish original material on Brian and his music. Well over 100 issues of a bi-monthly Newsletter have been published, many containing authoritative articles on aspects of
the composer and his music discussed in no other source. The Complete Music for Solo
Piano has been reissued in a single hardback volume, and a book about the Gothic
Symphony has been published. The Society is also involved with a series of volumes of Brian's
journalism, as well as the continuing publication of his music.
- To gather as much information as possible on the whereabouts of Brian's missing scores, most importantly the full score of Prometheus Unbound. As the result of a reward offer
made by the Society, the full score of The Tigers was recovered in December 1977 after
being missing for 30 or more years.
Compact Discs and Musicassettes
(* = sponsored by The Havergal Brian Society)
- Symphony 1 The Gothic (1919-1927). Eva Jenisová (sop), Dagmar Pecková (alto), Vladimir Dolezal (ten), Peter Mikulás (bass); Slovak Philharmonic Choir, Slovak National Opera Chorus, Slovak Folk Ensemble Chorus, Bratislava City Choir, Lucnica Choir, Bratislava Childrens Choir, Youth 'Echo' Choir; CSR Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava) and Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Ondrej Lenard. Marco Polo 8.223280/1 (2CDs) 4.223280/1 (2MC)
- * Symphony 3 (1931-32). BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Lionel Friend. Hyperion CDA66334 (CD) KA66334 (MC)
- * Symphonies 4 Das Siegeslied (1932-33) & 12 (1957). Jana Valásková (sop); Slovak Philharmonic Choir, Slovak National Opera Chorus, Brno Philharmonic Choir, Youth 'Echo' Choir, Mixed 'Cantus' Choir; CSR Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava [augmented], conducted by Adrian Leaper. Marco Polo 8.223447 (CD) [1992]
- * Symphonies 7 (1948) & 31 (1968); Comedy Overture The Tinker's Wedding (1948).
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Sir Charles Mackerras. EMI CDM 7647172 (CD)
- Symphonies 8 (1949) & 9 (1951). Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Sir Charles Groves. EMI CDM 7 69890 2 [DELETED CD - also LP and MC]
- Symphonies 10 (1954) & 21 (1963). Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra, conducted by
James Loughran (Sym 10) and Eric Pinkett (Sym 21). Unicorn UKCD 2027 [DELETED CD]
- * Symphonies 17 (1960-61) & 32 (1968); Tone Poem In Memoriam (1910); Festal
Dance (1908). National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, conducted by Adrian Leaper. Marco
Polo 8.223481 (CD)
- * Symphony 18 (1961); Violin Concerto; Comedy Overture The Jolly Miller. Marat
Bisengaliev (violin); BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Lionel Friend. Marco Polo
8.223479 (CD)
- * Symphonies 20 (1962) & 25 (1966); Fantastic Variations on an Old Rhyme (1908).
Ukraine State Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andrew Penny. Marco Polo (CD) [TO BE ISSUED
NOVEMBER 1995]
- The Tigers (1917-1929): The Complete Symphonic Movements. 'Masters of the English
Musical Renaissance' (c/w works by Parry and Foulds). Luxembourg Radio Symphony Orchestra,
conducted by Leopold Hager. Forlane UCD 16724/25 (2CDs)
- Fantastic Variations on an Old Rhyme, Festal Dance, In Memoriam,
Two Herrick Songs Requiem for the Rose, The Hag (1911), Doctor Merryheart,
English Suite No.1 (1899, 1903-04), Burlesque Variations on an Original Theme (1903),
Overture For Valour (1902, rev.1906). Saint Nicholas Singers, City of Hull Youth
Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Geoffrey Heald-Smith. Campion RR2CD 1331/2. [Reissues of LP
recordings from 179-81 originally sponsored by The Havergal Brian Society]
- Turandot (1949-51): Fanfare from the Banqueting Scene. 'British Music for Brass'
(c/w works by Bliss, Britten, Arnold, Tippett, Bax, & Walton). Philip Jones Brass Ensemble,
conducted by Howard Snell (Brian, Tippett, Arnold Symphony) and others. London 430 369-2
(CD)
- Festival Fanfare (1967). 'British Music for Symphonic Brass Ensemble' (c/w works
by Bliss, Benjamin, Elgar, Walton, Simpson, Tippett, Rubbra, Jacob). Locke Brass Consort,
conducted by James Stobart. Chandos CHAN 6573 (CD)
- 13 Part Songs. Stoke-on-Trent Bedford Singers, conducted by May Walley. British Music Society Environs BMS ENV 016 (MC)
A number of other now-deleted LP recordings of Havergal Brian's music were issued from the
early 1970s onwards. Some of these may be reissued on CD in due course. In addition, numerous
unauthorised LP transcriptions of BBC performances were issued on the Aries label in the USA.
Their sale in the UK is illegal.
Select Bibliography
- HAVERGAL BRIAN ON MUSIC. Vol.1: British Music. Toccata Press, 1986.
- EASTAUGH, Kenneth. Havergal Brian: The Making of a Composer. Harrap, 1976. [OUT
OF PRINT]
- FOREMAN, Lewis. (Ed.) Havergal Brian: A Selection of Essays. Triad Press, 1969.
- FOREMAN, Lewis. Havergal Brian and the Performance of his Orchestral Music. Thames Publishing, 1976. [OUT OF PRINT]
- MACDONALD, Malcolm. The Symphonies of Havergal Brian. Vol.1. Symphonies 1-12; Vol.2. Symphonies 13-29 [Second Edition]; Vol.3, Symphonies 30-32, Survey and Summing-up. Kahn & Averill, 1974, 1991, 1983.
- NETTEL, Reginald. Ordeal by Music. Oxford University Press, 1945. [OUT OF
PRINT]
- NETTEL, Reginald. Havergal Brian: The Man and his Music. Dobson, 1976.
- TRUSCOTT, Harold and RAPOPORT, Paul. Havergal Brian's Gothic Symphony (with
How the Gothic Symphony came to be written, by Havergal Brian). The Havergal Brian
Society, 1978.
Currently available compact discs, musicassettes, and books are available to HBS members
at discount prices.
Published Scores
The Complete Music for Solo Piano is published by The Havergal Brian Society (1985), and is available from the Society and from United Music Publishers, 42 Rivington Street, London
EC2A 3BN; tel 0171 729 4700. All enquiries concerning other works of Havergal Brian, both
published scores and material for hire, should be directed to United Music Publishers.
For membership details, contact:
Dr Alan Marshall, Hon Secretary, The Havergal Brian Society, 5 Eastbury Road, Oxhey, Watford,
WD1 4PT. Tel: 01923 224607