Today he and Warwick Braithwaite conduct scores from notable 20th century ballet scores as mounted by the Sadler's Wells Ballet - Gavin Gordon's score for The Rake's Progress and Sergei Prokofiev's music for Cinderella.
The Rake's Progress
Constant Lambert by Lola Walker (1951) |
Here, as in the Prokofiev work, the Royal Opera House Orchestra performs, as it did for the ballet performances themselves.
The Rake's Progress is notable in that it has remained in the repertory for many decades even though its composer is known for no other works. Gordon was not a full-time composer; he also worked as an actor and singer, appearing both in the first performance of Vaughan Williams' Hugh the Drover and in a stage production of My Fair Lady. In the musical realm, Gordon did produce a series of ballets and other compositions, but none were nearly as successful as The Rake's Progress.
It was Gordon himself who conceived mounting a ballet based on William Hogarth's series of pictures known as A Rake's Progress, bringing his ideas and music to the Vic-Wells Ballet. This was presumably through the intercession of Lambert, a friend from the Royal College of Music. It turned out to be quite a good conception, not the least because of the brilliant choreography by de Valois and the scenic design and costumes from the remarkable Rex Whistler.
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Costume designs for The Rake and The Dancer |
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Robert Helpmann as The Rake |
Igor Stravinsky was later to produce far better known Rake's Progress music in the form of his 1951 opera, but Gordon's music remained closer to Hogarth's scenario.
Cinderella
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Moira Shearer as Cinderella |
Just as Prokofiev's glorious music is in part an homage to Tchaikovsky, Ashton's choreography is a tribute to his predecessor Marius Petipa.
Conducting was Warwick Braithwaite (1896-1971), who had become music director of the ballet company. He had previously been an opera conductor for Vic-Wells and then chief conductor of the Scottish Orchestra.
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Warwick Braithwaite by Howard Coster (c. 1944) |
This was the second recording of Cinderella excerpts. Yuri Fayer, who had conducted the 1945 premiere, recorded two scenes with the Bolshoi orchestra in 1946. Braithwaite's Cinderella selections do not correlate with any of the three orchestral suites from the ballet published by Prokofiev.
The Rake's Progress and Cinderella recordings were originally issued on 78 by English Columbia. My transfer comes from a circa 1949-50 LP pressing by US Columbia with very well balanced sound. The LP's cover design is by Darrill Connelly, and is typical of the many such illustrations he devised for Columbia during the early days of the LP.
The download includes many additional production photos and images, some from my modest collection of vintage ballet books.
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Cinderella: Moira Shearer, Michael Soames and the corps de ballet |
Link (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/#!uQE0lAaR!EfsyqX-qtFmpsFZtsRbRE_X_-x3tlNR6nIJTi2bqBBs
Bravo, Buster. Another outstandingly illuminating offering, for which many thanks.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the music is just fine, but I love these covers and those little illustrations! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments, folks!
ReplyDeleteHow lovely to find another recording of the scintillating RAKE'S PROGRESS! It's also available on a 2-CD ballet anthology, TRIBUTE TO MADAM (Dame Ninette de Valois), conducted by Barry Wordsworth, and an album of Sadler Wells highlights, helmed by Robert Irving. Wonderful stuff!
ReplyDeleteHe abby - I think I have both of those recordings, although who knows where the CD could be. Madam was quite a formidable looking person (also quite a formidable person period, from what I have read). If memory serves, the Irving has a cover that is modeled on Rex Whistler's scenic curtain for The Rake's Progress.
ReplyDeleteHi abby, that is!
ReplyDeleteThis is fascinating stuff; thank you, Buster. I love the Columbia LP covers from this period that follow this "line drawings with color blocks superimposed" scheme; I first saw it in my youth when I bought the mono recording of Bernstein's Age of Anxiety symphony.
ReplyDeleteI had not heard of this Rake's Progress ballet, or its composer, before. The Stravinsky opera does indeed deviate from Hogarth in a major way: Auden & Kallman's libretto turns it into a Faust story, with a strong overlay of the Adonis myth and a hint of The Beggar's Opera.
I'm ashamed to say I'd never heard of Gavin Gordon before. He doesn't rate an entry in any of the music reference works to which I have access, and I learned only a little more from searching around. As you say, he did write several other ballets and more. My initial query, given my specialty, was whether he did his own orchestrations*, but given his study at the RCM under Vaughan Williams and others, I have no reason to suppose he didn't.
(*There's certainly a history of composers creating a ballet score with uncredited help of this sort: Richard Rodgers and Lord Berners come to mind. But again, I seem to have been wrong in this case.)
JAC - I have other recordings of this ballet, as I mentioned above, and I don't recall reading that he did not orchestrate the work. That said, Lambert was a good friend of his, and could well have helped him. But again, I have no evidence that he did.
ReplyDeleteBuster - As I said, this question came to me (because of examples like the Rodgers items, which would never mention Hans Spialek) before I looked up Gordon's bio and discovered that he had as much of an academic pedigree as anyone could ask for. So let's assume that I said nothing. Thank you for this one!
ReplyDeleteThanks again Buster. I don't think I've ever heard the Braithwaite recording before. It was quite usual apparently for Lambert and his circle to help each other out with arrangements and orchestrations when time was running out. I was a regular at Covent Garden, saw Madam often, and have it on good authority that she was a hard taskmaster and, to use that lovely expression beloved of obituaries, "did not suffer fools gladly". Perhaps that is as well, a forceful leader is what a ballet company (or any artistic endeavour) needs.
ReplyDeleteJAC - Yes, I don't think he was a dilettante, but then again, just because he attended RCM doesn't mean he could orchestrate as well as Lambert.
ReplyDeleteAndrew - Thanks for the anecdote, Andrew. I have worked for a few such personalities, and it is best not to be a fool in their presence.
Andrew - Evidence in favor of your "quite usual" remark was provided by me in another topic here, when we were talking about the Façade orchestral suites. Constant Lambert orchestrated (for payment but without credit) four of the numbers in Suite 2; and it certainly wasn't because William Walton was incapable of doing it himself! Just a matter of timing, or being on the spot when work was needed, or that sort of thing.
ReplyDeleteBuster - Your initial description of Gordon did, I admit, set off the "dilettante" buzzer in my head; but as soon as I read up on his biography, I stopped thinking that way.
Buster: many thanks for this exceptionally scholarly post, and the excellent transfers. This is, as usual, one of your "moral examples" for all record bloggers! - 8H Haggis
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, 8HH!
DeleteThe *last* thing that would occur to ME, regarding Braithwaite's performance of the Prokofiev, would be the criticism you cited that it is "dull"! It's ANYTHING but that, IMO. And, the exceptionally vivid British Columbia (EMI) recording of the late forties is exceptionally detailed & vivid, which adds to the sense of intensity & involvement.
DeleteBTW: stupid, unintuitive, and illiterate MS Windows will NOT properly arrange the correct numerical sequence; it reads from left to right number; ergo Windows will arrange your track list as follows -
10
1
2
3
etc.
...necessitating RENUMBERING all the files under 10 by adding a leading zero: i. e. 1 = 01, and so forth. This is true of ANY numerical sequence and drives me absolutely INSANE when trying to send a folder of music files to a media player, or -- in my other hobby activity of astronomy -- to arrange lists of celestial objects, where the individual numbers might have anything from 1 to 8 or 10 figures. NOT YOUR FAULT; you are using more intelligent Macs, and the rest of us cheapskates are doomed to suffer from the innumeracy of the MS coders in Redmond, who (while understanding binary arithmetic) are unable to parse numbers the way the rest of us mere mortals learned in 1st grade. - 8H Haggis
Critics can be wildly inconsistent. I am preparing another Prokofiev recording. One review says it is expressive, another says it lacks vitality. Yet another says it is melodramatic and lacks poignancy. I think it strikes a nice balance between the dance elements and the symphonic.
DeleteAbout numbering: I usually try to number my files 01, etc. But the program I use to convert them from WAV format takes the zeros out. I'll try to remember to put them back in.
8H Haggis - Macs only acquired that number-order intelligence somewhere along their history (I couldn't say which season upgrade). It didn't work that way from the beginning. I definitely know what you're talking about.
ReplyDeleteBuster - When I was more active as a critic, I would find that my reaction to a particular recording was wildly at odds with others (who didn't agree with each other either). We're all just trying to convey our reaction, given our own particular taste and history and knowledge. And those elements aren't the same for everyone. That said, I can be as inconsistent and irrational as anyone, and fume at some writer for not having the good sense to agree with my perception.
Thanks so much Buster for this enjoyable and rare LP.
ReplyDeleteThe sound is excellent.
I have been conducting ballet several times (I partly studied with Dorati...) and am very sensitive to Lambert's wonderful conducting: more 'ballet' style (precised, balanced, transparent, straighforward...) than purely symphonic.
JAC's post reminds me that somewhere on the shelves I have Richard Shead's biography of Lambert, but I see there is now a more modern one: I must get it. He was overworked, illhealth and a fondness for the bottle did not help. His conducting has always seemed to me to fit perfectly with Ashton's choreography, more concerned with the phrase than the bar lines, and a master of rubato. Listen to his recording of the Horoscope Waltz and you will hear what I mean - rubato within the bar. Irving could achieve the same. When watching an Ashton ballet it sometimes seems that the steps have nothing to do with the musical notes - but you can rely on the fact that the dancers will "come down" precisely at the end of the phrase. Unfortunately the Royal Ballet seems to be slowly forgetting how to perform their inheritance (please excuse curmudgeonliness).
ReplyDeleteJAC - Well said; I try to refrain from expressing strong opinions (not always successfully) for the reason that I know they are a product of my peculiar background and tastes.
ReplyDeletecenturi - Very much agree about Lambert's conducting.
Andrew - Like you, I love Lambert; I have not read a biography because although he is a fascinating character, his story is tragic. You are fortunate to see the Royal Ballet regularly. I have only had the pleasure once - a performance of Romeo and Juliet about a decade ago.
JAC - strong opinions formed by one's own background and tastes are the only ones worth expressing!
DeleteAndrew - I first heard Lambert's name as the favored reciter for Walton's Façade in its spoken version (which I've spoken too). Then I kept bumping into his name in other contexts: as a composer (though really only for one original work), as a conductor (not just ballet -- Turandot with the Royal Opera), and as seemingly a "best friend" to any number of eminent musicians. I need to read one or both of those full-length biographies.
ReplyDeleteBuster - I don't think there's any need for any of us to avoid expressing strong opinions, as long as we remember that others are similarly entitled to disagree. Their being a product of one's particular viewpoint is what makes them valuable. Some of my favorite writers about the arts (Rosen, Kael, Osborne, Nabokov) are the most opinionated, and they thereby take me places I wouldn't have seen without them.
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ReplyDeleteAndrew: "strong opinions formed by one's own background and tastes are the only ones worth expressing!" Absolutely!
ReplyDeleteWhen I started writing for publication, years ago, one of the first things I learned to do was to delete all such softenings as "in my opinion." It's ALL opinion*, and we don't look any more humble if we preface only selected sentences with a disclaimer. "State your opinions, as well considered as possible, and let them fend for themselves thereafter" was what I learned to tell myself.
[*There can be, certainly, some matters of objective fact. In my own field, music, these might include intonation, or messy ensemble playing. But it's sometimes surprising how open to uncertainty even such points can be. After I got up the courage to describe a soprano in the NY Times as "clinging to the underside of the pitch" because after multiple hearings that seemed to be undeniably true, I heard the recording on a different audio system and was no longer so sure (adding or subtracting overtones can affect pitch perception to a surprising degree). So it goes....]
JAC - "Invocation to the Moon" sounds to me heavily influenced by "Turandot". Hardly surprising.
ReplyDeleteHe had a dry wicked wit. I have a recording of a BBC concert which he introduced as well as conducted. "My friend the composer Alan Rawsthorne is not only a fine musician but a qualified dentist, which profession he no longer practises, or so he tells me...not even for pleasure".
I hadn't heard heard that quote before. I did discover today (and you must know it, but others here may not) that Lambert's widow married Alan Rawsthorne.
ReplyDeleteI don't know "Invocation to the Moon," but that title certainly sounds Turandot-adjacent. (Turandot was the first opera I ever saw, at Chicago Lyric Opera in 1958.)
Hello my dear Buster. I write you through this channel in order to inform you I posted in Symphonyshare my first upload: Michael Ponti live 1987. This is a first-rate version.
ReplyDeleteBe my guest and thanks again for giving us so treasured musical files.
Thans in advance and let me know if you liked the Haendel Variations: if you wish through my private mail.
HIRAM
Hi Hiram - I did see that, and will check it out. Congratulations!
DeleteAn update to our conversation about Lambert. I have just ploughed through Stephen Lloyd's recent, very detailed and comprehensive, biography of Lambert. It could have benefited from tighter editing, several events happen out of chronological order, but it is has exhaustive appendices and is obligatory for anybody interested in Lambert, or indeed the period and milieu in which he lived and worked. As to the "collegiate" orchestrations of music for the ballet: I was absolutely astonished to learn the following. Vaughan Williams was anticipating a commission from Diaghilev for "Job". This fell through (as did so many of Diaghilev's ideas) so he wrote the work with concert performances in mind, for a full symphony orchestra. When a ballet did arise, it required a reduced orchestration; Lambert offered to do it, RVW replied that he had every confidence in Lambert, his former pupil, and gave him carte blanche.
ReplyDeleteAndrew - I have to get that book - I am a great admirer of Lambert, as you know.
ReplyDelete...it contains nuggets of information such as: in 1933 three separate ballet companies worked in London (not simultaneously), conducted by Lambert, Thomas Beecham, Maurice Abravanel and Efrem Kurtz! (which leads us to...)
ReplyDeleteAndrew - I didn't know Abravanel conducted ballet. When last seen around these parts, he was conducting Kurt Weill.
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