Saturday, February 20, 2010

Music as erotic magic in a Renaissance romance- PART - I



In sixteenth-century France, few books were read so avidly as the series of two dozen novels known collectively as Amadis de Gaule. Yet although it was a roaring success at court, Amadis was scorned by many humanists, who condemned its racy tales of sex, magic, and adventure as lascivious and silly, at best a waste of time better spent on more profound reading. (1) Amadis would seem an unlikely vehicle for the exposition of systems of occult philosophy, usually confined in the Renaissance to Latin texts circulating in a predominantly masculine intellectual community. Yet this was exactly the function imagined for the novel by the alchemist Jacques Gohory (1520-76), adapter of several volumes from the middle of the series. Gohory admitted that many who knew his "studies in more serious and difficult subjects" would find works so "fabulous ... merry and wanton" beneath their attention. (2) Such critics would not only underestimate the need for leisure to balance graver matters, he argues, but, more importantly, would misunderstand romance's power to convey occult wisdom in the form of fable. In Gohory's hands, Amadis was serious stuff: through extensive modifications and additions to his source texts he wove concepts of natural magic and occult philosophy into the narrative structures and textual conventions of his Spanish models and of the previous French adaptations. (3).

Music played a vital role in his project, and added song poems and elaborate scenes of musical performance constitute a significant difference between Gohory's versions and their sources. Music is a point of synthesis for Gohory's seemingly disparate interests in medicine, alchemy, the occult, and romance, bridging problematic gaps between the masculine domains of knowledge, science, and the intellect, and a feminized world of fantasy, recreation, and sensuality. An approach to Gohory's work through music can reintegrate aspects of his career often treated separately, demonstrating how both music and romance participate in the therapeutic goals that inform his more overtly medical, scientific, and magical writings. At the same time, such an approach can address a thorny problem in the history of early modern concepts of music, medicine, and natural magic. The most-often-studied Latin tracts of Neoplatonism and occult philosophy make few explicit or implicit links with identifiable musical repertories, and are frustratingly vague about details of performance practice. Connections with extant music must be constructed by the modern scholar, and generally the move has been a textual one--from philosophical, medical, and occult literature to musical scores and questions of compositional technique--that leaves connections to potential performance contexts unexplored. Related to this, there has been relatively little work on how magical concepts may have spread beyond learned circles into the wider culture to condition contemporaries' experience of music and musical performance. (4)

Gohory's work is particularly valuable in addressing these issues. Unusually among occult philosophers of his generation, his interests in practical music-making have left traces both in imaginative fiction and in contributions to printed music books. In the context of his other writing on natural magic and medicine, reading Gohory's musical prefaces against his adaptations of Amadis provides a unique window onto how a writer steeped in alchemical and medical thought imagined performance situations in which musical magic might be used, and how it might accomplish its effects. Though his Amadis adaptations stop short of providing notated music or citing specific pieces, they nevertheless demonstrate strong links with music prints, the chanson repertory, and its performance practices in French courtly circles of the mid-sixteenth century. Unlike the discussions of music in treatises of Neoplatonic philosophy or in the medical literature, the novels work to establish connections between occult understandings of music and the performance of music at court. At the same time, the success of the Amadis series, which reached a larger and more diverse readership than any of Gohory's more erudite writings, contributed to the vernacularization of concepts of musical magic and helped foster their dissemination into these same courtly circles.

Gohory's advocacy of music coalesces most effectively in book 11 of the French Amadis, with its elaborate scenes of musical courtship. (5) Its main plot concerns a pair of adolescent princes who disguise themselves as Amazon lute singers to gain access to a beautiful princess. The story allows for plentiful descriptions of musical performances, in which the boys' beauty and skill in singing as women inspire such universal admiration that both men and women fall hopelessly in love with them. The novel's gleeful exploitation of the plot's erotic potential, its relatively unabashed treatment of both same-sex eroticism and heterosexual sex, and its evocation of the seductive powers of music are characteristic of the middle volumes of the Amadis series, and are among elements that shaped the novel's popular appeal. Many of the scenes of song performance draw not only on precedents from the French romance tradition, but on medieval and contemporary Italian literature--both in the vernacular (Boccaccio) and in Latin (Colonna)--in which such episodes are common. (6) Yet in Gohory's adaptation, such descriptions of music-making are embedded in a rich web of astrological and alchemical symbol that harnesses this aspect of romance to his broader intellectual program. His musical additions both contribute to his project of converting the romance into a vehicle for Hermetic wisdom, and duplicate its effects in another field, by endowing the performance of secular love songs--like romance reading, an activity often dismissed in the Renaissance as a trivial occupation of leisure time--with profound importance. A close reading of the scenes of musical performance in this book can act to restore the imaginative leap between magical principles and musical repertories and performance contexts to a place in early modern mentalities, demonstrating how the erotics of musical performance and audition could be attached to wider occult meanings in mid-sixteenth-century France.

2. GOHORY, MUSIC, AND THE FRENCH AMADIS

Gohory's work has long been known to historians of early modern medicine and magic. An intellectual omnivore whose sources included all of the principal Hermetic texts then circulating around Europe, the major Italian works of Neoplatonic philosophy, and a large body of Italian and Spanish literature, he was the author of original poetry and prose in Latin and French as well as of numerous translations. (7) He was among the first and most influential French Paracelsians, instrumental in bringing Ficinian Neoplatonism into dialogue with new concepts of chemical healing. (8) His readings of Marsilio Ficino's (1433-99) De vita and of Francesco Colonna's (ca. 1433-1527) Hypnerotomachia Poliphili have been particularly useful to historians of occult philosophy. (9) And Gohory's French adaptations of Amadis de Gaule have begun to attract attention as part of a general renewal of interest in sixteenth-century prose romance. (10) But one aspect of Gohory's life and work--his lively interest in music as both idea and practice--has never been examined at all. (11) His prefaces to music prints have never been completely identified, much less studied; and his musical additions to Amadis, in the form of songs and performance descriptions, have been treated as texts without sonic implications. (12) Though these writings occupy relatively little space in his large oeuvre, they are more important than a simple page count might suggest.

Born to a Parisian family with a tradition of royal service, Gohory followed the court from 1543 at the latest, was employed as secretary to a series of influential nobles, and accompanied French diplomatic missions to Flanders (1544), England (1546), and Rome (1554-56). He quickly established himself in courtly humanist networks, forming ties with Pleiade poets and other literary figures, as well as with physicians who shared his interests in occult remedies. He probably spent much of the 1560s on the family estate in Issy, where he concentrated on chemical experiments and on furthering his knowledge of Paracelsus. (13) Alchemical concepts were the principal focus of his influential Theophrasti Paracelsi Philosophiae et Medicinae utriusque universae, Compendium (1567), in which Gohory draws comparisons between Paracelsus, the magical philosophy of Ficino, and the work of occult philosophers such as Johannes Trithemius (1462-1516) and Cornelius Agrippa (1486-1535). (14) Occult inclinations also shaped his involvement with the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, his contributions to a volume of engravings depicting the story of the Golden Fleece (1563), and his annotated edition of the medieval poem Le livre de la fontaine perilleuse (1572), all of which he considered as carefully disguised alchemical allegories. (15) In his Instruction sur l'herbe petum (1572), the first full-length treatise on tobacco, Gohory is largely concerned with methods of distillation for therapeutic use. Around 1570, shortly before the publication of the Instruction, he created his Lycium Philosophal, a botanical garden and learned academy, at Saint Marceau on the outskirts of Paris. There he continued his work with plant distillations, and experimented with practical magic involving talismans as well as with more orthodox medical cures. (16) Though he seems rarely to have attended court himself during this period, his academy received visits from influential courtiers and he apparently renewed efforts to gain recognition for his work in courtly circles. (17).

Gohory's engagement with the Amadis romances began in 1543, when he wrote a Latin liminary poem for book 4, by the much-admired Nicolas Herberay des Essarts, the French series' first adapter (appendix 1). (18) Their friendship may have motivated Gohory to tackle Amadis himself when Herberay abandoned the project in 1548 after book 8: Gohory was responsible for books 10 and 11, printed in 1552 and 1554. Fifteen years later in 1571 Gohory returned to translate book 13 at the behest of Catherine de Clermont, Comtesse de Retz (1545-1603). His final contribution to the Amadis enterprise was a lengthy preface to Antoine Tiron's version of book 14 in 1574. Gohory's involvement with the romance thus corresponds to two moments in his life when he was moving in court circles and trying to garner patronage from powerful courtiers. He no doubt hoped for the kind of potentially lucrative appointments sometimes enjoyed by alchemists and occult philosophers: he must certainly have been aware that Agrippa, a writer he particularly admired, had held such a post at the French court in the 1520s. (19) Although by his own account Gohory was never successful--laments over his failure to receive recognition at court regularly punctuate his later writing--he believed that using a popular novel to diffuse his ideas would increase his work's appeal for his target audience, particularly for its female members. Unlike earlier Amadis volumes, Gohory's romances were dedicated to prominent court noblewomen: the king's sister, Marguerite de France (1523-74); his mistress, Diane de Poitiers (1499-1566); Catherine de Clermont; and Henriette de Cleves, Duchesse de Nevers (1541-1601). These women were all celebrated by contemporaries for their own intelligence and learning as well as for their active support of men of letters, so that the dedicatees figure as feminized icons of knowledge as well as consumers of fashionable recreation and likely sponsors at court. (20)

In contrast to Amadis, Gohory's musical prefaces appeared only late in his life. In his Instruction sur l'herbe petum, Gohory described how visitors to the Lycium Philosophal would perform together in a specially decorated gallery, showing that music-making figured in the academy's program in the early 1570s. During the same years he contributed to several books produced by the royal music printers Adrian Le Roy and Robert Ballard (appendix 2). In his preface to Le Roy's lute instruction (1570), Gohory claims that his own love of music fostered a longstanding friendship with the book's author. (21) Though there is no reason to doubt him, it was also true that both the reigning king, Charles IX (1550-74), and Catherine de Clermont, dedicatee of Amadis book 13, were keenly interested in music. Nearly all the prefaces introduce music by Charles IX's favorite composer, the celebrated Orlande de Lassus (1532-94). (22) Catherine de Clermont was the dedicatee both of Le Roy's lute instruction and of the Musique of the royal keyboard player Guillaume Costeley (which carries a main dedication to Charles IX and a secondary dedication to Catherine). (23) There are echoes across the prefatory material: Gohory's preface to Le Roy's lute book refers to his forthcoming translation of Amadis book 13, while Charles IX's love of music is mentioned in the preface to the romance. (24) Gohory also sent a copy of Lassus's Mellange to Marguerite de France with an autograph dedication. Marguerite had been the dedicatee of Gohory's first Amadis translation two decades earlier; and, as in the case of Catherine de Clermont, she was the recipient of both a romance and a music collection from Gohory's hands. (25) This suggests that for Gohory music, like romance, seemed a promising way to the hearts of courtly patrons.

Gohory's prefaces repeatedly allude to music's recreational capacities: in dedications to Renaud de Beaune and Jacques Amyot, he underlines how both men listen and sing to "sooth and assuage the tedium of grave cares." (26) Addressing Charles IX, he claims that kings above all need the pleasure of music to counteract the burden of their heavy responsibilities. (27) At the same time he encourages readers to understand this music as potentially more than a simple pastime. His arguments rest upon Neoplatonic concepts of celestial harmony and macrocosm-microcosm correspondence that pervaded contemporary French literary production, in which the unity wrought from the interplay of disparate elements is regulated by laws of harmonious proportion imagined as music. (28) Harmony's role as regulatory principle in both planetary and human contexts underpins Gohory's understanding of music's ethical and therapeutic value. In Lassus's Mellange, Gohory links music's capacity to foster moral behavior and restore mental health in humans to its role in controlling the motion of celestial bodies. (29) In the composer's second book of motets, Gohory more explicitly compares the harmony of the spheres, composed of the varied pitches generated by planetary motion, to the concord between human bodily parts and intellectual faculties that produces physical health and mental acuity. (30) Taking pleasure in music serves as proof of the individual's own healthful harmony, of mental and physical alignment with the cosmos. In Gohory's preface to Le Roy's lute tutor, Le Roy's personal worth is confirmed precisely by his excellence at music: for "it is a token of a person well borne, that his spirite hath been alwayes so inclined to Musicke, as beinge compounded of proportion and temporative harmonic call." (31)

Gohory's praise of Lassus offers a further refinement: "I do protest unto you that if the songes of other Musitians do delight mee, those of Orland do ravish me." (32) Here Gohory posits two categories of musical response, the lower delight and superior ravishment. Ravish is an English rendition of ravir--or possibly of transporter--in the lost French original: both words convey notions of ecstasy and elation as well as the idea of movement, potentially against one's will. This vocabulary resonates with other French courtly writing about music, in which ravishment is closely allied to the Neoplatonic conception of the furors. (33) Thus Pierre de Ronsard begins his preface for a 1560 musical anthology by claiming that the virtuous man reacts to music with joy, quivering from head to foot "as if sweetly ravished, and I know not how stolen away from himself," because his soul retains a memory of its divine origin. Those indifferent to music are "mired in the body," having lost all connection with the "celestial harmony of the heavens." (34)

Among the sources for Ronsard's preface were Pontus de Tyard's Solitaire premier, ou discours des muses et de la fureur poetique (1552), which examines music in the context of the divine furors, and Solitaire second, ou prose de la musique (1555), devoted entirely to music. (35) A second edition of the Solitaire premier appeared in 1575 with a new dedication to Gohory's own sometime patron, the music-loving Catherine de Clermont, assimilating her to the author's muse Pasithee. Pasithee begins the book by singing an ode to the lute; the resemblance of her music to celestial harmony triggers an episode of transport in the Solitaire, which acts as prelude to his explanation of how the soul may achieve union with the divine through love. In the Solitaire second, Tyard describes the effects of a lute performance by the virtuoso Francesco da Milano on an audience at a Milanese banquet, and here the account emphasizes how celestial inspiration empowers the performer to impose the trance state on listeners. Francesco first ravishes himself and his audience, then with superhuman force returns to the world and restores the souls of the auditors, leaving them astonished as if awoken from a divinely-inspired trance. (36)

These oft-cited images of the well-tuned soul and of musical ravishment testify to the currency of Neoplatonic conceptions of music in Gohory's immediate circles. However, in addition to confirming his allegiance to widespread understandings of harmony, his preface to Le Roy's instruction also makes a much more unusual connection in a passage praising the lute: "I will no further dilate the common prayses therof, but onley by the great singularitie of agreement and disagreement which by experience is shewed in it, in this, that if one Lute be sounded neere unto an other that is tuned in the same tune: it is a strange thing and in a manner marvellous, that the stringes of the other Lute will move at the sound and will shake not being at all touched, by an effect of correspondence wonderfull. Which the Poet Augurall in his Chrisopeied: nor other authors of secret Philosophie have forgotten." (37) This is the only French musical preface of the period to make an explicit reference to the alchemical literature: Gohory's authority, the "Poet Augurall," was Giovanni Aurelio Augurelli (ca. 1456-1524), whose Chrysopoeiaie libri III was a lengthy poem on making gold. In the passage Gohory has in mind, Augurelli uses the image of sympathetic string vibration to underline the extraordinary powers of consonance in the natural world: "For think that everything rejoices in its like, and even that everything is assisted externally by its like; especially since nature seeks nature, and, embracing its peer, refuses all contraries. Thus too, though not struck with fingers or plectrum, a string may be moved, as if it sounded in concordance with [other] strings to which it is tuned, so much power has the concord of things in everything." (38)

Though hierarchically organized, the universe is a unified organism in which manipulation at one level could achieve effects at others. Likeness is the conduit that opens channels between objects and beings at different positions and allows them to act upon one another. The sympathetic vibration of strings demonstrates this principle in nature, an illustration repeatedly taken up in early modern occult literature. (39) In the Lassus preface Gohory singles out the lute as model for the discordia concors--the "great singularitie of agreement and disagreement"--a harmonious interplay of difference through similitude, demonstrated by the sympathetic vibration of two instruments whose status as distinct entities is transcended by likeness. The adjectives strange, marvellous, and wonderfull emphasize the occult aspects of the operation.

Another way of thinking about sympathy is love. Eros can then function as a mode of understanding the attractions that bind the universe into a harmonious whole. Since love, whether between astral bodies or between humans, is the connecting energy of the cosmos, it follows that the person who can control these attractions--channelling the desires of substances and beings and directing them at will--is the most powerful of magicians. (40) For example, by manipulating the love of substances for one another, the alchemist can effect the desired transformations in his materials. In Augurelli, the sympathetic vibration of strings thus not only illustrates the general principle of sympathy, but demonstrates the kind of operation the alchemist wishes to perform. And this is the same type of operation that musicians themselves were believed to exercise when they used the invisible power of sound to affect the bodies and spirits of listeners. In occult literature, music is more than the archetype of healthful equilibrium: it is a dynamic agent of change, a means of manipulating substances and beings through the channelling of eros. Orpheus, musician and lover, is the model of the Renaissance magus. Gohory's prefaces consistently assimilate Lassus with the magus figure, casting the composer as a powerful producer of extraordinary effects: as Orpheus was able to move stones with the sound of his cithara, so Lassus moves human spirits. (41)

Though the Le Roy and Ballard prefaces date from late in his career, Gohory's musical interests already mark his early adaptations of Amadis. The music is striking in part through its sheer quantity: Gohory's volumes contain more interpolated song poems than had ever figured in previous instalments of the French series. (42) Though some are loosely based on counterparts in the books' Spanish sources, the majority have no precedent. One song uses a poem by the royal librarian Claude Chappuys, whose poetry figures in many midcentury chanson anthologies, and whose 1543 court panegyric the "Discours de la court" mentions the composers Claude de Sermisy and Pierre Sandrin. (43) All the other texts were apparently Gohory's own work. Many are huitains and dixains of the kind favored by poets of the Marot generation, and set to music by composers such as Sermisy and Clement Janequin. Gohory also wrote strophic poems of the type associated with the incipient air de cour, often set by slightly younger musicians such as Sandrin and Pierre Certon. Several poems are particularly reminiscent of lyrics by Mellin de Saint-Gelais, the leading court poet of the 1540s: one text is particularly closely modeled after Saint-Gelais's well-known song "O combien est heureuse." (44) Saint-Gelais's lyrics often had Italian antecedents: this too is the case for Gohory's "La jeune vierge est semblable a la rose," an accomplished French version of "La verginella e simile alla rosa" (Orlando furioso, canto 1, stanza 42). "La verginella" could be sung to one of the widely-circulated musical formulas used for Ariostan stanzas in Italy, some of which were employed by Saint-Gelais for musical performances of his own poetry in French: Gohory and his courtly readers were certainly aware of the practice, and may have been familiar with specific formulae used to sing "La verginella" and other Ariostan verse. (45) His adaptation of Amadis book 11 features one sung sonnet, echoing the preoccupation of Gohory's friends in the Pleiade with the genre from the late 1540s onward. Though printed sonnet settings with music from this period are scarce, Gohory would have known of the musical supplement to Ronsard's Amours of 1552, which included a piece by his friend Marc-Antoine de Muret as well as sonnet settings by professional court musicians. (46)

Gohory's biographer W. H. Bowen was perplexed by these song texts, remarking that the Amadis poems can seem inconsequential when compared to Gohory's other verse. (47) But Bowen was contrasting the poems with the most high-flown literary production of Gohory and his Pleiade contemporaries, while Gohory's romance additions generally adopt the less ambitious stylistic register of much contemporary poetry destined for song. In fact, Gohory's songs in Amadis represent a helpful overview of the most common types of chanson poetry from midcentury, consistent with the (often anonymous) texts found in contemporary music prints. Gohory also alters musical descriptions to bring them into line with French practice, most obviously by replacing the harps of the Spanish text with lutes. Though relatively few prints of lute song have survived, there is ample testimony from other sources to indicate that singing to the lute was a valued skill among French courtiers. (48) Here Gohory's profession of lengthy friendship with Adrian Le Roy is particularly resonant. Le Roy was himself a virtuoso lutenist who spent the early part of his career in the service of Catherine de Clermont's father, and may have been Catherine's own teacher on the instrument. Some of the first prints he produced after he and Robert Ballard founded their music-publishing firm in 1551 reflect this background, containing lute and guitar arrangements--as both solo instrumental pieces and as accompanied songs--of chansons composed or arranged by court musicians such as Arcadelt and Certon, and that were simultaneously issued as polyphonic vocal pieces in other anthologies the firm produced. Le Roy's books are exactly contemporary with Gohory's first Amadis adaptations, demonstrating how pieces today better known as vocal polyphony were performed by sixteenth-century lute singers: the lute books for which Gohory wrote prefaces in the 1570s contain similar arrangements. (49)

Gohory's descriptions sometimes include other useful scraps of performance practice information. In book 11, for example, Daraide performs the song "Nonobstant qu'Amadis esprouve," first in a highly ornamented solo lute version, and then adds the voice on the second time through. (50) Sources for lute music regularly include plainer and more ornate versions of the same pieces, providing models for the addition of rapid passagework and other ornaments to a song's basic framework. The lute songs in Attaingnant's Tres breve et familiere introduction (1529) are each prefaced with ornamented solo lute versions of the same piece, which could be used as preludes to vocal performance. Nearly all of Adrian Le Roy's volumes of song arrangements for lute and guitar feature such doubles. (51) Thus in addition to their strong idealizing elements, Gohory's musical interludes intersect convincingly with evidence from musical sources about chanson performance practice in courtly circles at midcentury.

Gohory's performance descriptions and song texts evoked music familiar to his courtly readership: the musical additions fostered immediacy and enhanced the homology between the romantic world of Amadis and the court's own social practice. This is in keeping both with Gohory's evident knowledge of practical music-making and the role that Amadis had come to occupy as primer for elegant behavior, and follows a well-established pattern of French rewritings of Amadis as a mirror of the royal court. (52) Yet descriptions of song performance also serve a larger purpose, as Gohory intended the entire novel to do. In his dedication of book 10, Gohory employs the same tactics he would later use for music books, alluding to romance's recreational use while simultaneously alerting the competent reader to the secret wisdom it conceals. He offers the book to Marguerite de France as a pleasant diversion from her study of serious works in Greek and Latin, but says that her patronage will make the book attractive to other aristocrats who do not have her intellectual gifts. For these readers, the romance can serve to sweeten moral instruction just as honey is used to make bitter medicine more palatable to children: "your name by its lustre will make [the book] seem more agreeable to gentlemen and ladies who do not have the stomach to digest more serious and stronger reading: for whom these romances were written for good reason, to furnish them an example and model of chivalry, courtesy, and discretion, that might raise their hearts to virtue, teaching the actions they should imitate or avoid. Which they would not consume so willingly in plain moral instruction, any more than children (as Lucretius says) would take a medicinal drink if the edge of the vessel were not spread with honey: such is for them the lure of the merry tales of strange adventures and love affairs scattered through such stories." (53) These appealing aspects of romance not only serve as bait to attract otherwise reluctant readers, but become a means of encoding sacred mysteries for those capable of piercing the cloak of fable to understand the author's purpose. Gohory claims authority for his procedure in classical myth (the Minotaur, the Golden Fleece, the Twelve Labors of Hercules), medieval romance (tales of the Round Table, the search for the Holy Grail, Merlin's spells), and medieval and contemporary Italian literature (Boccaccio, Colonna), all of which were used to communicate wisdom in the guise of fable. He asserts that readers of "good understanding" will immediately suspect the magical episodes in Amadis of concealing some mystical meaning conveyed through symbol. (54)

Amadis is assimilated to the group of texts that Gohory understood as Hermetic allegory, a claim he would reiterate in his prefaces to subsequent volumes: his image of children lured into drinking medicine presents romance reading as a potentially therapeutic exercise leading to virtuous self-transformation. For some this process may happen unawares, though Gohory's prefaces paradoxically forestall the kind of literal reading, completely innocent of romance's potential moral and mystical aspects, that he posits as typical of the common reader. Instead, he carefully prepares a reading practice for an elite who can appreciate simultaneously the recreational, sensual, and philosophical dimensions of the book: as he says in book 14, good minds "are delighted by reading [romances] for the marvels they contain, preserved [confittes: literally, "pickled" or "conserved"] in the sweet voluptuousness of tales of valorous deeds and amorous exploits." (55)

Gohory's musical additions figure centrally in his project, fulfilling different functions according to textual register and performance context. One category consists of songs of entertainment, with mock-rustic, humorous, or encomiastic texts, performed generally by lower-class characters, often during banquets or festivities. The other main category consists of serious love lyrics, and represents the majority of Gohory's departures from his Spanish models. These are sung by aristocratic characters to their own accompaniment on the lute or harp and generally performed in small gatherings or in intimate settings where the singer is with the beloved or completely alone. Characters react to songs of entertainment (often described as "joyous" or "pleasing" in the text) with amusement and pleasure, a response easily assimilated to Gohory's category of delight. In contrast, performers and listeners of love songs are ravished: they undergo transcendent experiences whose descriptions carry the main weight of Gohory's music-philosophical arguments. Familiar elements of courtly musical practice are thereby attached to a more abstract intellectual discourse that imbues such practices with occult significance. The effect is clearest in book 11, where musical episodes consistently act as fictional elaborations of the Neoplatonic and alchemical principles later expounded in Gohory's prefaces for Le Roy and Ballard.

3. L'ONZIEME LIVRE D'AMADIS DE GAULE: IN PURSUIT OF THE MUSICAL IDEAL

Virtually all of the love songs in book 11 of Amadis arise from the principal plot, what the title calls the "noble deeds of Agesilan de Colchos, in the lengthy pursuit of the love of Diane, the most beautiful princess in the world." Diane is the daughter of Sidonie, Queen of Guindaye, who was seduced and abandoned by Diane's father, Florisel. Sidonie constructs an enchanted palace in which she locks her daughter away from all men: she has Diane's portrait sent out with her own vow that the knight who can bring her the head of Florisel will have Diane's hand in marriage. Florisel's nephew, the adolescent prince Agesilan, is smitten by the portrait. Hoping that a dose of reality will cure Agesilan of his obsession, his cousin Arlanges proposes a ruse that will allow them to see Diane herself: they will masquerade as Amazon lute singers and gain employment in her service. Using the names Daraide and Garaye, the boys successfully present themselves to Sidonie in feminine disguise, producing musical performances so persuasive that she hires them on the spot for her daughter's entourage. When Agesilan meets Diane he becomes ever more hopelessly enamored, and the attraction is mutual: but it is too dangerous for Agesilan to reveal his identity, and Diane is disturbed by her love for someone she believes to be a woman. The narrative also introduces a subplot involving the love of Arlanges-Garaye for a visiting queen, Cleofile.

In the book's dedication to Diane de Poitiers, Gohory explains that the story is properly hers because of her resemblance to the heroine Diane de Guindaye. Both are manifestations of the "Idea," an imagined perfection whose contemplation is incitement to love: "this story of Diana is especially addressed to your greatness, as properly destined by the sameness of its name. Which signifies an Idea of all perfection of beauty and grace, representing your own similar excellence: which is an imaginary form of harmony of proportion, color and lineament, ravishing the heart in natural admiration, and there igniting an ardent desire for possession, that we call Love." (56) The earthly beauty of the two Dianes mirrors a pure form with the explicitly musical quality of harmonious proportion: it ravishes the beholder and inspires an ardent yearning to experience the divine intelligence that conceived it. Agesilan's "lengthy pursuit" of Diane is at the same time both a pursuit of knowledge and a quest for the divine union through love that was the ultimate goal of Neoplatonic philosophy.

Agesilan receives an appropriate princely education that includes music as an antidote to weightier affairs: sent to Athens at age six, he learns "some practice of the lute and musical singing, so that one day he could use it to sweeten the handling of grave and serious matters: in which he showed an extraordinary dexterity in understanding everything." (57) Like Charles IX and other recipients of Gohory's Le Roy and Ballard dedications, Agesilan's musical ability marks him as exceptionally virtuous in a larger sense. Diane too is trained in music so that by the age of twelve "[she] thought only of taking her ease and pleasure in the delicious abode of her palace with her damsels, strolling through the lovely orchards, gathering flowers there to weave bonnets and bouquets, sometimes going to refresh herself at the fountain, other times sitting on the grass amid her girls like the goddess Diana among her nymphs, taking up a lute and sounding it so melodiously that there was not a listening ear that did not remain enchanted by the harmony, as were people at sea long ago by the song of the Sirens." (58) Gohory continues with a description of Diane's beauty which similarly emphasizes its entrancing effects on the beholder: like the siren qualities of her music, her visual attractiveness is so powerful as to transcend the normal structures of gender relations. (59) This depiction of Diane's graces expands a single sentence in the Spanish model into an account of the audible and visible qualities of the Neoplatonic figure of perfection wrought by nature, the "Idea" of Gohory's preface. (60) Agesilan's own musicality--like that of the courtly patrons to whom Gohory's later writings are directed--predisposes him to appreciate the transcendent qualities of his beloved's song and prepares his spirit for the series of transformations he will undergo in his quest.

Agesilan's first step is to adopt feminine disguise, a partial becoming of the ideal he seeks. Cross-dressing is a regular feature of Renaissance romance, and the Amadis series is no exception. (61) Here the cross-dressers are boys rather than adult men, and the text emphasizes their slenderness, absence of beards, and high voices as contributions to the success of their female impersonation. Since much medical thinking of the time regarded both women and youths as imperfect or as-yet-undeveloped males, the gender identity of adolescents such as Agesilan and Arlanges could be seen as already fluid even before the adoption of their scheme. And musical boys provided one of the most legible instances of transvestism in Renaissance culture, in that singing boys in feminine dress were regularly seen on stage. As Richmond Barbour has observed, boys' sexual indeterminacy formed an important basis of early modern theater's erotic play. (62) This too is the function of the transvestite singers in Amadis, whose interactions in and out of disguise with other characters of both sexes generate a catalogue of potential sexual combinations and furnish readers with a wide range of erotic identifications. Music thus figures prominently in a world where gender confusion functions to stimulate the erotic imagination, rendering novel reading itself an erotic activity--one of the qualities Amadis' detractors condemned. Gohory insistently foregrounds this aspect of the plot by his use of language, referring to the boys as "she" in feminine garb but frequently shifting to "he" when describing their thoughts or motivations. He playfully juxtaposes the opposing gendered pronouns and adjectives in a way that invites, or even forces, reader attention and contributes to the potency of the "transvestite effect," a term used by Marjorie Garber to evoke the power of cross-dressing not only to disturb gender categories but to challenge the stability of all such oppositional binaries. (63) Gohory consistently calls on this capacity in constructing the relationships between his principal characters.

Amadis' transvestite youths provide erotic force, not only in the sense of sexual stimulation, but also in the wider terms embraced by occult understandings of eros, for they offered Gohory scope to emphasize notions of resemblance and sympathy through images of androgyny. The androgyne was a significant figure in Neoplatonic philosophy and in occult and alchemical thought: both traditions are active here. The androgyne exhibits characteristics of both doubleness and incompleteness, both in its original form as a creature combining both sexes, and in its yearning for its absent half following its division. (64) Agesilan can thus not only stand for a failure of stable, gendered oppositions, but can serve to evoke the mutual longing of like for like in nature. His character also suggests the Ficinian use of the androgyne image to symbolize the soul's desire for reunion with the divine essence. In alchemical literature, the androgyne represents the union of the passive feminine principle associated with the moon with the active, masculine solar principle. While the resemblance of Agesilan's adolescent voice and body to a girl's is heightened by feminine dress, the web of allusions attached to Diane's name projects her in turn as virile woman, the huntress goddess Diana of classical myth, and associates her with the moon, icon of instability and mutation; her pursuit of the masculine occupation of the hunt also involves a form of cross-dressing. (65) In the preface to book 11, Gohory further links transvestism and gender ambiguity to divine ceremonies of the cult of Diana: the heroine Diane de Guindaye is urged to pay tribute to her twin Diane de Poitiers, accompanied by her Agesilan "disguised as a damsel, as long ago in a certain country men sacrificed to the goddess of that name in women's clothing, and women in men's." (66)

The interchangeability of Diane and Agesilan as unstable, bigendered figures is enhanced by Gohory's exaggeration of their likeness to each other. (67) Similarity also connects the other pair of lovers, Arlanges and Cleofile, and in their case the resemblance is explicitly linked to the androgyne image when Arlanges exclaims "Because [we are] so similar in body and soul, they join in a perfect union, almost of two in one, that the ancients called homfenin." (68) Agesilan not only looks exactly like Diane but sounds like her: his transvestism is a musical impersonation as well, for he must sing convincingly as a woman. When Sidonie first hears him, she immediately likens the performance to her daughter's, and claims that Daraide was destined to serve Diane, "to whom your exclusive service is due more than to anyone else, given the excellence in music you will find in her, answering your own." (69) In fact Agesilan and Arlanges sing only as Daraide and Garaye, never as men, so that their musicianship is an essential component of their androgynous identities, confirming music's power to transcend, or even efface, difference. (70) Agesilan and Diane, Arlanges and Cleofile are set up as ambiguously gendered pairs whose mutual desire is a manifestation of the natural principle of sympathy, the yearning of like for like; the visual and sonic correspondences between them construct avenues through which eros may invisibly course to create sympathetic effects. Gohory does not make an explicit comparison to sounding lutes as he had done in his translation of Amadis book 10, but the analogy with sympathetic vibration seems clear. (71)



Friday, February 19, 2010

Classical Music - Country Style

Around the turn of the 20th century especially, a marvelous example of synchronicity occurred. Composers and musicians from various countries (primarily in Europe) returned to their roots, one might say. Without the mixed blessings of multi-media, instant communication or any type of recording devices, these (mostly) male musicians listened to various folk melodies and then transcribed them on paper as best they could. What happened afterwards was nothing short of miraculous, for they then used these folk melodies in new orchestral and chamber works.

Of course, using native melodies was not an especially new thing - after all, Carl Maria von Weber is credited with having begun the nationalistic opera movement with his Der Freischütz in 1821. Based on a German legend, it also utilizes German folktunes, and still remains in the repertoire, although most of his other works have fallen out.

Felix Mendelssohn absorbed both melodies and rhythms of Italy and Scotland for two of his symphonies, obligingly named for the countries represented. Scottish is No. 3 in a minor, Op. 56 from 1842, while the Italian is No. 4 in A major, Op. 90 from 1846.

Tchaikovsky also used Italian folk tunes in his Capriccio Italien, Op. 45, written in 1880. There is a tender song for strings and a jaunty one for oboe before the final whirling tarantella. An earlier inspiration was the Little Russian melody, The Crane used in his Symphony No. 1 in g minor, Op. 13 - Winter Dreams, written in 1866, and revised in 1874.

Bela Bartók was a Hungarian, born in 1881, who made an early debut as composer at age nine, and piano soloist a year later. He was fairly well established in his chosen field, when in 1905 he began making trips to remote regions of Hungary. Here he collected folksongs and dances which were mostly unknown to the outer world. After editing, they were published, but then he decided to incorporate these native songs into his music. The result was a major change in his style - from romantic to avant-garde albeit of a somewhat rustic nature, in some of his work. He was not afraid of dissonance or harshness if required. One notable example of his use of folk music is his Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste from 1936. The last movement is an energetic and vigorous peasant dance.




A lost generation of pianists?

Nine years into the twenty first century, we can very easily forget the great pianists of the past. There is an unfortunate attitude prevailing in some quarters that only living performers deserve our attention and, therefore, some pianists of a previous generation, and some who are still working today may be in danger of being forgotten at some time in the future. Many fine pianists who have died, even in comparatively recent years, are ignored or forgotten despite some of their recordings being available.

It is not possible to mention all the pianists of yesteryear that have graced the concert platforms in England, but this article is written to remind us of some of the outstanding pianists who may be in danger of being forgotten. For example, David Parkhouse was an outstanding pianist, but there are apparently no solo recordings of his available and many music lovers of today do not even know about him.

However, I have included in this article many fine pianists who are still alive and delighting audiences and some who have recordings available. It is hard to believe that some of these may be forgotten.

I have not put the pianists in any order for many reasons including the wish to avoid any suggestion of superiority and in order to be spontaneous. However, my study of these pianists and the enjoyment of their performances has, of course, lead to my assessments. And, of course, this article is not satisfactory since I am only setting out the briefest biographies but, later , I may choose to write extended articles about some of these pianists, or hope that others might do so.

As a starting point, Colin Horsley is one such pianist of yesteryear. He was born in Wanganui, New Zealand in 1920.

Through the Associated Board, he won a scholarship to study in England arriving in London in 1936 and studied at the Royal College of Music (RCM).

His grandfather, who was born in 1854, had left the Isle of Man in 1880 for Auckland in New Zealand in which country Colin's father was born in 1885.

Colin Horsley studied with Herbert Fryer and was a student in the next generation after Cyril Smith (1909-1974) who, sadly, is only remembered for the loss of the use of a hand when he had a stroke in the USSR in 1956.

Another pianist he met was Kendall Taylor, who was born in Sheffield in 1905. Horsley then studied with Angus Morrison (1902-1989). Later, he was to have six lessons with Tobias Matthay when Matthay was well into his eighties which he describes as a revelation. Colin Horsley was also helped by Irene Scharrer.

Colin Horsley made his London debut in 1943 at a Promenade Concert as one of three soloists in Bach's Concerto for three pianos. In those days students from RCM and RAM alternated yearly to be soloists and this was the first year that the Promenade Concerts were held at the Albert Hall. Horsley's solo debut was in Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto no. 3. He knew Medtner and rates the Sonata in G minor very highly and premiered the Piano Quintet because the composer was ill with heart trouble and was unable to perform it himself. After Medtner's death his widow asked Horsley to perform the Piano Concerto no. 3 at a Memorial Concert at the Royal Festival Hall under Anatole Fistoulari.

In 1946 Horsley premiered the scintillating Piano Concerto no 1, Op 5 by Humphrey Searle, a work of great technical difficulty which indicates the pianist's ability. Horsley found Searle a splendid character , a modest and most likeable man. Horsley also worked with Max Rostal performing all the Beethoven violin sonata with him. Rostal (1905-1991) was Austrian and settled in London in 1934 and was a magnificent teacher as well as a performer, and he introduced us to many fine contemporary works. Horsley also worked with the legendary Dennis Brain (1921-1957) in such works as the horn trios of Brahms and Lennox Berkeley and recorded much of Berkeley's solo piano music. Although Vaughan Williams's piano concerto is not pianistic, he has played it and admires such works as The Lark Ascending and Flos Campi. Horsley was awarded the OBE in 1963 and taught at the Royal Manchester College of Music from 1964 to 1980 and at RCM from 1955 to 1990.

Herbert Fryer was born in London in 1877 and was a pupil of Oscar Beringer (1844-1922) at the Royal Academy of Music (RAM). Beringer gave the British premiere of Brahms's Piano Concerto no. 2. Fryer won a scholarship to RCM and spent time with Busoni at Weimar. Fryer was professor of piano at RAM (1905-1914) and, thereafter, went to New York where he was professor of piano for the duration of World War I, before taking up a similar post at RCM. His students included Philip Challis, Constant Lambert, who dedicated his Rio Grande to him, George Malcolm, Cyril Smith, Kendall Taylor and Colin Horsley. Fryer died in 1975.

Another of his many pupils was Lance Dossor who was born in Weston super Mare in 1916. After studying at RCM he won prizes at the Liszt competition and the Warsaw Competition both in 1937, which was also the year that he made his London debut. He went to live in Australia in 1953 and was professor of piano in Adelaide. Arthur Benjamin dedicated his Siliciana of 1936 to Dossor.

I am grateful to Eileen Broster for her assessment of Cyril Smith. She has said that Cyril Smith was a Rachmaninov specialist (he was also magnificent in Brahms), a very kind man and thorough as a teacher. He was a generous man and often a lesson with him would take half a day or a whole day with food provided as well. He did not believe in short cuts or making things simpler. You played what was written.

Irene Scharrer was born in London in 1885 and made her debut in a Promenade Concert in 1900. She pestered Henry Wood and almost camped on his doorstep until he agreed to hear her play. She studied at RAM with Tobias Matthay and sometimes appeared with Myra Hess as a piano duo but she had a wide solo repertoire specialising in Chopin and Schumann. She has been credited with the rescuing from possible oblivion the famous Scherzo from Litolff's Symphony Concertante no. 4.

Myra Hess (1890-1965) will be remembered for giving many wartime concerts at London's National Gallery and sustaining morale. There are those who say that her Beethoven's Fourth Concerto was painfully slow and her finale of the Schumann concerto was also atrociously slow , and her recording testifies to this. However, Colin Kingsley has said that , in her early days, Hess played contemporary music of its time including D'Indy's Sonata which was surprising as D'Indy, like Chopin, was outrageously anti-Semitic and Hess was Jewish. It is also said that her early recording of the Schumann concerto with Walter Goehr was not pedestrian. In her early days she was associated with the great works such as Liszt's First Concerto and Brahms's Second Concerto. Hess was much revered and people still talk with enthusiasm of her playing of the Brahms' F minor sonata.

It is true that her playing during the Second World War lessened her attitude to music and by her making it acceptable to people, who had no previous experience of classical music, she 'adjusted' it to make it more palatable.

Bax referred to Scharrer, Hess and Cohen as the three giggling girls.

Esther Fisher (1900-1992) came from Christchurch, New Zealand. Her father was a New Zealand MP and a tennis champion. Her first professional teacher was Alfred Bunz who studied with Leschetizky in Vienna from 1903-1906. Esther once played for Busoni as a girl. She made her London debut in 1923 having from 1920, studied in Paris with Isidore Philipp (1863-1958). She was a close friend of Cyril Scott, who was into both spiritualism and the occult, and often played piano duos with him, but he was not a good pianist although, surprisingly, he was a piano teacher. His compositions leave much to be desired and he claimed that they were dictated by the spirit of the Great Master in Tibet. Scott also wrote poetry, books on philosophical and medical matters and yet he was not a doctor or had any experience in the medical profession. As for Fisher, she married a baronet in the early 1950s and became Lady Barran, but her husband died soon afterwards. She does not seem to have left any recordings that are now available, but those who heard her play speak well of her performances. She was a piano professor at RCM.

No praise is too high for Kendall Taylor who was professor of piano for over fifty years at RCM from 1929. His made his debut withMozart's lovely D minor concerto K 466 when he was twelve. He made twenty six appearances at the Proms sometimes with Barbirolli. In fact it was said that he was the only soloist who persevered with this inadequate conductor. Taylor had an amazing affinity withBeethoven. He loved the countryside and was a Christian and, indeed, a truly admirable man and the best piano teacher I have encountered. He died on 5 December 1999 aged 94.

One must speak about the brilliance of the pianist Colin Kingsley, not only as a soloist but as a superlative accompanist, chamber player and lecturer. Kingsley was born in London in 1925 and largely taught himself before studying at Cambridge University for his BMus and with Arthur Alexander at RCM. In 1952 he studied with Marcel Ciampi of the Paris Conservatoire and regards him as the most lucid exponent of movement and muscular control . Kingsley's career was also encouraged by his enthusiasm for John Ireland all of whose works he has played, and, after this, Kingsley was fascinated by Peter Racine Fricker's work premiering his Anniversary at Cheltenham in 1978. He has played most of Fricker's piano music including some of his very early pieces. As Fricker had an interest in the piano works of Fauré, Kingsley took this composer up as well. He performed Hindemith and prefers his first sonata. He has also playedMaxwell Davies's Op 2 and, in the 1960s, took up the works of John White of which he still speaks with unabated enthusiasm. Kingsley has played most of the concertos in the classical repertoire and, while he has loved Brahms's Piano Concerto no 2 since he was fifteen, he has only played it once explaining that he has the wrong type of hands for it. He has toured the world introducing audiences to some splendid contemporary works.

He taught at RCM and at Edinburgh University at the behest of Sydney Newman, and among Kingsley's pupils are Donnald Runnicles, now known primarily as a conductor, and Anthony Peebles.

We recall the pioneering work of Kyla Greenbaum, born in Brighton in 1922, who gave the British premieres of Schoenberg's amazing Piano Concerto in 1945 and Prokofiev's Piano Concerto no. 2 in 1955.

John Clegg was born in London in 1928. He began to seriously study the piano with a lady in a village near Bletchley where he was evacuated in 1939-40. This teacher encouraged him to listen to music. On his return to London, he studied with Herbert Fryer until Fryer's death, often at his country house in Effingham. Clegg won a scholarship to Jesus College, Cambridge, to study mathematics (1946-1949) and, after a year in National Service, he made his London debut playing French music of which he is particularly keen. His concerto debut was in Rachmaninov's First Concerto, which was warmly received Many of his performances were overseas the tours often facilitated by the British Council including about 20 tours to South Africa. He taught at the Watford School of Music and, from 1961 at the University of Aberstwyth teaching maths and music. These were also his disciplines at the University of Lancaster from 1965 although, in his last ten years there , he was pianist in residence. He performed for the BBC many times specialising in Medtner who, along with Reger, were composers championed by Robert Layton and Robert Simpson, and, with the conductor Constantin Silvestri, John Clegg performed the amazing Reger concerto three times.

A pianist who will probably be remembered for his teaching and famous pupils is Benjamin Kaplan who was born in London in 1929. His early musical experience was due to his father Alf Kaplan being in Oscar Rabin's dance band at the Hammersmith Palais. Benjamin Kaplan was evacuated when he was nine and, after the war, was an external student at the Guildhall School with Frank Griggs. A great influence on Kaplan's life was the violinist Leonard Freidmann with whom he travelled in Europe giving recitals. Kaplan was in the Army Education Corps and later studied for five years with Franz Reizenstein and, thereafter had five years with Louis Kentner. In 1954 he made his Wigmore Hall debut recital. He was keen on the music of John Ireland and Bax, particulalry the F sharp minor sonata, and he premiered Humphrey Searle's Concertante for piano, percussion and string orchestra. Kaplan came second in the Liszt Competition in 1961 and gave recitals for the BBC between 1960-1978 before devoting his time to teaching in England, New York and Japan and among his pupils are Daniel Blumenthal and the brilliant Noriko Ogawa, who was born in 1962.

He also accompanied Britain's finest contralto, Sybil Michelow, in some of Frank Merrick's Esperanto songs.

Peter Katin was born in 1930 and is not only a pianist of the very highest rank but it is true to say that his playing is always beautiful. He was born in England but is a Canadian citizen. His London debut was in 1948. His career took off when he played Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto no 3 at a Promenade Concert in 1953. It was such an amazing performance that people still talk about it today. His recording of the Rachmaninov preludes cannot be bettered. In his early days, he played all the war horses such as the Tchaikovsky and, for decades, his was the only recording of Tchaikovsky's Concert Fantasy. His Liszt was remarkable causing a fellow pianist to write, 'Katin performs feats of prestigious prestidigitation.' Later, Katin was to delight with his Mozart, Haydn and his Beethoven. He has also specialised in Schubert and Chopin. He recorded the William Mathias Piano Concerto no. 3 and Malcolm Lipkin wrote a sonata for him. Katin was professor of piano at RAM from 1956 to 1969 and at the University of Western Ontario from 1978-1984. He is in danger of being forgotten. The BBC has not given him a recital or concert for many years, and yet he is undoubtedly one the finest pianists of all.

Another stunning pianist in danger of being forgotten is Liza Fuchsova who was born in Brno in 1913 and who studied at Brno and at the Prague Conservatory and taught there after graduating, and, later, settled in the UK in 1939 as a refugee from the Nazis. She was a truly sensational pianist and a charming, smart and elegant woman. Karol Janovicky wrote his Variations on a theme of Brigadier H Smith and remarks on how well she performed the work. She premiered Martinů's Concertino H 269 with amazing clarity and her reliable dependable accuracy. Those who knew her said that she was and will remain the best Janáček pianist of all, and she was connected with the Society of the Promotion of New Music. Humphrey Searle wrote the fiendishly difficult Toccata from his Op 14 for her. She was superb in chamber music and the pianist for the Dumka Trio and an excellent teacher. She died in London in 1977.

(See my separate article about Liza Fuchsova.)

Frank Merrick was born in Bristol in 1886. He made his London debut in 1903. He won the Diploma of Honour at the Rubinsteincompetition in St. Petersburg in 1910. He was professor of piano at the Royal Manchester College of Music (1911-1929) and on the staff at RCM from 1929-1956 and at Trinity College of Music from 1956-1975. He completed Schubert's Unfinished Symphony although one wonders why. He revived interest in the music of John Field. It is reported that Merrick did not like the music of Rachmaninov. Merrick composed much music including two very attractive piano concertos (1905 and 1936) and a Concerto in A minor for two pianos, a piano trio, a piano quartet, a symphony in D minor, songs and psalm settings. Some songs are in Esperanto, which he learned while he was in prison as a conscientious objector in World War I. He was also a male suffragette. There are sonatas for violin , viola and cello respectively, and a piano sonata in A minor dating from 1902 which I am currently deciphering for possible publication. There appears to be three other piano sonatas, one in E flat of 1936 , another in B and "no. 2" in E minor. He recorded his sonatas in E flat and E minor and two movements form the sonata in B. As a performer, he specialised in the music of Bax, Ireland and Rawsthorne and was made a CBE in 1976. Among his very many pupils were two future directors of RCM the ultra fussy and infuriating David Willcocks (1974-1984) and M Gough Matthews (1984-93). Frank Merrick died in 1981.

Eileen Broster has told me that Frank Merrick was a Father Christmas figure, gentle, cultured and kindness itself and, when he was a boy , he lived with his teacher Theodor Leschetizky, as did many other of his students.

There were other notable piano professors such as Arthur Alexander and Harold Craxton. Craxton was born in London in 1885, married in 1915 and had six children of whom Janet was the most brilliant oboist of her generation. He taught at the Matthay Piano School (1914-1940) and also at RAM (1919-1961). Not only was his a fine pianist but a truly superb accompanist working with Nellie Melba, Clara Butt, John McCormack and Lionel Tertis. With Tovey, he edited the Beethoven sonatas and Chopin works for the Associated Board. He was a well-loved and splendid teacher, a composer and his songs need to be revived. He died in 1971.

Arthur Alexander was born in Dunedin, New Zealand in 1891 and studied at RAM. He won the McFarren Prize and the Chappell Gold Medal and then taught at the Matthay School. He was professor of piano at RCM from 1920 and gave the premiere of Bax's Piano Sonata no. 2. In 1921 he married Freda Swain and among his other pupils were Ruth Gipps, Elizabeth Maconchy and Helen Perkin, a very fine pianist who specialised in contemporary works.

Another pianist of note was David Parkhouse and, sadly, one wonders how many will remember him. He was born in Teignmouth, Devon in 1930, studied at RCM with Herbert Fryer and Lance Dossor, won the Chappell Medal in 1948 and married the cellist Eileen Croxford. He served in the RAF and won many more prizes for his musical prowess. As a soloist he gave performances of profound commitment and moving power. He was an outstanding pianist and somewhat revered. He devoted most of his life to being the pianist in the Music Group of London. He died in 1989.

Lamar Crowson also studied at RCM and with Arthur Benjamin. Fricker dedicated his Twelve Studies to him and among Crowson's pupils are Howard Shelley and the late lamented Clifford Benson.

John Lamar Crowson was born in Tampa, Florida in 1926 and attended Reed College (1943-1948) in Portland, Oregon studying art, literature and history. At the invitation of Arthur Benjamin, he came to London in 1948 and Benjamin dedicated his Etudes Improvisees to him. Later, Crowson became a member of staff at RCM. In the 1950s he won many prizes and established himself as a concert pianist performing with Boult, Monteux, Colin Davis and Pierre Boulez. Crowson was the pianist with the Melos Ensemble for many years and Brendel said that he was one of the finest chamber music pianists of the day. In 1963 Crowson moved to Cape Town as an examiner for the Associated Board and lectured at the South African College of Music and at the University of Cape Town. He was married three times and had two sons from his first marriage. He died in August 1998.

James Gibb is an exceptional performer, born in Monkseaton, Northumbria in 1918 and studied both in Edinburgh and London. He studied privately with Mabel Lander, a pupil of Leschetizky, before and after the war, in which he served with the Royal Artillery in Germany . He made his London debut in 1949 at a Promenade Concert playing Dohnanyi's Variations on a Nursery Song. Having met Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt during the war, he was invited by this conductor to play concertos in Hamburg and in Dublin when Schmidt-Isserstedt conducted the RTE Orchestra. Gibb has performed with the top orchestras and conductors and a performance of Beethoven's Piano Concerto no 3 with Giulini still lives in the minds of those that heard it. Gibb was contemporary with Geraldine and Mary Peppin the famous piano duo, and, with another fine pianist, Edith Vogel at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama , with whom he sometimes performed piano duo works. He gave the British premiere of Balakirev's Piano Concerto no 2, Rawsthorne's Sonatina at the Wigmore Hall and Bernard Stevens wrote his Five Inventions for him. Gibb, Stevens and Alan Bush shared the same political views.

It is a rare thing to say today but, in days gone by the BBC served him and many other pianists well.

It was in Czernowitz in 1912 that the Austro-Hungarian pianist, Edith Vogel, was born. She made her debut in Vienna at the age of ten. When she settled in the UK, she was also well served by the BBC. She specialised in Schubert and Beethoven. Whilst Schubert's music can be over long and tedious, Vogel's Beethoven was masterly.

It was Humphrey Searle who recommended the study and performance of the works of Alkan way back in the 1930s and he was responsible for introducing the world to Alkan's music. One of the first and most brilliant exponents of this music was Ronald Smith who was a close friend of Searle. Smith gave the British premieres of many of Alkan's works and lectured on the composer. He was a pianist of colossal energy and possessed that rare quality of stamina. He also specialised in the romantic concertos of the 19th century having about forty in his repertoire and his performances of the Chopin etudes were masterly. Despite failing eyesight, his last recital, which was in Brighton, was stunning, but he died a few days later on 27 May 2004.

He was born on 3 January 1922 and studied at RAM. He also studied in Paris with Marguerite Long and achieved a BMus from Durham University. He taught for forty years at the King's School in Canterbury. He wrote a book on Alkan and composed a Violin Concerto.

We have already referred to Eileen Broster, who has given some valuable insights into her teachers, but it must be remembered that she is a fine pianist in her own right. She was born in 1935 and was a pupil at RCM studying with Frank Merrick and Cyril Smith. Later, she taught at RCM. She had a wide repertoire and gave the first broadcast performance of Castelnuovo-Tedesco's Sonatina Zoologique and the lovely Piano Concerto by Ruth Gipps. She was always in demand with the BBC, broadcasting almost every week and was held in high esteem by other pianists and orchestras. Cyril Smith and Ruth Gipps both said that her performance of Rachmaninov's PaganiniRhapsosdy was the best they had ever heard and, on one occasion, the Daily Telegraph reported from a Liszt festival in the 1960s thatJohn Ogdon would have his work cut out to beat her glittering performance. There was a time when she had to learn Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto no. 2 in a week and, apart from meals, would sit at the piano from 8 am to midnight. She speaks of the fine conductors that she worked with such as, Boult, Groves, Bryden Thomson and especially Hugo Rignold who was the man who made the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra into a fine ensemble.

Another pianist born in 1935 was Ian Lake whose story is tragic. He was born in Quorn in Leicestershire to working class parents. He was a precocious child and his mother worked as a chambermaid to finance his education. He won a scholarship to Trent College. While on national service he played the clarinet and viola in an Army band. He studied at RCM with the great Kendall Taylor and made his London debut at the Royal Festival Hall in 1961 playing Rachmaninov's Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini. He had a teaching post at RCM for about thirty years until 1995. He was a deeply sensitive man but, sadly, convicted of sexual offences in 1995 and was later smitten with cancer. He died on 12 August 2004, but will people remember his very fine playing, as I certainly do?

Both Eileen Broster and Ian Lake would have known Neville Bower who was a very fine pianist as his recording of Liszt's Piano Concerto no. 1 testifies. He was also a conductor who, at one time, worked with Antal Dorati, but he concentrated on composition and left many notable compositions.

Another tragic pianist was the extremely talented Terrence Judd, who was born in London in 1957 and won the National Junior Piano Competition in 1967. He won first prize in the British Liszt Competition on 1976 and fourth place in the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1978. His performances of Liszt, Tchaikovsky and Balakirev's Islamey were amazing. He committed suicide at Beachey Head in 1979.

Dame Moura Lympany was also a very fine pianist who was born in Saltash in 1916 and made her public debut in 1929. She gave the British premiere of Khachaturian's Piano Concerto. She was a well-loved pianist excelling in the romantic repertoire. She died in Menton, France in 2005, where she had made her home.

The other two female pianists who deservedly enjoyed popularity were, firstly, Nina Milkina, born in Moscow in 1919 (she shared her birthday with Mozart). She studied with Leon Conus and Glazunov, who referred to her as his granddaughter. She once played forRachmaninov. She left Russia in 1926 and lived in Paris before coming to London in the 1930s and studying with Harold Craxton. She was described as 'a very beautiful woman who played Mozart beautifully.' She died on 22 November 2006.

The other pianist is Katharina Wolpe, who was born in Vienna and recorded all the piano works by Schoenberg and works by her father Stephan Wolpe (1902-1972). Elizabeth Lutyens wrote three works for her and Iain Hamilton wrote his Piano Concerto no. 2 for her, and how well she played it. But her Mozart and Beethoven, particularly Opus 111, were both eloquent and superb. She remains a wise person and identifies a good pianist as one who accurately realises what the composer wrote.

One of the most outstanding exponents of Beethoven was Denis Matthews, who was born in Coventry in 1919 and studied with Harold Craxton at RAM. He made his successful debut in 1939 and served in the RAF but, when available, assisted Myra Hess in her London lunchtime concerts during the war. In 1971 Matthews was appointed professor of piano at Newcastle University. Not only was he was very fine pianist but also a brilliant lecturer and writer. He wrote an introduction to the music of Michael Tippett. Among his pupils are Rhondda Gillespe, John Ogdon and Alan Schiller.

Another student of Craxton was John Bingham, who was born in Sheffield in 1942 and was a child prodigy, giving his first recital at the age of nine and his first broadcast at the age of thirteen. He went to RAM and spent two years in Neuchaus. He won the BusoniCompetition and made his adult London debut in 1967. He won a prize at a BBC Music Competition in 1971 and has taught at Trinity College of Music in London. Among his pupils is Ronald Brautigam.

Harriet Cohen (1895-1967) was, sometimes, a maligned pianist and maybe for her life style (she was a notorious name-dropper). Piano concertos by Vaughan Williams and Fricker were both dedicated to her and first performed by her. Sadly, she is remembered for being the mistress of Sir Arnold Bax. When Harriet Cohen eventually found out about the death of Bax's wife on 23 September 1947 (she found out about this in May 1948) she expected and hoped for a proposal of marriage and to become Lady Bax. When this did not happen, she cut her wrist on a wine glass, and apparently severed an artery, although it was said that this was an accident and that she had dropped a tray of glasses and cut herself in picking up the fragments. Such a serious injury was hardly the result of an accident. As a penance, Bax wrote the Concertante for piano, left hand, and piano for her in 1949. She also discovered that Bax had a second mistress, Mary Gleaves, with whom he had been associated for twenty years. However, there are good reports of some of Cohen's performances before the war including that of Falla's Fantasia Betica. Cohen always made a gorgeous sound with her playing and one recalls her exemplary recording with William Primrose of the Bax Viola Sonata.

Clifford Curzon (1907-1982) was a very fine pianist pianist, but sometimes it was difficult to watch him with his eccentric moves and histrionics, rather like Lang Lang of today. Curzon was an exceptionally kind man adopting the two sons of the great soprano Maria Cebotari, who died in 1949. He also gave budding pianist free lessons. His generosity and kindness knew no bounds. Curzon was a fine player of Beethoven and Mozart but it must not be forgotten that he performed many British works by such composers as Lennox Berkeley and the totally ignored William Wordsworth, whose music has a spirituality second to none. All his life Curzon was pursuing perfection.

Another pianist with eccentric moves at the piano was the German born Peter Wallfisch, born in 1924 in Breslau, who settled in England becoming a professor of piano at RCM. He won the Bartók Prize in 1948 and enjoyed many worldwide tours. He died in 1993.

John Ogdon (1937-1989) was a virtuoso pianist with an amazing memory, versatility and a command of the piano. He won joint first prize with Ashkenazy at the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition in 1962, and between 1976-1980 taught at the Indiana University School of Music in Bloomington. He was a brilliant player of Liszt, Busoni and Alkan and had a wide repertoire of concertos. He was certainly gifted, and composed over two hundred compositions, including four operas, a Stabat Mater, cantatas, chamber music including a string quartet, about 16 piano sonatas, sonatas for unaccompanied violin, cello and flute respectively and innumerable works for piano, including variations, pieces written in the style of others and about fifty transcriptions. There are two piano concertos and an unfinished symphony. One cannot imagine Ogdon ever being forgotten.

There are some wonderful true stories about Ogdon. He once played a concerto with Barbirolli conducting, whose conducting was always erratic and unreliable. He was not a good conductor. Ogdon had to watch the conductor all the time and never once looked at his hands, which tells us two things: that the conductor was poor and that Ogdon was truly superb. It was such a pity that he was blighted by mental illness, and there were unkind people who treated him badly because of his affliction.

As for Barbirolli, he once told Solomon how to play a cadenza!

However, for all his brilliance, there are some who regard Ogdon's playing as clinical, mechanical and cold.

A pianist that was absolutely sensational and is almost forgotten was Susan Bradshaw, who was born into an army family in Monmouth on 8 September 1931 and died in London on 30 January 2005. She was a specialist in contemporary music, much of which is the most difficult music to play, and yet she was slight, demure and socially awkward. She studied at RAM with Craxton and composition with Matyas Seiber and Howard Ferguson. On a French scholarship grant, she studied with Boulez in Paris. She supported composers setting out on their respective careers such as Giles Swayne, Robert Saxton and Brian Elias. She championed Soviet composers such as Schnittke, Smirnov, Firsova and the hugely talented Edison Denisov. She had a phenomenal technique. She never married or had children and positively hated pomposity. Her dedication to contemporary music brought about that shallow and foolish remark made by many people who state that something is not music unless it has a tune.

Valerie Tryon was born in Portsmouth in 1934 and broadcast on the BBC before she reached the age of 12 and appeared as a teenager on many concert platforms. She was one of the youngest pupils to be admitted to RAM where she received the highest awards. She also studied with Jacques Fevrier in Paris. She taught at McMasters University in Hamilton, Canada for many years and she is rightly acclaimed for her performances of Liszt. She has been dubbed the finest female interpreter of Liszt. But her repertoire extends from Bach to Alun Hoddinott and John McCabe and she loves the sonatas of Scarlatti. She is excellent in the romantic repertoire as well and has performed duo works with Campoli (violin) and George Isaac (cello).

The female pianist who, like Liza Fuchova, deserves the most admiration is Margaret Kitchin, a formidable performer who premiered many new works. She was born in 1913 and studied at the Lusanne Conservatoire before moving to London studying at RAM. She had a remarkable capacity for learning the most difficult works and Alexander Goehr wrote his Piano Sonata, Op 2, for her in 1953. In 1954 she revived Alan Bush's Piano Concerto. Tippett wrote his Sonata no. 2 for her. I recall her British premiere of the Roger Sessions's Piano Concerto in 1956 when the audience booed, showing how ignorant and fickle the listening public can be. If I were to boo a public performance of the Elgar Cello Concerto there would be an outcry, and yet a great and formidably difficult piano concerto can be booed. To play anything by Sessions is to take on a Herculean task. She championed Iain Hamilton, William Worsdworth and Humphrey Searleplaying the most difficult works in the repertoire with a brilliance that was spell-binding, and some fellow pianists who dismissed her, did so because of their jealous admiration of her. A truly great pianist, she died in June 2008.

(See my separate article about Margaret Kitchin.)

These are only thumb nail sketches and this is not a work of literary skill. There are many other pianists that I could have mentioned, but there is sufficient information here to encourage music lovers to pursue and discover these eminent pianists.

WARNING
Copyright © David C.F. Wright 2009. This article, or any part of it, however small, must not be copied, downloaded, stored in any mechanical or retrieval system or altered or used under anyone else's name without the prior written permission of the author. Failure to comple is illegal being theft and in breach of International Copyright law and will render any offender liable to action at law. However, the author may willingly grant permission on the proper written application.

RECORDINGS

At the time of writing this article, I understand the following reordings are available

  • Horsley: Piano works by Lennox Berkeley
  • Smith Cyril: Arnold Concerto for three hands, Dohnanyi Nursery Variations, Rachmaniniov Concerto 3, G minor Prelude, DelibesIntermezzo
  • Scharrer: Scarlatti, Chopin (Etudes and Scherzi), Litolff Scherzo
  • Hess: Bach, Haydn, Schumann, Beethoven Concerto 4, Mozart Concertos 9,14, 21, 23. Beethoven Concerto 4, Concertos by Griegand Schumann, Brahms 2
  • Kingsley: Sonatas by John White
  • Kitchin: Tippett, Wordsworth, etc.
  • Greenbaum: Rio Grande (Constant Lambert)
  • Katin: Chopin Mazurkas, Sonata 3, Ballade 4 etc., Finzi Eglogue, Walton Sinfonia Concertante, Mathias Concerto 3, SchubertImpromptus, Scarlatti, Mozart complete sonatas
  • Smith Ronald: Alkan, Bach Chaconne, Chopin Etudes, Beethoven/Liszt Symphony 7, Schubert Wanderer Fantasy and Sonata 14,Beethoven Sonatas 21,23 and 32
  • Lympany: Rachmaninov preludes, Chopin Waltzes and Nocturnes, Mendlessohn 1, Falla Nights in the Gardens of Spain, LitolffScherzo, Liszt 2, Poulenc, Balakirev, Khachaturyian, Dohnanyi, Mendelssohn
  • Matthews: Mozart 23, Beethoven Sonata Op 109, Britten and Rubbra Concerti
  • Bingham: Chopin Etudes, Beethoven 4 and 5, Schubert<.a>/Liszt Lieder, Chopin Sonata etc.
  • Cohen: Bach '48', book 1
  • Curzon: Brahms 1 and 2, Delius Concerto, Mozart 20, 23, 24, 26, 27, Beethoven 4 and 5, Schubert and Schumann
  • Wallfisch: Phantasm (Frank Bridge)
  • Ogdon: Rachmaninov 2 and Paganini Rhapsody, Fauré Ballade, Litolff Scherzo, Tchaikovsky 1, Bartók 1, Glazunov 1, Shostakovich 2,Scott 1 and 2, Brahms 2, Liszt 1 and 2, Mendelssohn 1 and 2, Beethoven 5, Franck Symphonic Variations, Liszt Fantasia and Sonata,Busoni Concerto, Sorabji, Schubert D958, Beethoven 5, Rachmaninov Etudes Tableaux, own works
  • Tryon Scarlatti, Ravel, Liszt, Chopin, Mendelssohn, Hoddinott
  • Clegg Mathias, Ferguson, Leighton, Self, Poulenc, complete solo piano works of Rawsthorne, etc.
  • Judd: Tschaikovsky, Liszt, Balakirev