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Edward Elgar and His World

Page 27

by Adams, Byron


  C. Sanford Terry

  November 12, 1910.

  1. The Spanish friend was M. Antonio de Navarro, whose wife was the well-known American actress Mary Anderson. The Elgars enjoyed the Navarros’ lavish hospitality at Court Farm, Broadway, Worcestershire, on a number of occasions.

  2. The Naiades concert overture is by the noted British composer William Sterndale Bennett (1816–75).

  Letter from Charles Sanford Terry to Sir John Marnoch, 1919

  Westerton of Pitfodels

  By Aberdeen

  Sunday [n.d.]

  My dear Marnoch,

  This is to introduce a volume which has been among my treasures and for that very reason I want to count among yours henceforth. It is the final proof of the Full Score of Elgar’s Violin Concerto. Some of the corrections obviously are the proof reader’s. The rest are Elgar’s holograph. He gave the score to me because, as you will see when you read the typed memorandum bound up with the score, I had been so closely connected with the completion and production of the work. Certain letters of his relating to the Concerto are included, in particular one which definitively dates its completion.

  As it stands the volume is a real historical document: the information it contains has never been published and is unknown outside a narrow circle, many of whom already have forgotten much of it, no doubt! Some day it will have to be recorded.

  There accompanyies [sic] the Score three little water colours of local scenes by a local artist. They bring with them the deep and heartfelt gratitude of us both which strives to express itself in this imperfect form. I can hardly believe that it is only one week tomorrow since we were in your house. But what a deep gulf of relief divides the dates!

  Yours ever gratefully,

  C. Sanford Terry

  I enclose a Hymn written for Maisie Smith’s1 wedding.

  1. Eldest daughter of the Reverend Charles Drew in June 1919. Terry dabbled Professor Sir George Adam Smith, principal in composition from time to time, and besides of Aberdeen University, a close friend of this hymn, his works include published songs Terry’s. She married American army officer and anthems, and a comic opera.

  Letter from Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 5 August 1910

  Aug 5 1910

  Plas Gwyn

  Hereford

  My dear Terry,

  It was good of you to send that cheery wire; we, deleerious devils, were hard at it & we wanted you. This moment I have put the last note to the last movement in the full score & have lit a pipe! Would you were here to join in. We shall play through the concerto at Gloucester & we hope to have an uproarious time: the concerto is (aiblins!) a Dunter. I think you will like it & I only hope something will bring you to London for the 10th Novr. Couldn’t you be turned on to represent the University at the Lord Mayor’s Show the day before—or something of that sort? Shall I write to the Senate to suggest this [?]

  The weather has been awful with one or two glorious days & we hope for a fine autumn: turn up in good time at Gloucester. [Added in pencil] Saturday 3 Sept. The Hostel, College Green, quite by noon.1

  Mrs Worthington is here till tomorrow, & the family & she & I send all messages to Mrs Terry & to you. I send this to Cults2 but I expect you are leaving or already left. Good luck & love to you.

  Yours ever,

  E. E.

  1. Terry was to be a member of the Elgars’ Three Choirs Festival house party at the Cookery School, Gloucester.

  2. The Aberdeen suburb where Terry lived.

  Postcard from Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 16 October 1910

  Athenaeum

  October 16, 1910

  So many thanks for your note from Leeds.1 Kreisler was here and plays the thing superbly now & last night I had a very pleasant 2 hours with Saffery2 & Legge3 at the Savile4—we wanted you.

  All good wishes,

  Yrs ever

  Ed: Elgar

  1. Terry had been at the Leeds Festival,

  2. Terry’s brother-in-law.

  3. Robin Legge, music critic of the Daily which the Elgars did not attend that year. Telegraph.

  4. Terry was a member of the Savile Club.

  Note from Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 19 October 1910

  Q.A.M.

  [Queen Anne’s Mansions]

  Oct 19 [1910]

  My dear CST,

  No time to write.

  Here’s a sweet-looking page for you & come the besmirched pages of the whilk1 were despatched yesterday to N[orth]. B[ritain].2

  Love

  Edward E

  Just off home.

  1. “Whilk” is Old English for “which.”

  2. This note accompanied the first-proof score of the Violin Concerto, posted to Terry in Aberdeen.

  Letter from Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 6 November 1910

  Nov 6, 1910

  Plas Gwyn

  Hereford

  My dear Terry,

  This is to say that all goes well in the parish. Jake1 has been missing for some three weeks but Carice & I found him on Friday on the road to our great joy—in which my wife does not join.

  The concerto goes well also but much tribulation over mistakes alas!

  We had a good time at Sunderland2 & were geared up by your telegram & the whole evening was merry.

  Now we start to Gotham3 tomorrow4 & will make it truly Cockaigne before the week is out—you will come round to the artists room, won’t you. All the folk will be there for a moment.

  Love to you

  from

  Edward E.

  I have made a new friend in the parish—a man who traps weasels: he knows little of concertos I find but the parish is backward.

  1. “Jake” remains unidentified but seems to have been a local “character” whom Elgar befriended. On 24 December 1910 he wrote to Mrs. Sidney Colvin (soon to be Lady Colvin) that he had had “seasonable dealings (tobacco &c have passed)” with “Jake the Lawyer.”

  2. At the request of his friend Nicholas Kilburn, Elgar conducted part of a concert given by the Sunderland Philharmonic Society and the Hallé Orchestra in Sunderland on November 1.

  3. Elgar refers to London with “Gotham” which was first used as a name for New York by the American author Washington Irving (1783–1859). The Oxford English Dictionary’s definition of Gotham—“the name of a village, proverbial for the folly of its inhabitants”—combined with the definition of Cockaigne—“an imaginary country, the abode of luxury and idleness”—provides the gist of Elgar’s opinion of London.

  4. Terry has written in the margin “to stay with Schuster for production of the Concerto.” Both Terry and Elgar were friends of Frank Leo Schuster (1852–1927), a wealthy patron of music.

  Letter from Lady Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 2 December 1910

  2 December 1910

  Ladies Imperial Club

  Dover Street

  Piccadilly

  Dear Prof. Terry,

  I feel we have been remiss in letting you hear, what curious English, I mean in not letting you hear, oh! it is all tied up in a knot. I have only time to tell you the 2nd performance was more wonderful even than the 1st.1 More authority and more easy mastery, it seemed over too soon like a beautiful dream—many lovely sounds in the Orch.—came out, we heard before—Tremendous enthusiasm.

  The 1st movement was so splendid. Much finer performance. Excuse such a blot. E. is looking rested & well again but this weather is so depressing, rain ceases not, & so dark. Impossible to go househunting.2 So many many thanks for all the Archives. We have given over Plas Gwyn to the Arkwrights.3 Trust he will have a splendid majority on the 5th at Hereford.

  Best remembrances to you both. So glad apples are good.

  Yrs. Very sincerely,

  C. A. Elgar.

  1. The second performance of the Violin Concerto took place on November 30, 1910. Terry was not able to attend.

  2. The Elgars were looking for a larger property in London, eventually moving into Se
vern House in London in January 1912.

  3. The Elgars were supporters of John Stanhope Arkwright, the young Conservative M.P for Hereford. In the forthcoming general election, for which Arkwright was campaigning, he held his seat, although the Liberals remained in power.

  Letter from Elgar to Charles Sanford Terry, 4 December 1910

  [London]

  Dec 4 1910

  My dear Terry,

  We wanted you badly last Wednesday to complete our joy. “It”1 went well & we had the de Navarros & the Legges & Schuster to supper at Queen Anne’s [Mansions] after—I borrowed a welkin & we made it ring till after 12. Since then—nothing—the weather has been awful. Saffery introduced a beaming smile, most welcome, into the artists’ room & then we had a gathering of all sorts—& you not there to defend me: perhaps it was as well for you might have prevented an impulsive lady from kissing me (!) SHE DID &—well—I didn’t mind so perhaps it’s as well Scotland had ye in grip.

  I have been better since that foggy evening2 & shall never forget the delight I had in having you there. I hope all goes well in Aberdeen & that your journey home was not too trying.

  They cut all the [illegible word, but possibly ‘sermon’ or ‘scree’3] out of my speech4 which was not bad but the room was too big for me to coruscate in—a week ago though & you will have forgotten.

  We lunched with the Legg[e]s today & had a nice time. Now rain in torrents.

  I fear these elections will do no good—yesterday was not much promising.

  Send me a line soon. Carice is still in the Lalley County—I forget quite where it is—oh! with Granny Gandy5—she goes on to the Kilburns6 I think.

  Alice joins me in love. She has had a most delightful time at tea today at the Safferys: whither I could not wend.

  My love to you and duty to Mrs Terry.

  Yrs ever

  Edward Elgar

  [Addendum written sideways on the front page of the above]: I have no news of the parish. Jake is a bad correspondent though I believe I am discussed at length in the Bunch of Carrots & in less measure at the Whalebone7, but no letters.

  1. “It” refers to the second performance of the Violin Concerto.

  2. A reference to the evening of the first performance of the Violin Concerto.

  3. Definition of scree in the Oxford English Dictionary: “a mass of loose detritus.” This may well describe what Elgar meant!

  4. Elgar addressed the Institute of Journalists in London on November 26.

  5. Mrs. Annie Gandy was a leading light at the Morecambe Music Festival; the Elgars met her through Canon Gorton. She was part of the Elgars’ Three Choirs house party at Worcester in 1905 and on subsequent occasions. Elgar is said to have particularly enjoyed her wit and vivacity. Carice went to stay at the Gandys’ country house, Heaves, near Sedgwick in the Lake District (then Cumberland).

  6. Dr. Nicholas Kilburn (1843–1923) conducted choirs in Sunderland and Bishop Auckland in northeastern England and was an ardent champion of Elgar’s works. Carice was to join the Kilburns while they were on holiday in Westmorland.

  7. Two local pubs on the River Wye near Plas Gwyn. Both are still in existence, although the second is now named The Salmon. Elgar found inspiration in cycling along the country lanes around Hereford and would have been familiar with such local landmarks.

  PART III

  LONDON

  Elgar’s Critical Critics

  AIDAN J. THOMSON

  On December 6, 1905, Edward Elgar delivered the fifth lecture in his first series as Peyton Professor of Music at the University of Birmingham. Titled “Critics,” it was concerned less with individual critics (although several were mentioned by name) than with their function. In Elgar’s opinion, music criticism should be educational as much as judgmental, both for the composer, to whose work a critic should give “the final polish” and “help us [the composers], guide us and lead us to higher things,” and for the listener, for whom the critic could provide musical analyses.1 Too often, however, critics seemed unaware of these responsibilities. In Elgar’s view, the journalist-critic was prone to write concert reviews too quickly, for an inappropriate medium (such as a general magazine with a nonmusical editor), and, above all, without sufficient time for reflection. For Elgar, the “real, lasting, educational good” was “gained from the mature slowly-wrought opinion.”2

  Such hasty assessments thus had considerable potential to affect adversely the performance history of a work. Yet despite these concerns, Elgar was imaginative enough to envisage a role for criticism more familiar to musicologists a hundred years later than it would likely have been to his audience in Birmingham. Enlarging upon his topic, Elgar opined:

  It is invariably interesting to read the opinions of various writers on the same work: I venture to suggest that such a collection might form a volume. If extracts from various criticisms on the same work, or on the same performance of a work, could be gathered together, it would form a valuable contribution to musical literature; not formed with any idea of playing off one critic against another, but to arrive at the result, which from a multitude of such counsellors should be wisdom.3

  With these remarks, Elgar promotes “reception history” as a methodological approach decades before the term was coined, although it must be stressed that his conception of reception history—to find the essential “truth” that lay at the heart of a piece of music—is very different from that of musicologists today. The centrality to Elgar’s vision of what Lydia Goehr has called the “work-concept” reflects both the idealist philosophy that underpinned nineteenth-Century German music (particularly instrumental music) and the doctrine of “Art for Art’s sake,” whose prevalence in Britain had grown considerably since its original espousal in the 1860s by Matthew Arnold and Walter Pater.4 To an aesthetic that denied anything beyond the artistic Ding an sich, the idea that the “final arbiter” in reception histories should be not the work but, as Carl Dahlhaus has described it, the “‘moment in history,’ i.e. the forces that condition reception,” would have seemed utterly alien; to a composer as concerned as Elgar with his place in ahistorical, ideology-free posterity, it doubtless would have seemed a threat.5 Indeed, the only historical process that Elgar is willing to countenance in reception history is the “conversion” of a critic from a negative to a positive point of view about a particular composer, which he felt would be “seriously instructive.”6 But this process, revealingly, is concerned primarily with the uncovering of an objective artistic “truth” which, once reached, is set in stone for all time. There is no suggestion that a critic’s change of view might have any historically contingent or ideological stimulus behind it; rather, the “conversion” would appear to be a Damascene one.

  Although Elgar’s views on art are theoretically underpinned by an objective value system, it is far from clear what aesthetic criteria he used in making critical judgments. Elgar was no philosopher, and if, as Brian Trowell has observed, he shared Ruskin’s “resolutely Platonic view of music as an art of great ethical power,” this was no more than most of his contemporaries did.7 If any ideological position is discernible in the Birmingham lectures, it is a bias for “absolute” music: Elgar praised Hanslick in his “Critics” lecture and would later describe the symphony without a program as the “highest development of art.”8 But, as Ernest Newman noted, this position was contradicted by virtually all of Elgar’s oeuvre to date, and though the First Symphony would come close to realizing the ideal of absolute music, the quotations at the beginning of both the Second Symphony and the Violin Concerto seem to indicate that Elgar’s view of art was not instinctively formalist.9 Rather, Elgar’s conception of music was that it “must be … a reflex, a picture, or elucidation of [an artist’s] own life,” a position that owed more to the early Romanticism of Elgar’s “ideal,” Schumann, than to either camp in the Brahms-Wagner debate.10 This reflex was a multifaceted one, where different genres called for different approaches, thereby obscuring any specific agenda.
Thus Elgar’s large-scale instrumental works conform, more or less, to the criteria of absolute music (even if the “absolutism” is more honored in the breach); the mature oratorios adopt Wagnerian music-dramatic principles, at least externally; and the smaller vocal genres, marches, and occasional music reflect a functional approach that embodies Elgar’s comparison of the composer’s vocation to that of the “old troubadours and bards … [who] inspire the people with a song.”11 More to the point, however, a composer whose conception of music was as personal, even instinctive, as Elgar’s was hardly likely to apply rigorously objective standards when evaluating the works of others. Instead, these works would be measured by their artistic sincerity, a criterion that was intuitive and justifiable in terms of common sense.

  But such a commonsensical approach merely conceals biases that are far from objective, and which certainly do not transcend history; instead, they are inextricably connected to the historical and critical concerns of early-twentieth-century British music. These biases are all too apparent in Elgar’s lectures, even, for example, in the critics of whom he approved and disapproved. It is clear that the composers most likely to suffer from the overhasty journalistic judgments that Elgar condemned would be young, unknown, and probably English—a particular concern for the composer given that, in his inaugural lecture, he had spoken of an “English School of Music” driven by a “younger generation [who] are true to themselves … and draw their inspiration from their own land.”12 So it is surely no coincidence that several of the contemporary critics he singled out for praise had all actively promoted English composers: Joseph Bennett (the chief music critic of the Daily Telegraph), Arthur Johnstone (of the Manchester Guardian, until his death in 1904), Ernest Newman (Johnstone’s successor at the Manchester Guardian), and George Bernard Shaw. Conversely, Elgar’s one example of the “shady side of music criticism” involved the disparagement of a British composer, namely the obituary of Arthur Sullivan in the Cornhill Magazine in 1900, written by J. A. Fuller-Maitland (although Elgar did not name him in the lecture). For Elgar, this was a “foul unforgettable episode”; Fuller-Maitland was simply wrong. But at no point did Elgar explain why Fuller-Maitland was wrong, let alone admit that his argument—that Sullivan was a composer capable of genius (notably in The Golden Legend and in his incidental music for The Tempest) who rarely fulfilled it because of his readiness to compromise his style to popular taste—might have some truth to it.13 Not surprisingly, Elgar’s comments attracted negative press coverage: Musical News, conscious of similar faux pas that Elgar had directed at Stanford in earlier lectures, observed that Elgar seemed unable to “open his mouth apparently without finding himself embroiled in some more or less lively controversy.”14

 

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