John Ireland
(1879-1962)
Piano Music Volume 2
The English composer John Ireland often complained of what he perceived
as a lack of attention to his work. Nevertheless, during his lifetime, he had
his fair share of exposure, although this has certainly been followed by
subsequent neglect. He was born in 1879, the son of Alexander Ireland, a native
of Edinburgh and business manager and publisher of the Manchester Examiner. His
mother, also from Scotland, was his father's second wife and thirty years her
husband's junior. Ireland had some of his early education at Leeds Grammar
School, but at the age of thirteen, without his parents' knowledge, presented
himself for audition at the Royal College of Music, where one of his sisters
was already studying. He was accepted by the College, intending to become a
concert pianist and also taking organ lessons with Sir Walter Parratt, organist
of St George's Chapel, Windsor. Two years later he persuaded Stanford to accept
him as a composition pupil. In the following years, while he attempted to
establish himself as a composer, Ireland, supported by the money he had by then
inherited from his parents, earned an additional living for himself as an
organist and choirmaster, establishing lasting friendships with some of the boys
in his charge. He settled in Chelsea, dividing his time between London, a
retreat in Deal and regular visits to the Channel Islands. After the war he
joined the teaching staff of the Royal College. There he continued to exercise
influence on generations of students. In 1927 he made a brief attempt at
marriage. His wife, a student some thirty years his junior, proved as
unsuitable a partner as Tchaikovsky's had fifty years earlier, and the marriage
was quickly annulled.
In common with other musicians, Ireland suffered disruption to his life
in 1939. He had at first thought to find peace in the Channel Islands, to be
evacuated to safety when the surrender of France became imminent. He spent much
of the war lodging with a clergyman he had first known as a young choirmaster
and once the war was over returned to Chelsea, until London became impossible
for him. He spent his final years in Sussex, where he died in 1962.
With his long connection with the Church of England and its liturgy,
Ireland wrote music for services, hymns and carols. He also added to English
vocal repertoire in a valuable series of solo songs and choral works. Works for
chorus and orchestra include These Things Shall Be and Greater Love
Hath No Man, both of which won success. Orchestral compositions include a Piano
Concerto, Concertino pastorale for string orchestra and the symphonic
rhapsody Mai-Dun, inspired by the British defence of Maiden Castle
against the invading Romans in A.D. 43. With some labour he completed a score
for the film The Overlanders, one of his last major achievements, and
added to chamber music repertoire, with a Viola Sonata for Lionel
Tertis, two Violin Sonatas, the second for Albert Sammons, a Cello
Sonata that Casals planned to take into his repertoire and a Fantasy
Sonata for the clarinettist Frederick Thurston. For the piano, essentially
his own instrument, Ireland wrote a quantity of music, one sonata and some
forty short lyrical pieces. His most popular composition, The Holy Boy, inspired
by one of his choristers, was originally a piano piece but underwent various
transformations. His thought was much influenced by the Celtic mysticism of the
novels of Arthur Machen, haunted by the ghosts of Roman Britain, and he also
found affinity with the poems of A.E. Housman and the novels and poems of
Thomas Hardy.
Merry Andrew, written in 1918, is dedicated to the pianist William
Murdoch, who had taken part in the first performance of Ireland's Second
Violin Sonata a year before. The caprice suggested by the title is borne
out in the music, which offers a contrast of mood and key in a central section.
The Towing Path, written in the same year, was suggested by the Thames
Valley and the riverside village of Pangbourne. The piece offers an idyllic
picture, in its prevailing lilting rhythm. The Rhapsody of 1915 lacks
any overt extra-musical connection, with its strongly rhythmic opening, gently
lilting chords and final tranquillity.
April and Bergomask were published in 1925. The second of these pieces
was to mark the birthday of the choirboy Arthur Miller, son of a Chelsea
antique-dealer, on 22nd February, 1925. The first is gently
evocative and the second suggests, at least in part, the rhythms of the dance.
The three pieces that constitute Decorations were published in
1915 and reflect earlier visits to the Channel Islands. The first of the set, The
Island Spell, was started during a holiday in Jersey in August, 1912,
inspired by Le Fauvic beach. After work on the piece at home in Chelsea, he
completed it in Jersey the following year. It has a quotation from Arthur
Symons at its head:
"I would wash the dust of the world in a soft green flood:
Here, between sea and sea, in the fairy wood, I have found a delicate,
wave-green solitude…"
The chiming of a bell is heard over the gentle sound of the water,
leading to a dramatic climax, before the sound dies away once more.
The second piece, Moon-Glade, is again headed by verses of Arthur
Symons.
"Why are you so sorrowful in dreams?
I am sad in the night;
The hours till the morning are white,
I hear the hours' flight
All night in dreams..."
Completed in Chelsea in 1913, the piece offers distantly evocative
fragments of melody over a repeated accompaniment pattern.
The third of the set, The Scarlet Ceremonies, bears the date June,
1913. It is prefaced by lines from Arthur Machen's The House of Souls:
"...Then there are the Ceremonies, which are all of them important,
but some are more delightful than others – there are the White Ceremonies, and
the Green Ceremonies, and the Scarlet Ceremonies. The Scarlet Ceremonies are
the best..."
The occult ceremonies of the title are translated into musical terms,
with insistently repeated figures and a final glissando leading to
forceful closing bars.
Leaves from a Child's Sketchbook, published in 1918, offers music of great
simplicity. On the Mere is an Allegretto in a straightforward
triple metre, with the dotted notes of its melody above. In the Meadow, again
in simple two-part writing, is a graceful Moderato and the set ends with
a graphic and descriptive The Hunt's Up.
A poignant mood, lightened by a central passage in the major, generally
pervades The Darkened Valley of 1921, with its superscription from
William Blake:
"Walking along the darkened valley
With silent Melancholy."
Ireland's Sonatina was written between June, 1926, and October,
1927, and dedicated to Edward Clark, the husband of the composer Elisabeth
Lutyens. The first movement includes an attack on Arnold Bax for his allegedly
cruel treatment of the pianist Gweneth Hutcheson. The notes C A D provide an
emphatic secondary subject in the first movement. The evocative slow movement
leads without a break to the final energetic rondo.
The Three Pastels were published in 1941, at a time when Ireland
had taken refuge in Banbury. The first, from an earlier manuscript, follows
lines from A.E. Housman's A Shropshire Lad.
"A Grecian lad, as I hear tell,
One that many loved in vain,
Looked into a forest well
And never looked away again."
Ireland, in correspondence with a friend, wondered whether this referred
to Narcissus or Hyacinthus, the latter in fact killed, in legend, by a
misdirected discus. The second piece, The Boy Bishop, refers, in assumed
solemnity, to the customary promotion of a boy to this office for a day. It carries
the superscription from Psalm XLV 'diffusa est gratia in labiis tuis' (‘full of
grace are thy lips’), while the third piece, Puck's Birthday, with the
words I am that merry wanderer of the night, from Shakespeare's A
Midsummer Night's Dream, reflects that character's impetuosity.
February's Child was written in 1929 to mark the birthday of the
choirboy Arthur Miller. Ireland had provided a first dedication in 1922 with On
a Birthday Morning and continued the custom during the 1920s. Published in
1931, it is dominated by the opening melody, marked Allegretto amabile, an
echo of the dedicatory Pro amicitia that had prefaced the first
dedication in 1922. The piece was published together with Aubade, a
salute to the new day.
Summer Evening, written in 1919, evokes an image of tranquillity.
Keith Anderson