Philip Legge
I
should begin by congratulating the Scores Subcommittee on its progress with
the vocal score of the Gothic. Many valuable issues are raised and the
article points to further ones, most of which I hope this article addresses.
I was unaware the old vocal scores describe the four semichoruses (or are
they demi-semi?) as A, B, C, and D. I believe this convention is far
superior to the cumbersome I A/I B/II A/II B in the Cranz full score, and
should be retained. The chorus master can more quickly shout ‘choirs C and
D’ than unambiguously refer to ‘II A and II B’, and there is less danger of
confusing multiple different Is, IIs, As and Bs—especially if asking for
individual voice parts, Bass 1 and Alto 2 say, which are occasionally
described in shorthand as B1 and A2! The orchestral conductor may invariably
still refer to the choirs by virtue of reading the full score's
nomenclature, but by that stage it should be obvious that ‘II A’ = C and ‘II
B’ = D. And eventually the new VS will be incorporated into a revised full
score anyway...
Dividing the VS into two volumes is a brilliant idea, and has many
ramifications. In many places the writing will reduce to the traditional
four vocal staves plus piano, albeit with differences between the music
found at any particular bar in the two volumes. The covers should be given
different colours to plainly distinguish volumes I and II by sight. I
suspect volume II will be slightly thinner—in movement IV, choir D is never
truly independent of the remainder (except by virtue of being silent!); the
children's choir is tacet in V, and in VI appears on just 2 pages of the
full score. In fact their part is slight enough to justify a separate,
cut-down VS—even for a complement of only one hundred children. This would
be a smaller, lower-cost print run, as without the adult voice parts their
score will be much shorter, thinner, and importantly, lighter. In practice,
adult mixed choirs almost always rehearse separately from children's choirs
anyway, except for the few final general rehearsals when all of the
disparate choirs are brought together.
I am not implying for a moment that the parts for children's choir should be
removed from the second volume: if in the dire event that a performance of
the Gothic could not obtain a children's choir, then the burden would
naturally revert to the adult choir, being the core singing body. It makes
sense then for choir II to be utilised: in movement IV they are slightly
less busy. In any case the chorus master may wish to exercise his or her
prerogative by reinforcing the children's choir with some adult voices,
because of the ever-present issues of audibility (or confidence), so their
music must be printed in the main VS.
Even if the adult choir for the Gothic is as small as three hundred
voices—which must be close to a real minimum number, if not the HBS'
recommended one—then nonetheless it is almost certain to have been formed by
combining two or more smaller symphonic choirs of between
100 and 200 voices, each of which will usually have its own conductor and
repetiteur(s) (and emergencies who deputise from time to time). Thus the
overall chorus master who pulls the forces together will not have much
of a worry rehearsing any particular component choir in the earlier stages,
or finding a repetiteur; his problem is at the final combined rehearsals
where he will have to juggle the two vocal scores simultaneously, as well as
the full score.
It might be desirable to ensure the page layout of each volume is similar,
so that the music doesn't look radically different when comparing the two at
any point. The chorus master will have his or her work cut out advising the
conductor of the many errors in the vocal parts of the full score: a vexed
question will be how many discrepancies between the choir and orchestra
parts are allowed to remain in overhauling the vocal score, before a new
full score can be prepared. Fortunately the task of proofreading the new VS
may be split between different individuals, just as the typesetting was.
This would still need to be limited to a small group with access to the
older, handwritten VS: although the composer’s manuscript full score of the
Te Deum is missing, the vocal short score is not, and this may also provide
some help with the wide range of clerical errors; the Cranz full score is no
help, being frequently and obviously wrong (here I know I am flogging a
horse that is long dead). There are also some curiosities of Brian's vocal
writing—and the errors in the actual text that is sung!—that I wonder can
actually have been intentional on HB's part. The most obvious textual
discrepancy which should be corrected is the phrase et rege eos et
extolle illos—according to his Modern Mystic article on how the Gothic
came to be written, Brian said he obtained the Latin text and a parallel
English translation from a musician at Brighton College surnamed Allen. Less
obtrusively wrong, movement IV ends with Patrem in the FS (presumably
correct in the VS).
In several places there are both missing or incorrect hyphenations and
conjunctions: both de victo and vene randum are one word, but
fac-cum is actually two; both qu-os, qu-emadmodum have
one fewer syllable while Dei often requires an extra one. Finally
there are misspellings of the
authentic text, probably because the text which Brian received was itself in
error, of which credentilus instead of credentibus is the most
obvious. No one expects to see such mistakes reading a Bruckner or Kodály Te
Deum; so it should be likewise for Havergal Brian.
The
previous article finishes with some rhetorical questions regarding the
nature of the piano reduction, which are not unlike the questions I had to
ask myself when commissioned to prepare a new VS with piano reduction for
the Gurrelieder choruses (a work I've now performed twice, in each
case with the entire choral forces using my edition, rather than the
traditionally unhelpful choir partbooks). There is the extremely valuable
point that the reduction should help provide an adequate musical experience,
enabling the average chorister to feel some level of confidence when
rehearsing the work. With something as forbiddingly difficult as the Gothic,
this is probably essential; the piano part is perhaps the most important
feature of the new vocal score, as I will endeavour to illustrate.
Something like Mahler’s eighth—at times also a hard slog for the singer—has
less intrinsic difficulty since Mahler has virtually been canonised since
the turn of his fortunes, and choristers can easily listen to recordings so
they have the ‘end of the tunnel’ clearly in sight. Brian’s idiom and his
obscurity as a composer are more likely to provoke a mixed reaction in the
collective choral mind—’is this really great music, or just rubbish?’—that
is not helped by a repetiteur fumbling for notes in having to sight-read
multiple vocal staves to create the accompaniment. (Some players have the
skill to combine disparate parts like this, others do not.)
‘Will the repetiteur be able to play it (ever)?’
The traditional piano arrangement for Gurrelieder by Alban Berg (which does
not appear in the sub-standard choir partbooks) is designed for a virtuoso
pianist: to be fair to Berg, it was supposed to replace the orchestra for a
chamber performance rather than support the choir. Although only one of the
six repetiteurs in the recent Australian performances actually found it
unplayable, it should not be assumed that all repetiteurs are thorough
professionals capable of rendering at sight a densely polyphonic texture
that seemingly requires three (or more) hands. It is better to always
attempt to simplify such an inherently complicated work.
‘If they could play it, how much help will it be to the choir?’
Again I believe some piano reductions fail the test of usefulness by
unnecessary complication or providing inaudible cues: with an orchestra the
size of the Gurrelieder or the Gothic, not all of the polyphonic lines are
going to be audible, especially from the bass- and brass- heavy acoustical
perspective where the choir normally finds itself, at the back of the
orchestra. When the accompaniment is not simply doubling the choir parts, it
must articulate the most clearly audible swathes of harmony, melody, and
rhythm which will help the choir to co-ordinate their part; simply
duplicating Brian's chromatic (sometimes polytonal) counterpoint would
arguably be making the task more difficult. I believe the specific example
cited by Jeremy (the final pages of the Judex) actually demonstrates
this clearly. The cue of a descending violin line would be almost impossible
to hear as a violin line, if the choir is (as usual) placed behind the
orchestra. Enough of the upper brass and percussion are also playing and
would be positioned closer, so as to obliterate the sense of the line
occurring at the pitch of the upper strings: the violins and violas are also
positioned to project their sound out into the auditorium rather than back
towards the choir. The same line would actually be perceived as a bass line,
doubled in the lower octaves by the massed trombones, tubas, and the
weightier lower strings, while the most clearly audible texture, both in
rhythm and block harmony, would remain the upper brass. The musical example
[next page] provides a conjectural short score of this passage: the choir
texture is often spread across two octaves, but is reduced to a single
handspan for the repetiteur, so occasionally a bass part is heard in a
higher octave, or a soprano part in a lower one. While the choir sings Ah
the piano can articulate the prominent horn and trumpet rhythm, which also
provides a helpful pick-up for the next bar. The left hand is able to fill
in the wandering bass line and the descending violin line as accompaniment,
but at the more
prominent lower octave(s). Five bars from the end, the choir is essentially
in organum, so only one hand in each piano part articulates the choir’s
rhythm. This allows the brass and timpani rhythm to be thrashed out by one
repetiteur, and the ascending bass line by the other. For greater sonority
the piano parts are usually separated by an octave, although each is
complete in itself.
In
the final five bars of Judex there are subsidiary chromatic harmonies
in the upper woodwinds and strings which could form part of an
accompaniment: however they would be dramatically less prominent in
performance, as well as being in direct tonal opposition to the choir, and
thus quite justifiably are omitted. Conversely soloists may be expected to
stand at the front of the orchestra close to the conductor, so the parts of
the vocal score which form ‘solo arias’ can and should rely more on the
string parts for the accompanying texture, because these singers will be
standing directly in front of them. Finally, singers tend to listen to
whatever recordings are available, so the Naxos CD is likely to remain the
benchmark for the foreseeable future: the piano reduction should be designed
to be readily followed with the recording (which often spotlights certain
instrumental lines). A caveat is that a phrase easily heard on a CD may be
impossible to hear in concert, or that what is ‘audible’ will vary
considerably between individual recordings and performances, as well as
owing simply to placement—one choir might be relegated to a gallery (with
the off-stage bands, say), while another is sharing the extreme back of the
concert platform with the heavy brass and the hordes of the percussion
battery.
‘What exactly will it be?’
Being a vocal score, it should cover all 1529 bars of Part Two, despite
there being lengthy passages for orchestra alone and a lesser need for piano
reduction of the same; fortunately there is no real need to score the 825
bars of Part One, though a ‘Rolls-Royce’ solution might do so. Although the
solo quartet has been allocated to volume I, there is probably a need to
indicate what the soloists are doing in the actual ‘solo aria’ sections in
volume II—for the Soprano, the Judex and Aeterna fac; Tenor,
Te ergo quaesumus; and Bass, Dignare Domine—otherwise the
choristers of Choir II will simply be following a piano reduction for long
stretches of time, when the main focus of interest is the solo line. For
this reason I do not believe these should be inserted in volume II as cues;
the solo line only adds one stave per system at a time (unlike the instances
where the solo quartet is used, which would require four staves). The poor
old contralto soloist only sings for 48 bars in the whole thing, and would
thus never appear in volume II at all.
There are not many lacunae in Part Two, aside from the two big orchestral
interludes in Judex: the orchestral fanfare at the start of the Te
Deum is the only such passage in movement IV—which along with the
shorter 10 bars of fanfare before figure 101 would be pointless to omit, the
rest being firmly choral. The few gaps between the end of a solo in the Te
ergo and the next choir entry, eg, between the Tenor finishing at figure 267
and the choir entry at 271, or again the Soprano solo finishing at 278 and
choir II entering at 280, are precisely the places where you would want the
accompaniment to continue, to ensure the choral entries don't get lost! The
clarinet march is an obvious interlude, but it would be fairly trivial to
notate and play: on the other hand, the Varèse-ian outbursts of timpani and
brass at the end would require all of the virtuosity of La Main Gauche
himself.
Only at full general rehearsals without orchestra (or the case of a
particularly large choir split across both choirs I and II) would two
repetiteurs be needed at the one time, since different choirs normally
rehearse separately. Despite this, the piano accompaniments for choir I and
choir II can be designed to be complementary to one another as well as
reducing the respective voice parts into a playable texture. For example,
when choir I alone is singing with orchestra, piano I should provide the
vocal reduction, while piano II reduces any salient orchestral lines; if the
choir needs to hear what the orchestra is doing, the answer may be found in
the other volume's piano part.
In a full choir rehearsal without orchestra, (a piano call involving the
conductor meeting the vocal tutti is standard practice here), the two
vocal scores allow accompaniment by four hands on two keyboards, with each
choir providing and being supported by a repetiteur; if only one actual
piano happens to be available, an electronic (and realistic sounding!)
keyboard is an adequate and easily obtainable alternative.
© Philip Legge 2005
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