The Marco Polo cycle | |
The Marco Polo
complete edition - David J Brown
The whole thing stemmed from the personal desire of Klaus Heymann (who, for those who don't know, is the originator and prime mover of the whole HNH/Marco Polo/Naxos enterprise) to record the Violin Concerto and The Gothic. I believe, but am not certain, that his original intention was for the former to be played by his wife Takako Nishizaki, but in the event it was The Gothic that came first. However, there were at that time no plans for a Brian Cycle as such. For purely practical reasons, recording The Gothic was repeatedly delayed, but in the end it was got down in Bratislava in two extended sessions in 1989: Part One (for orchestra only) in March and Part Two (soloists, choruses, and enlarged orchestra) in October. Mr Heymann invited me to attend the latter sessions and I subsequently wrote a long piece about them in the Newsletter and a short one in Gramophone. The reason for doing The Gothic
in Bratislava was - apart from economics - the availability of large numbers of
professional choristers, and I don't think many disagree that chorally it was a triumph,
whatever may be thought about aspects of the interpretation and orchestral playing.
In any event, the recording totally vindicated Mr Heymanns resolve and was a real
commercial success. It has sold to date something over 14 000 sets, has been the
best-selling Marco Polo title ever (as distinct from Naxos), and most importantly from the
company's point of view actually went into profit. And this was without any subsidy,
either from the HBS or anywhere else. Naturally Mr Heymann was very well disposed to
recording some more Brian, and after an exchange of letters accepted a standard subsidy of
£2000 from the HBS for any further discs - a pittance compared with what it had cost us
to persuade HMV and Hyperion into the studio with the 7th and 3rd Symphonies respectively.
Putting the Cycle notionally together on paper was a privilege, and an absolutely fascinating exercise - and one in which personal views on the effect of works both individually and juxtaposed inevitably played a big part. Rightly or wrongly I went for maximum contrast - early with late, symphonic with non-symphonic, expansive with terse, cheerful with gloomy - rather than a thematic or chronological approach. Also, whether a work had been played before - and how frequently, and how long since the last (usually only!) performance - were factors, as were the forces involved: asking, for example , for a third pair of horns, a fourth trumpet, or a second harp for one piece only out of several was to be avoided if possible. Total duration of each disc was another consideration. Knowing how difficult and unfamiliar much of the music was, and the constraints of session time, I made no attempt to push the notional playing time of each CD beyond the 70-minute mark, and generally was happy with sets of pieces that added up to around 60 (in the event some of the couplings still proved over-ambitious). Finally, as works were used up, it got increasingly difficult to round off the final instalments as satisfactorily in programme terms as the earliest had fallen into place. In the end the couplings
were prepared and presented. There is a lot of I in this, but I want to
make clear that the content and the ordering of the Cycle was very largely my decision and
responsibility - and that I made one cardinal error right at the outset which
unfortunately has had repercussions ever since. The choral success of The Gothic
drove me to placing Das Siegeslied firmly at the head of the cycle; it seemed
obvious that given singing as fine as The Gothic performance, the work could prove
at last to live up to the highest claims that had been made for it, and might prove an
equal success in sales terms. Sadly this was not to be. The discs were released simultaneously. Though Das Siegeslied eventually shifted something over 4500 copies - a perfectly respectable number for any CD of wholly unfamiliar music - the huge forces, orchestral as well as choral, involved made it nearly as expensive to record as The Gothic, and simple arithmetic shows that the yield was thus less than one-sixth the earlier set. As for the Irish disc, again sales were respectable by unfamiliar repertoire standards (a couple of hundred less than Das Siegeslied), but recording in Ireland was far more expensive player-for-player than in Eastern Europe, so that even though the forces involved were a normal large orchestra, it was another costly disc by then Marco Polo standards. The upshot of both was a severe loss for HNH right at the outset of the Cycle, and hence an immediate dilution of their optimism about it. Nevertheless their commitment to continuing remained, and the next thing that happened was the arrival of Marat Bisengaliev on the scene. Takako Nishizaki was now no longer in the frame for the work, I think because she had some technical playing problem. I don't know the details of how Marat came to be involved, other than that David Denton was central to it, but crucially he both fell in love with the Violin Concerto and proved to have the technical wizardry to give us the first performance fully as Brian conceived it. That disc, recorded in January 1993 through a special, then one-off deal with BBC Scotland again through the offices of David Denton, had the expert collaboration of Lionel Friend and the BBC SSO and was a great success from all points of view. Already another recording in
Ireland was in prospect, and this time it seemed as if all the auspices were good.
Top of the couplings list now was Doctor Merryheart + Symphonies 5 and 11 - what
seemed to me an ideal conjunction of works (the wittiest and the most virtuosic of all the
early pieces + the chance to capture Brian Rayner Cooks proven interpretation of the
unique Wine of Summer + another uniquely-designed middle-period symphony that had
won the hearts of the relatively few able to get to know it from the by then far-distant
broadcast premiere). Doctor Merryheart and No. 11 went very well under Adrian
Leapers baton, but sadly disaster struck when BRC was unwell on the day and
subsequently requested that the performance of No.5 be not issued. Adrian Leaper, with what should have been three Brian discs under his belt, stopped making CDs for the company, and their new house conductor for British music, Andrew Penny, was slotted in to make some recordings in Ukraine. David Denton and Klaus Heymann agreed that another HB could be among them, and so Symphonies 20 and 25 + Fantastic Variations were set down in October 1994. I had always been a little worried about this coupling, on the grounds that the two symphonies were maybe too similar in style, layout, and duration, but in the event (for this listener at least) first thoughts were vindicated, and No.20 in particular made sense at last. However, it received minimal advertising (like its new successor), and one good review in Gramophone, and has not had great sales. The general downturn in the
classical recordings industry has also had a dampening effect. David
Denton retired last year when Naxos and Marco Polo UK temporarily closed down, and control
of repertoire management for the labels shifted to New Zealand (now its back in UK).
Their UK distribution arrangements also changed. With all this, communication
was ever more difficult, and it became increasingly clear to me that effectively driving
and guiding something as large and ambitious as this Cycle from a position right outside
the industry, with all these difficulties, and very intermittently, due to my own
workload, was virtually impossible. My intended coupling for No.2 was No.15 (on grounds of absolute contrast, and large forces) as well as Festival Fanfare, but so much time was spent getting No.2 as good as it could be that time ran out in Moscow. With an eye on the shelved Irish works, one of the last things David Denton did was - after much negotiation with the orchestra - to secure two sessions, amongst their busy schedule of recording native works, for Tony Rowe to record a fill-up in Dublin, as well as supervise an overdub of the Dublin Concert Hall organ onto No.2 (there was no organ in Moscow and the part - unlike Fantastic Variations, also recorded in an organ-less hall in Ukraine - was not ad lib). As he had already prepared No.15, it was the natural choice. With only weeks to go before the sessions in May 1997, however, I had a request for another piece to take up the remainder of the sessions. I sent Tony the English Suite 4 and For Valour (maximum contrast again!) and he chose the latter because it used a large orchestra in a quite conventional way and thus would not be too demanding for the players in the short time available. Also it had a large organ part. With the two pieces in the can, it would make a well-filled CD of 25 + 16 + 21 + 14 (before anyone tells me that No.11 runs a half-hour, Adrian Leaper is much brisker than Harry Newstone in the BBC premiere). In the event two things happened: the organ proved to be impossible to dub adequately in the time available, so more delays to No.2 ensued while Chris Craker, the producer, prepared an electronic organ overdub (I'm surprised no-one has mentioned this yet). The other was a real surprise - the total time of the items now waiting is, Im told, 83 minutes! At the time of writing Ive not heard edits of No.15 and For Valour, and cannot imagine where the extra seven minutes have come from. If this is true, then it looks as though For Valour will stay in the can until yet more contingency sessions are pinned down in Ireland. David J Brown was the Secretary/Editor of the Havergal Brian Society 1975-1992 and its Chairman 1994-1998 981122 Havergal Brian - the official website HOME |