The Garden of Fand

The Garden of Fand (1916) is a tone poem by the English composer Arnold Bax. It was inspired by an Irish mythical figure, Fand, the daughter of the lord of the ocean. The work does not portray the events of the mythical tale, but evokes Fand's island. The composer had been greatly influenced by Celtic culture in his earlier works, but described this one as his last in that vein.

Background

The work was complete in piano score shortly before the First World War, and orchestrated in 1916. It was premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conducted by Frederick Stock on 29 October 1920,[1] and first performed in Britain on 11 December 1920 by the British Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Adrian Boult.[2]

Bax was a great admirer of Celtic culture, including Irish myths, in which the garden of Fand is the sea. The old saga, The Sick-bed of Cuchulain tells of a hero, Cuchulain, who is seduced away from home and duty by the Lady Fand, daughter of Manannan, lord of the ocean. Cuchulain's wife, Emer, pursues him and persuades Fand to release him. Manannan shakes his "Cloak of Forgetfulness" between Cuchulain and Fand, and each forgets the other completely.[1] Bax did not depict the original story in his symphonic poem, but painted a picture of a ship, cast ashore on Fand's enchanted island. The crew are drawn into Fand's eternal world of dancing and feasting, as the rising sea overwhelms the island, and the garden of Fand is lost from sight.[3]

The composer described the work to his partner, Harriet Cohen, as "the last of my Irish music".[1]

Music

The work is in ternary form, with the music of the opening returning at the end, with Fand's love-song in between. The opening is a shimmering theme played by woodwind, two harps and divided upper strings, with the lower strings playing a rising and falling theme illustrative of the swell of the sea. Fand's song, in the central section, is played by flute and cor anglais in unison, over strings divided into ten parts.[4] Bax's orchestration is on his customary lavish scale. A reviewer in the US after the work was first played there, remarked on the score's "singular poetic intensity, singular eloquence and beauty", although adding that Bax "is, of course, a child of his time, and he cannot forget Debussy".[3] The musical scholar Andrew Keener also notes the Debussian influence: "there is the characteristic writing in parallel thirds that move by whole tones, and brass and woodwind detail which glints out of a surging, opulent orchestral sonority".[4]

Performance history

The work has remained among Bax's more popular compositions, even during his most neglected years in the late 1940s and the 1950s. Among those who kept it before the public were Sir Thomas Beecham and Sir John Barbirolli, who played it in concert and made recordings of it: Beecham for 78 rpm records in 1948,[4] and Barbirolli for LP a decade later.[5] With the greatly increased representation of Bax's works in the LP and then the CD catalogues from the 1960s onwards, The Garden of Fand has received several modern recordings, including one conducted by Boult, fifty-two years after he introduced the work to England.[6]

Bax's score was used by Frederick Ashton for his ballet, Picnic at Tintagel (New York City Ballet, 1952).[7]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Foreman, Lewis (2006). Notes to Chandos CD 10362, OCLC 887670232
  2. British Symphony Orchestra", The Times, 13 December 1920, p. 16
  3. 1 2 Gilman, Lawrence. "Music of the Month: Some Celtic Music, Old and New", The North American Review, May 1921, pp. 697–704 (subscription required)
  4. 1 2 3 Keener, Andrew. Notes to Chandos CD 10156, OCLC 225847440
  5. "The Garden of Fand" WorldCat, retrieved 20 September 2015
  6. Parlett, Graham Discography, The Sir Arnold Bax website, retrieved 20 September 2015; and Stuart, Philip. Decca Classical, 1929–2009, Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music, retrieved 18 September 2015
  7. "Garden of Fand, The", The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd edition, Ed. Michael Kennedy, Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press, retrieved 20 September 2015 (subscription required)
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