The Serenade for String Orchestra in E minor, Op. 20, is an early piece in three short movements, by Edward Elgar. It was written in March 1892 and first performed privately in that year; its public premiere was in 1896. It became one of Elgar's most popular compositions, and has been recorded many times.
Background and first performances
editIn 1892 Elgar had yet to achieve the public recognition that came to him by the end of the decade. His compositions did not earn him enough to support his wife and daughter; he earned most of his living conducting local musical ensembles and teaching in his native Worcestershire, while continuing to compose.[1]
The Serenade for Strings may be a revised version of an earlier set of Three Sketches for Strings, performed in May 1888 at a concert of the Worcestershire Musical Union. The sketches had the individual titles "Spring Song" (Allegro), "Elegy" (Adagio) and Finale (Presto); the manuscript of the Three Sketches does not survive, and their connection with the Serenade is conjectural.[2] The Serenade was the first of Elgar's compositions with which he professed himself happy. He wrote to a friend about the three movements, "I like 'em (the first thing I ever did)".[3] The critic Ernest Newman wrote in a 1906 study of Elgar that the Serenade and the concert overture Froissart (1890) were the only two works of importance among the composer's output before the mid 1890s: "the rest are experiments in various smaller forms – songs, pieces for piano and violin, part songs, slight pieces for small orchestra, &c".[4]
The work was first given in a private performance in 1892 by the Worcester Ladies' Orchestral Class, with the composer conducting. His first attempt to interest a publisher in the piece was rebuffed on the grounds that though it was "very good", "this class of music is practically unsaleable",[5] but he found a publisher in 1893.[6] The Serenade received its first public performance in Antwerp, Belgium on 21 July 1896,[1] but was not given publicly in Britain until 1899. Two movements were played at a concert in the Grand Pump Room at Bath in January of that year;[7] the complete work was played at a concert in York on 5 April 1899, conducted by Thomas Tertius Noble;[8][n 1] and the composer conducted it at an all-Elgar concert in the seaside resort New Brighton on 16 July 1899.[12] The work is dedicated to the organ builder and amateur musician Edward W. Whinfield, who had encouraged the composer in his early years.[13]
Structure
editThe work typically plays for between 12 and 13 minutes in performance.[n 2]
1. Allegro piacevole. The metronome mark is ♩. = 96. The gently rocking 6
8 metre of the first movement, the direction "piacevole" (pleasantly/agreeably) and avoidance of harmonic tension suggest a cradle song, according to the analyst Daniel Grimley, and an aubade according to Elgar's biographer Michael Kennedy.[15][16] The movement opens with a figure in the violas that recurs throughout:
The main theme is heard from the third bar:
The middle section is an arching melody, moving briefly into the minor, before the coda presents a new theme derived from the opening subject, which itself returns to bring the movement to a quiet conclusion.[15]
2. Larghetto. The second movement, marked ♪=80, is in 2
4 time. After a brief introduction the main theme is what Newman describes as "a long and flexible melody sung by the first violins … one of the finest and most sustained that ever came from Elgar's pen":[17]
The introductory theme returns at the end of the movement as a peroration.[17]
3. Allegretto. The finale begins in 12
8 time, ♩. = 92, changing to 6
8 when Elgar reintroduces the main theme of the first movement to bring the work to a conclusion.
Recordings
editThe Serenade has become one of Elgar’s most popular works, particularly with amateur groups, youth ensembles, and chamber orchestras,[2] and is among the most recorded of his compositions.
See also
editNotes, references and sources
editNotes
edit- ^ This first complete performance in Britain has been overlooked by several writers about Elgar, including Michael Kennedy,[9] but it is well documented. The Yorkshire Herald recorded, "The strings alone had their opportunity in the three movements of a serenade by Edward Elgar … The subsidiary strings are [given] parts of a more distinctive character than usual".[10] The Yorkshire Gazette reported, "Elgar's 'Serenade for Strings – Allegro, Larghetto, Allegretto' was skilfully performed".[11]
- ^ The composer took 12:09 in his 1933 recording; Sir John Barbirolli's 1963 recording takes 13:05, Sir Adrian Boult (1968) takes 12:14, and Sir Mark Elder (2008) takes 12:57.[14]
References
edit- ^ a b McVeagh, Diana. "Elgar, Sir Edward"', Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 22 August 2021 (subscription required)
- ^ a b Grimley, p. 120
- ^ Moore, p. 124
- ^ Newman, pp. 1–2
- ^ Moore, p. 160
- ^ Moore, p. 170
- ^ "The Pump Room Concerts", Bath Chronicle, 19 January 1899, p. 2
- ^ "York Symphony Orchestra", Yorkshire Gazette, 8 April 1899, p. 6; and "York Symphony Orchestra", Yorkshire Herald, 8 April 1899, p. 13
- ^ Kennedy, p. 343
- ^ "York Symphony Orchestra", Yorkshire Herald, 8 April 1899, p. 13
- ^ "York Symphony Orchestra", Yorkshire Gazette, 8 April 1899, p. 6
- ^ "Notes on Music", The Liverpool Mercury, 1 April 1899, p. 7
- ^ Kennedy, p. 341; and Moore, p. 89
- ^ OCLC 31793357, OCLC 15161086, OCLC 855948218 and OCLC 937854160
- ^ a b Grimley, p. 121
- ^ Kennedy, Michael (1973). Notes to EMI LP ASD 2906
- ^ a b Newman, p. 9
Sources
edit- Grimley, Daniel (2005). "The Chamber Music and Works for Strings". In Daniel Grimley; Julian Rushton (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to Elgar. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-00225-7.
- Kennedy, Michael (1987). Portrait of Elgar (third ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-284017-2.
- Moore, Jerrold Northrop (1984). Edward Elgar: A Creative Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-315447-6.
- Newman, Ernest (1906). Elgar (third ed.). London: J. Lane. OCLC 2560311.
External links
edit- Serenade for Strings: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Performance by A Far Cry from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in MP3 format
- Programme notes from BBC Radio 3