Forthcoming concerts

2008 Concert Schedule.

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Multi-Media/Video Clips

A ne addition the the Malcolm Arnold website, here you will find a selection of Multi-Media/Video clips related to Sir Malcolm Arnold.

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The 2007 Malcolm Arnold Festival

The 2007 Malcolm Arnold Festival was held at the Royal & Derngate theatre, in the composer’s hometown of Northampton, the weekend of October 6th & 7th. Director Paul Harris created for this year’s festival a brilliant skein of concerts and events, offering rare insights into Sir Malcolm’s glorious music.

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"NEWSFLASH! The 2008 Malcolm Arnold Festival will be taking place at the Royal and Derngate Theatre, Northampton, on October 18th and 19th. Details of the programme of concerts and events taking place over this Arnold celebratory weekend will be announced in due course".

 

 

Arnold Sinfonia: Inaugural concert took place on the 18 November 2007

The Haverhill Sinfonia was first established in 1986 as an amateur orchestra comprising local adults, teachers and students with a professional conductor, leader and soloists. Over the last 21 years the orchestra’s performing and musical scope has continually developed and they have built a solid reputation as a music entity of considerable merit. From Autumn 2007, the Haverhill Sinfonia will continue to promote the Haverhill Sinfonia Soloist Competition and recitals, as well as concerts given by the newly formed and fully professional Arnold Sinfonia under the baton of its Music Director, Kevin Hill.
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The Arnold Sinfonia is named in honour of Sir Malcolm Arnold, Composer Patron of the Haverhill Sinfonia from 1996 until his death in 2006.
The orchestra believes that through his music Sir Malcolm has left us is a wonderful and inspiring legacy that will captivate and stimulate audiences far into the future. In addition to performing music by Sir Malcolm Arnold, their programmes will include British music, new works, and neglected repertoire alongside standard repertoire, echoing Sir Malcolm's sentiment that music is for everyone to enjoy.
 
The inaugural concert of the Arnold Sinfonia took place on 18 November at the Haverhill Arts Centre in Suffolk, and included a performance of Sir Malcolm’s Sinfonietta III.
On 6 April this year, Sir Malcolm’s Clarinet Concerto 1 was performed by soloist Anna Hashimoto and the Arnold Sinfonia, conducted by Kevin Hill, at the Haverhill Arts Centre.

 



Image Copyright Adrian Harris

Tony Meredith, David Nixon and David Drew: Sadlers Wells June 2007
Copyright Adrian Harris

 

All for one and one for all:
Olivier Nomination for Northern Ballet Theatre’s Musketeers

Leeds-based Northern Ballet Theatre (NBT) has been nominated for a prestigious Laurence Olivier Award in the Best New Dance Production category for its highly acclaimed production of The Three Musketeers. Other nominees in the category include The Royal Ballet, Mark Morris Dance Group and Fabulous Beast Dance. The winners will be announced at a star-studded ceremony on 9 March at Grosvenor House in London. 

The production has already scooped a top accolade at the Manchester Evening News Theatre Awards 2007, winning the Best Dance Award in a category that included some of the worlds leading dance artists: Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, Carlos Acosta, Henri Oguike Dance Company, and Richard Alston Dance Company.

NBT Artistic Director, David Nixon, choreographed The Three Musketeers to a scenario by the Royal Ballet’s David Drew MBE and a specially arranged score of memorable music, from one of Britain’s greatest composers, Sir Malcolm Arnold. The production had its world premiere at the Alhambra Theatre in Bradford in 2006 and was toured extensively in the UK during 2006 and 2007.

Since joining Northern Ballet Theatre as Artistic Director in 2001, David Nixon has made a major impact on the company, drawing admiration from public and critics alike, and securing remarkable results at the box office.  He has added an impressive array of new productions to the company’s repertoire among them A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which was alsonominated for an Olivier Award in 2004. 
 
David Nixon said: “I am thrilled to be nominated again for this very prestigious award and particularly for this production. Making The Three Musketeers offered me an opportunity to work with new collaborators, which always stimulates something new in the Company’s work. It has proved a very popular production not only with audiences but with the dancers too and it is always very rewarding for us all to have work recognised with a nomination such as this.”

 

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Download and listen
to some selected samples taken from
The Three Musketeers

Right click on the links below and choose "save as" then open the files with Windows Media Player.

Film "Trapeze": Prelude

Sinfonietta No 1 - 3rd movement

English Dance Set 2 - No 1


Serenade for small orchestra - 3rd movement


Serenade for small orchestra - 2nd movement


Film: "Roots of Heaven" - Main Title


Irish Dance No 1


Film: "Hobson's Choice" - Wedding Night


Film: "David Copperfield" - David's Resolution and Finale


Symphony No 3 - 2nd movement (extract)


Symphony No 3 - Third movement (extract)


Symphony No 5 - Third movement (extract)


Film: "David Copperfield" - Young Lovers


Film: "David Copperfield" - The Micawbers


Film: "Hobson's Choice" - Willie and Maggie


Vita Abundans


Flute Concerto - Third Movement


Symphony No 5 - Second movement (extract)


Symphony No 5 - Fourth movement


Film: "No Love for Johnnie" - Moderato


Flute Sonata - 2nd movement


Symphony No 2 - Second movement


March: HRH Duke of Cambridge


Cornish Dance No 1


Anniversary Overture

To purchase the CD of the complete work from The Three Muskeeters visit the Quartz Music website

Click Here to purchase the CD today.

 

Premiere recording of Malcolm Arnold's stunning new ballet The Three Musketeers now released on the Quartz Label: QTZ 2056.

The Northern Ballet Theatre Orchestra, conducted by John Pryce Jones, has recently recorded the outstanding score for this new ballet, arranged and orchestrated by John Longstaff, Tony Meredith, who compiled the music, gives this account of how the score came together:

"David Nixon’s The Three Musketeers, with music by Malcolm Arnold, was first performed by NBT at the Alhambra Theatre, Bradford on 23 September 2006, the very day the composer died. It was an understandably poignant occasion, and few who were there will ever forget the inspired playing of the NBT Orchestra under John Pryce-Jones. No tribute could have been finer. The music offers a very representative Arnold mix: film scores bursting with Hollywood opulence; symphonies and other concert works, written to exhibit the full resources of large orchestras like the Hallé; and, by contrast, more modest pieces: for wind band, string orchestra and even small chamber groups. Each work, of course, was re-orchestrated to suit the needs of NBT, John Longstaff  producing, as if by magic, a brilliantly cohesive score both in its overall sound and its faithfulness to Arnold’s unique orchestral colours.

The choice of Malcolm Arnold was particularly appropriate, for he was something of a musketeer himself (at least, when on his best behaviour), and his music, like:

Dumas’s romantic drama, unashamedly wears its heart on its sleeve.  Back in 1975, too, Arnold came close to writing a Three Musketeers ballet, for which a few musical sketches survive. David Drew, one of the Royal Ballet’s greatest stalwarts, was the catalyst, seeking Arnold’s collaboration for the ballet which he himself was intending to choreograph. They spent a day exploring the project, but although David had his own three-act scenario by then and set and costume designs by Terence Emery, Arnold (shortly to be in the throes of a terrible breakdown) never took things further.

In 2003, when Paul Harris and I were researching our Arnold biography, David Drew gave us the full story of his aborted Musketeers. The idea of combining Dumas and Arnold seemed so inspired that, a little later, I suggested to David that although the sketches were probably too fragmentary to be developed usefully, a composite score from Arnold’s vast output of published works might well be possible.  To put this theory to the test, I played David piece after piece. I soon discovered an immediate  glint in his eye meant Yes;  the lack of a glint, No.   Most encouragingly, the Yes’s swiftly outweighed the No’s, and it was not long before we were sounding out David Nixon, famous for his achievements in narrative ballets.

David, although, as ever, hugely busy, was so interested that we were soon sitting round the Drew dining-table like the Three Wise Men, listening to more and more Arnold, our host entertaining us from time to time by going into his dance (the cheeky Galop from the 2nd Brass Suite, which alas, in the end, didn’t quite make the cut).  With NBT’s David it was not so much a question of glints as thoughtful, far-away looks (Yes) and puzzled gentlemanly silence (No).  Both Davids, of course, knew exactly what would and wouldn’t work in the theatre. It was clear that, even at this early stage, a new Nixon ballet was already taking physical shape in his mind’s eye. As soon as a rough working score had been agreed, John Pryce-Jones and John Longstaff came along. They listened carefully, liked what they heard, and the project moved on.   

The score grew organically; before and during rehearsals there were some further changes. When, for example, David wanted extra input for the washerwomen in Act One, he and John Longstaff admitted one of the well-known English Dances, which, in deference to MacMillan’s Solitaire, we had previously excluded. Another late and inspired decision was the use of the Vivace from the Second Symphony for the ‘cat fight’ between Constance and Milady.

And so, in Bradford, a new work was born, and one which clearly offers a highly talented company a real show-piece for their skills. Such is the tireless invention of David Nixon’s choreography - gloriously romantic one moment, thrillingly daring the next – that it is almost impossible to pick out favourite sections. But I’ll offer the five I would most like with me on a desert island: the virtuoso celebrations (to the rousing Duke of Cambridge March) after the four heroes and Constance have overcome the forces of evil in Calais; Buckingham and the Queen, dancing behind closed doors to their own highly lyrical theme tune; D’Artagnan and Constance, shyly expressing their love in a ravishingly beautiful pas de deux at the end of Act One (what a curtain!);  Buckingham and Milady in England, spurred on by the most romantic music since Tchaikovsky, steamily mixing business with pleasure; and D’Artagnan and Constance in yet another fine pas de deux, starting in back-to-back bondage and danced to ‘Constance’s Sad Theme’, the only Musketeers sketch which Arnold later fully developed. There is so much to admire in David Nixon’s Three Musketeers, but, for many of us, ‘Constance’s Sad Theme’ is the very heart of the ballet: a reminder of Arnold’s cruelly frustrated ambitions, and their late and very special realisation".

Copyright: Anthony Meredith
Gramophone – September 2007. To read Edward Greenfield's review of the above recording, please follow this lin

 

 

Decca announce Arnold edition -  The Malcolm Arnold Edition is the largest-ever collection of his concert music. It embraces 61 works, assembled in three Volumes totalling no less than 13 CDs. At the core of The Malcolm Arnold Edition are the 44 Arnold works recorded by Conifer Classics in the 1980’s and ‘90s. The Conifer Arnold project began at a time when Arnold’s concert music was still largely ignored. It contributed greatly to the re-evaluation of Arnold as a composer of concert music and the revival of his popularity. It includes many works recorded for the first time. The composer was in attendance at many of the recording sessions. Follow this link for full details of the Arnold Edition.

 

Andrew McGregor, presenter of BBC Radio 3 CD Review, looks at the comprehensive survey of Arnold’s orchestral works on Decca, originally intended for release as an 85th birthday tribute..

Click Here to read the review

Click to see the full image

Bright Jewels - Music from the 1940s and 1950s

Maestro Sound & Vision: MSV0214CD

(Concert Piece for Percussion & Piano/Beauty Haunts the Woods/John Clare Cantata/ English Dances set 2 arr. Reizenstein piano duet/Divertimento for Wind Trio/ The Peacock in the Zoo/ Piano Pieces Vol. 2/ Purple Dust/ Ragtime/ Scherzetto/ 2 Sketches for Oboe & Piano/ Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano/ Sonatina for Recorder and Piano/ Solitaire arr. recorder and piano/ Suite Bourgeoise)

Those who think of Sir Malcolm Arnold as the composer of highly colourful orchestral music or as one of the greatest of film music composers will be very pleasantly surprised by what is to be found on these two discs. Arnold embraced every musical genre from songs to choral music, operas and ballets, piano miniatures, and a whole range of sonatas and sonatinas as well as a considerable body of chamber music.Many of these appear here on disc for the first time.

The earliest work in this set is his evocative and haunting song, Beauty Haunts the Woods (1938), a setting of some words by his elder sister Ruth, who was a great inspiration to the young Arnold. Poet, artist, feminist and lover of jazz, the daring Ruth Arnold was way ahead of her time and the teenage composer adored her. More songs came in 1953, when Arnold was at the height of his film career. He was approached to write some incidental music for Sean O’Casey’s play Purple Dust andserved up a collection of riotous songs. Ten years later, as a special treat, he set a poem written by his young daughter Katherine, The Peacock in the Zoo.  A sunny and slightly jazzy song it must have been a pleasant distraction from the fourteen episodes of a TV series, Espionage, with which he was grappling at the time.

Arnold is not well known for his choral music yet the John Clare Cantata is a little gem, highly engaging and often beautiful with hints of Benjamin Britten. It was written in 1955 just before his enormous success at the Proms with the tone poem Tam O’Shanter. Another great success was his two sets of English Dances (1950/51), perhaps more responsible than any other of his compositions for establishing his name before the general public. We hear the second set here in the more unusual version for piano duet, arranged by the composer Franz Reizenstein. Though in the tradition of ‘English’ works by the likes of Holst and Vaughan Williams, Arnold did not draw on actual folk music – the tunes are all his own. 1951 was also the year of perhaps his most performed instrumental work, the Sonatina for Clarinet. Hugely extrovert and tuneful it was given its first performance by Colin Davis in his pre-conducting days. Jack Thurston, though, was the real inspiration behind it. Arnold’s long-time friend, he was also the recipient of the marvellous First Clarinet Concerto. When asked about the gorgeous slow movement, Arnold once explained enigmatically, “I didn’t want it to sound like Bartok.” 

Arnold would always choose his friends to play for him in his film sessions and he would always make sure that there was a lot for them to do. In 1954 he wrote the music to a British comedy, You Know what Sailors are.  Thurston was again central to Arnold’s thinking as there is a wonderful (and extended) scene which features one of his most tongue-in-cheek creations - Scherzetto for clarinet and piano. Whether or not the film will live on, this little gem is surely destined to become a jewel in the clarinettist’s repertoire of encore pieces!

The previous year saw the composition of the Sonatina for Recorder, the last of his four wind sonatinas which hints at earlier times with its gentle and melodious Chaconne and concluding Rondo. The recorder is also soloist in Solitaire, a piece that has quite a history.  It began life as a piano solo for a TV commercial for a particular brand of cigarettes; in the event it was not used. Arnold then arranged it to be whistled by his friend John Amis for a radio programme. Here the recorder takes on the John Amis role.  The earlier piano version (Theme for Players) is also included.

Arnold began writing for piano as early as 1937, when the sixteen-year-old presented his mother with short pieces as birthday and Christmas presents. The earliest piano piece here is The Dream City, a delightful miniature composed on December 24th 1938, making its purpose quite clear. Flamenco owes its origins to the silver screen - the 1952 film It Started in Paradise, an unusually plush, Lana Turner-esque production that was very popular in its day. Constance’s Sad Dance is one of a series of sketches Arnold wrote for a proposed ballet version of The Three Musketeers.  Though illness and financial problems saw to it that the ballet was never really begun, this lovely piece eventually found its way into the slow movement of the Flute Sonata, written a few years later for James Galway.

So much of Arnold’s music was written for friends.  The Wind Divertimento of 1952 was for Richard Adeney, Sidney Sutcliffe and Stephen Waters. The famous critic, Felix Aprahamian, was openly chuckling out loud at each new musical joke at an early performance. The six movements are expertly written and exploit each instrument brilliantly.  James Blades (another close friend and the man who plays the actual gong at the beginning of those Rank Organisation films) was the recipient of another unashamedly witty work – the Concert Piece for Percussion and Piano, possibly the first piece of its kind.

Also for piano (two pianos this time) is the Ragtime of 1942.  Arnold was a pacifist and his hatred of war is clearly an influence.  So too are his love of jazz and his enormous regard for his teacher Constant Lambert.  Another wartime work is the charming and insouciant Suite Bourgeoise - an impudent five-movement work  encompassing a tango, a hard rock number, the most amorous of ballads that would happily accompany any 1940s romance and a jazz-waltz.  It is truly a musical treasure. Written at the same time were the Two Sketches for Oboe and Piano.  The oboist Ivor Slaney (who later became a bandleader) was probably the dedicatee.

Here then is a side of Malcolm Arnold perhaps new to some.  This is music which displays a certain sophistication whether serious, charming or witty. You’ll feel you’re much better acquainted with the man through knowing these delightful works.  

©Paul Harris 2006

 

 

For new recordings, follow this link

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Sir Malcolm Arnold: Burlesque for horn and orchestra (world premiere) Discovery of a missing manuscript by one of Britain’s greatest living composers is always an exciting event. Realisation that it is one of their earliest mature compositions - an unfinished work for horn and orchestra - makes it doubly so. For the full story of this exciting find follow this link to Alan Poulton's article on this newly discovered work which was premiered at last year’s Arnold Festival at the Royal and Derngate Theatre in Northampton on 22 October

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Malcolm Arnold: Rogue Genius - David Mellor writes of Tony Meredith and Paul Harris' new biography Malcolm Arnold: Rogue Genius. 'This is both a serious study of an important and much misunderstood composer and a most entertaining book, which, once started, is hard to put down. It seems to me to achieve precisely what Malcolm Arnold himself set out to achieve in his music: to be inclusive, embracing the very broadest appeal possible and determinedly leaping over artificial boundaries of dull categorisation.' Order online via this link.

The Life and Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold: The Brilliant and the Dark - interweaving biographical details with close analyses of Sir Malcolm's major works, particularly the nine symphonies, and drawing on sketch materials never previously examined, Paul Jackson's new biography provides fascinating insights into the composer's compositional process. Order online via this link.

 

The Portrait depicted on the cover of this new book is a work by:

Gerhard van der Grinten

A new book on Sir Malcolm Arnold's music is now available. Entitled Malcolm Arnold - A Composer of Real Music: Symphonic Writing, Style and Aesthetics, author Dr Raphael Thoene has analysed in depth the composer's symphonic music.

"Drawing upon a wide range of available sources, including those only very recently accessible, Thoene reveals Arnold's composition aesthetics and identifies possible influences (e.g.  Mahler and Sibelius) by providing clear music-theory-orientated evidence.  The composer's oeuvre is here scientifically categorised within the British contemporary classical music  movement of the 20th and 21st centuries"

Dr Thoene believes that "Arnold's extremely demanding oeuvre, in which he combines orchestral brilliance with his sense of syntactic compositional unity, easily overcomes the prejudicial barriers of serious and light music. Perhaps Arnold's life is portrayed in his works like no other British composers. Arnold's music is full of energy, but can turn lightness into the deepest melancholy; its musical intensity makes it almost impossible not to be touched by it. His compositions underline the charisma of his personality."
ISBN 978-3937748061

Click Here to purchase the book

"To download Dr Thoene's lecture entitled Elgar's influence on Malcolm Arnold (1921-2006): Elgar's Pomp and Circumstances as a model for a British concert overture? given  at the Institute of Music Research, Gresham College on 14 December, 2007 Click Here To Download

Dr Thoene has since been invited to present a paper at the Society for Musicology in Ireland Annual Conference (May 9-11) at the Waterford Institute of Technology.His paper is entitled: "Malcolm Arnold, the unprogressive? Thoughts on the modernist nature of some of his late symphonies"

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New video - Towards an Unknown Region released on video - acclaimed film maker Tony Palmer's portrait of Sir Malcolm, made for TV's South Bank Show, is now available on DVD and VHS video. Follow this link to buy online.

Arnold audio interviews available from BBC web site - four interviews with Sir Malcolm can be heard online via this link.

Arnold on the web - Arts and music web site On An Overgrown Path asks is Arnold's 9th Symphony a neglected 20th century masterpiece?

"Secret Symphonies on internet radio"

New publications - new works available from Queen's Temple Publications  

 

News archive  

 

Performance archives (these pages are undergoing reconstruction)  

 

Archival research (the documentary films)  

 

Archive of  Autumn of 2004 events  
 

 

 

 

Malcolm Arnold in 1948

 

 

 


 




Anna Hashimoto (clarinet) and the Arnold Sinfonia, conductor Kevin Hill







 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3 Musketeers images are Copyright

 

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3 Musketeers images are Copyright

 

3 Musketeers images are Copyright

 

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3 Musketeers images are Copyright
Merlin Hendy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Prema Kesselman,
winner of the 2006 Arnold Concerto Prize.
(Photo credit Maria Martins)