Views And Reviews: Arnold’s Little Suite No. 1
Paul Serotsky introduces us to Malcolm Arnold’s Little Suite No.1, a set of three pieces composed for the inaugural concert of the National Youth Orchestra.
For more of Paul’s scintillating words on the greatest music ever written please click on http://www.openwriting.com/archives/views_and_reviews/
Arnold (1921-2006) – Suite: Little Suite No. 1
Paul Serotsky introduces us to Malcolm Arnold’s Little Suite No.1, a setoff tghree pieces composed for the inaugural concert of the National Youth Orchestra.
For more of Paul’s scintillating words on the greatest music ever written please click on http://www.openwriting.com/archives/views_and_reviews/
It's well-known that the “democratic” brilliance of Arnold's scoring results from the diligent application of his intimate inside knowledge of the orchestra. The less obvious side of this coin is beautifully illustrated by the Little Suite No. 1, which is the published title of a set of three pieces, To Youth, composed in 1948 for the inaugural concert of the National Youth Orchestra.
In consideration of the relatively limited capabilities of the young players (then, though certainly not these days!), Arnold kept the string parts simple, and incorporated plenty of doubling between parts. The craft was in the doing – while the art lay in the disguising of the doing, for the music betrays no obvious sign of contrivance. Quite the contrary – it carries as devastating a left hook as the most virtuosic of orchestral works.
1. Prelude: maestoso. Launching a melody fit to feed a full symphonic movement, and not so much showing his influences as showing off his influences, Arnold steers us through Waltonian grandiloquence which dissolves disconcertingly into Shostakovichian introspection – but not, as we might expect, “and back again”. Instead, the music fades away, leaving us wondering if it was just a dream.
2. Dance: larghetto. By way of contrast, the utterly disarming central movement (originally entitled “pastoral”) deposits us in a meadow of English Dances territory – except that they were still three years in the future! All is sunshine and buttercups – plus the occasional harmonic tussock.
3. March: allegro con brio. It's hat-holding time! This cracking quick-fire march needs little comment, other than the observations that Arnold's deft tunefulness, that was to stand him in such good stead in his film career, is well in evidence and that he was clearly well aware just how much kids enjoy making a right old racket.
© Paul Serotsky, 2001
