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Oliver Knussen Day, Britten Studio, Snape Maltings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2023

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Abstract

Type
FIRST PERFORMANCES
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

A trill sends a barely audible note spluttering into life, forming snatched phrases that evolve into a lyrical melody. Violinist Tamsin Waley-Cohen coaxes rainbow colours from the upper-octave section; it's so compelling that it takes a moment to notice the piano has begun its fragmented commentary – an unassuming entry that echoes the violin's own juddery beginnings. Reflection, op. 31a, may have been selected for its editorial connotations – the piece opens Aldeburgh Festival's Oliver Knussen Day, three recitals dedicated to the composer-conductor who passed away in 2018 – but its title isn't an evocative musing, so much a description of the compositional device. Pianist Huw Watkins repeats and refracts Waley-Cohen's expressions, until the two eventually meet, aligning in a final flourish.

The eight-minute work is one of the longest pieces featured in this morning recital, which includes just one other work by Knussen – Ophelia's Last Dance, op. 32, a gentle, dream-like waltz for solo piano that's increasingly been taken up by pianists since Kirill Gerstein included it on his recording of Liszt's Dante sonata with Schumann's Humoreske (Myrios Classics, MYR005). A substantial work packed with filigree melodies and taking a quasi-impressionistic style, it focuses on the resonant, mid-range of the piano. (The thematic material stems from discarded sketches for Knussen's Third Symphony, which, in a different guise, would also be used in the ensemble piece Ophelia Dances, Book 1.) It is exquisitely crafted, economical but never austere, whispering its secrets into the Britten Studio.

Knussen – artistic director of Aldeburgh Festival from 1983 to 1998, a resident of Snape and regular fixture on festival programmes – was a collaborative colleague. Many of the composers he worked with were featured throughout the day, with several in attendance. One of these was Tansy Davies, who was among the audience to hear the premiere of gem (2022), a compact and engaging piece for solo cello, one of 13 played by the intrepid Anssi Karttunen. Colin Matthews was present for the first UK performance of 2020's Three Fragments, also for solo cello, which mixed elegiac writing with an unbuttoned dance-like movement.

Other short musical tributes included Hans Werner Henze's Olly on the shore (2001) – a play on the folk song Molly on the shore and a nod to Knussen's life on the Suffolk coast; Esa-Pekka Salonen's 2022 Arabesques for Olly; Detlev Glanert's Little Letter to Olly (2021); and Julian Anderson's Maisema (2019) – the latter three being premieres. Morning turned to afternoon with selection of songs by Mussorgsky, performed by soprano Claire Booth and pianist Christopher Glynn. On the face of it, the soundworlds of nineteenth-century Russian villages and the English coast circa today have little in common. But the influence of Mussorgsky is felt throughout Knussen's oeuvre, from the bells in his opera The Nursery (a reference to Boris Godunov) to Cleveland Pictures, op. 31, from which clear parallels can be drawn with Pictures at an Exhibition (both of which were performed in the evening concert; see below). We emerge from the studio, blinking into brightness.

The second two recitals followed a virtually identical format: a couple of pieces by Knussen himself, alongside dedications and the odd historic work. It was interesting to hear Knussen's one-minute tarantella written for Kaija Saariaho's 50th birthday – which uses the cipher SAARiAHo (E♭–A–A–D–A–B♮) – alongside Saariaho's own musical message, a lullaby composed shortly after Knussen's death. Both were played by Karttunen, who had delivered the original birthday message back in 2002. The cellist had a demanding role throughout the day, with the majority of pieces scored with him in mind (such as Brad Lubman's For Anssi for OK). This, combined with the number of mentees featured, created an often homogenous soundscape – a School of Knussen. Former students, such as Mark-Anthony Turnage, whose 2020 piece Song for Big Owl: 66 Bars in Memory of Oliver Knussen was premiered, joined the growing audience. But there was always going to be an element of hagiography to such an occasion, the first opportunity since the pandemic that Aldeburgh Festival had to commemorate one of its own. Knussen might not have the same level of notoriety as some of his contemporaries, but at Snape he garnered respect that bordered on reverence. I recall walking into the Plough and Sail after a Saturday morning recital. Our entire party fell silent as we registered Knussen enjoying refreshment with the festival's then artistic director Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Tamara Stefanovich. Dutch courage secured, compliments were paid and humbly received – the cult surrounding the composer-conductor was simply that.

Zoë Martlew's O-lude provided a welcome change in style. Scored for cello (again) and electronics, it featured some very personal sounds – Karttunen pulled the ring on a can of Diet Coke, Knussen's chosen poison, from a bag emblazoned with a picture of an owl, and took a dramatic slurp. It injected a moment of poignant humour before the concluding piece, Knussen's Secret Psalm, originally written for the memorial concert for Michael Vyner, artistic director of the London Sinfonietta, a still meditation on life and art.

The BBC Symphony Orchestra and Ryan Wigglesworth provided a dazzling addendum to the day over in the Snape Maltings concert hall with the first public performance of Cleveland Pictures (2003–08), an unfinished work that depicts pieces from the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Four (nos 1, 2, 4 and 5) are complete, while the others are significant fragments. The 16-minute work was repeated during the concert, one of Knussen's own programming techniques. It was played alongside the 1994 horn concerto and Mussorgsky's A Night on Bare Mountain and Pictures at an Exhibition, a dramatic and fitting testament to two composers lost too soon.