The Wand of Youth explained

The Wand of Youth Suites No. 1 and No. 2 are works for orchestra by Edward Elgar, first performed in 1907 and 1908 respectively. The titles Elgar gave them were, in full: The Wand of Youth (Music to a Child's Play) First Suite, Op. 1a (1869–1907) and The Wand of Youth (Music to a Child's Play) Second Suite, (Op. 1b). The music was drawn from material written by the composer in his youth and orchestrated forty years or so later.

History

Elgar wrote a programme note for Fred Gaisberg of His Master's Voice in connection with a recording of the suites in 1929. He explained that they were drawn from music he had written as a boy for family theatricals. The note opened:

Throughout his life Elgar kept musical sketchbooks in which he jotted down musical ideas as they came to him, to be drawn on as wanted in future compositions.[1] His early sketchbooks, which date back to 1867, show that in addition to the music composed for the family play, some was originally intended for chamber music, or wind quintet or the Powick Asylum dance music he wrote as a young man for the Worcester City and County Lunatic Asylum.[2]

At around the time of his fiftieth birthday, with several successes to his credit but struggling to write a symphony and frustrated at his temporary failure of inspiration, Elgar turned to his early sketchbooks.[3] The first Wand of Youth suite was not written to commission but at the composer's own instigation. The suite remained untitled during its composition and Elgar called it The Wand of Youth only after it was complete; it is not known why he chose that title.[2] He gave the suites the opus numbers 1a and 1b in recognition that they were his earliest surviving compositions, albeit rescored for full orchestra.[4]

The two suites were published by Novello, the first in late 1907 and the second in 1908.[5]

First Suite

The Wand of Youth (Music to a Child's Play) First Suite, Op. 1a (1869–1907) is dedicated "To my friend C. Lee Williams". It is scored for 2 flutes (one doubling piccolo, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B & A, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets in B, C & A, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani (3), 2 percussionists (with bass drum & cymbals, triangle & snare drum), harp and string section. Not all these instruments are played in all sections.[6]

The suite was first performed at the Queen's Hall, London on 14 December 1907, conducted by Henry Wood. It consists of seven sections:

1. Overture

Elgar reworked this movement from sketches dating back to 1879. The opening theme is extrovert and fast moving, marked allegro molto in in the key of B.[7] The second theme, marked largamente, with characteristic Elgarian falling sevenths, is more expansive.[8] [9] The Elgar scholar Michael Kennedy finds in the second theme hints of the first subject of Elgar's Violin Concerto.[10]

2. Serenade

The Serenade (andantino) in F[11] is a gently lilting movement with an initial clarinet melody later taken over by the violins and then alternated between strings and woodwinds.[8]

3. Minuet (Old Style)

The Minuet, in G major,[12] is a 17th-century pastiche originally dating (in short score) from 1881.[8] Marked andante in, the opening bars have the annotation "The two old people enter".[12] Kennedy calls the movement "an affectionate tribute to Handel" with nothing of Haydn or Mozart in it.[13] Reviewing the first performance, The Times commented, "It may be doubted whether the mature composer would have given the name of 'Minuet' to a movement that is unmistakably in the saraband form".[14]

4. Sun Dance

The movement is in C major, in presto time.[15] The music dates from 1878.[2] The order of the music in the two suites does not follow that of the action in the unstaged play. The Sun Dance depicts the two old people being awakened (by glittering lights flashed in their eyes by means of hand-mirrors) from the sleep into which they have been charmed in the Slumber Scene, which in the suite follows two movements later. Kennedy compares it with the "Dorabella" section of the Enigma Variations: "stylish and fluent woodwind writing". It has a central waltz section and virtuoso music for the harp towards the end.[13] Elgar reused this movement for his later score for The Starlight Express.[8]

5. Fairy Pipers

The marking is G major,, allegretto.[16] Elgar annotated the opening bars, "Two fairy pipers pass by in a boat, and charm them to sleep".[16] Two clarinets in thirds play a gentle melody over a rocking string accompaniment. The strings then have a theme which Kennedy finds "yearning" and comparable to "the rarefied atmosphere of the introduction to Part II of Gerontius".[13]

6. Slumber Scene

The movement is in G major,, moderato, for muted strings with two bassoons and a single horn.[17] The double bass line uses only the open strings: Elgar noted, "the simplicity of the bass made it possible for a child who knew nothing of music on any instrument to grind out the bass". Diana McVeagh comments that Elgar's harmonic shifts over the bass are "a tour de force, the soporific rhythm soothing, never monotonous".[2]

7. Fairies and Giants

The final movement of the suite is in D major, marked presto in time.[18] The music portraying the fairies (the children) is in a tarantella rhythm, while that for the giants (the adults) has brass and bassoons with unison strings in heavy detached crotchets. The main theme dates back to a work entitled Humoreske which the young Elgar wrote in 1867,[8] [19] and is the earliest of his music known to exist.[20]

Second Suite

The Wand of Youth (Music to a Child's Play) Second Suite, (Op. 1b) – is dedicated to Hubert A. Leicester. It is scored for 2 flutes (second doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B & A, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets in B, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani (3), 3 percussionists (with tambourine, bass drum & cymbals, side drum, bell in E & triangle), harp and string section. Not all these instruments are played in all sections.[21]

The suite was first performed at Worcester (as part of the Three Choirs Festival) on 9 September 1908, conducted by the composer.[22] There are six movements:

1. March

The opening of the march is variously described by musical analysts as "tense and hesitant",[13] having "an air of pensive expectancy",[9] and "in sombre mood ... in the key of E in with much use of triplet rhythms". The trio section, in G major, gives the strings a jaunty, skipping rhythm.[9] Elgar's 1929 programme note records that the march was composed to conclude the family play.

2. The Little Bells (Scherzino)

Like the first movement of the suite, the second has two contrasting sections. The opening allegro molto, in E, has a prominent part for the glockenspiel.[23] The slower middle section has a wistful theme,[9] using a five note falling phrase in the melodic minor.[8]

3. Moths and Butterflies (Dance)

The movement, marked allegretto, is in C major, in time.[24] In the planned play the delicate flutterings of the moths and butterflies draw the two old people across the bridge to Fairyland.[9] Kennedy compares the music to that of a Tchaikovsky ballet.[25]

4. Fountain Dance

The G major Fountain Dance, marked allegretto comodo, is in time.[26] The music depicts gracefully rising and falling jets of water, the lower strings and timpani forming a drone bass.[8] According to the composer's programme note, in the planned play "the water was induced to follow the music by means of the interior economy of a football".

5. The Tame Bear

In time, the C major movement is marked allegro moderato.[27] The music depicts a tame bear dancing to a tambourine.[28] Kennedy writes that the poignant mood of the movement is marked by the use of plagal cadences.[25] Elgar's wife commented that the music showed the composer's sympathy with "the poor bear – captive, made to dance".[2]

6. The Wild Bears

The final movement, in C major, is marked presto, in time.[29] The original thematic material comes from Elgar's sketchbooks from the time of the family play, and was reused for one of a set of five Powick quadrilles entitled L'Assomoir (1879).[30] Kennedy calls the movement "a romp, which is also one of Elgar's most exotic pieces of orchestration".[25]

Recordings

There are complete recordings made from 1929 to the 21st century. In the era of the LP record a full Suite (each lasting around 20 minutes) fitted conveniently on one side of a disc.[31] The suites have continued to be recorded for CD, often in tandem with other shorter pieces by Elgar such as the Nursery Suite.

OrchestraConductorIssued
London SymphonySir Edward Elgar1929
Liverpool PhilharmonicSir Malcolm Sargent1949
London PhilharmonicSir Adrian Boult1954
London PhilharmonicEduard van Beinum1955
London Philharmonic Sir Adrian Boult1968
Ulster OrchestraBryden Thomson1984
English String OrchestraWilliam Boughton1988
Royal Liverpool PhilharmonicVernon Handley1989
Indianapolis SymphonyRaymond Leppard1991
Welsh National OperaSir Charles Mackerras1992
Academy of Saint Martin in the FieldsSir Neville Marriner1994
New Zealand SymphonyJames Judd2004
HalléSir Mark Elder2018

Ballet

In 1985 Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet staged a new ballet by Michael Corder, The Wand of Youth. The music was mainly from the first of the two Elgar suites, with two movements from the second and one from the Nursery Suite. The main characters are two young people and their friends, seen first in tranquillity in the Edwardian era in which Elgar's two suites were premiered, and later in the carnage of the First World War. The men are all killed, and the women are left on their own to age with their memories.[32]

Notes, references and sources

Sources

. Edward Elgar . The Wand of Youth: First Suite. 1908. 1936. London. Novello. 1223590596.

. Edward Elgar . The Wand of Youth: Second Suite. 1908. 1936. London. Novello. 2881377.

. Diana McVeagh. Elgar’s musical language: the shorter instrumental works. Grimley. Daniel. Julian Rushton . The Cambridge Companion to Elgar. 2011. Cambridge . Cambridge University Press. 978-1-13-900225-7.

. Jerrold Northrop Moore . Elgar On Record: The Composer and the Gramophone. 1974. London and New York . Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-315434-6.

Notes and References

  1. Moore (1999), p. 48
  2. McVeagh, p. 59
  3. Moore (1999), p. 514
  4. Adams, p. 69
  5. Craggs, pp. 81–82
  6. Elgar (1936: 1), pp. 1, 12, 21, 23, 45, 52 and 55
  7. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 1
  8. Walker, Malcolm (1983). Notes to Chandos CD CHAN 8318
  9. Burn, Andrew (2018). Notes to Hallé CD CDHLL7548
  10. Kennedy, p. 19
  11. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 12
  12. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 21
  13. Kennedy, p. 20
  14. "Concerts", The Times, 16 December 1907, p. 4
  15. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 23
  16. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 45
  17. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 52
  18. Elgar (1936: 1), p. 55
  19. Moore (1999), p. 33
  20. Willetts, p. 34
  21. Elgar (1936: 2), pp. 1, 27, 47, 57, 66 and 80
  22. Craggs, p. 82
  23. Elgar (1936: 2), p. 27
  24. Elgar (1936: 2), p. 47
  25. Kennedy, p. 21
  26. Elgar (1936: 2), p. 57
  27. Elgar (1936: 2), p. 66
  28. Anderson, p. 367
  29. Elgar (1936: 2), p. 80
  30. Willetts, p. 28
  31. March, p. 359
  32. Percival, John. "Dance", The Times, 5 October 1985, p. 7; and "Corder reveals his strengths", The Stage, 17 October 1985, p. 29