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Arthur Bliss

Sir Arthur Edward Drummond Bliss CH KCVO (2 August 1891 – 27 March 1975) was an English composer and conductor.

Arthur Bliss c. 1922 (photograph by Herbert Lambert)

Bliss's musical training was cut short by the First World War, in which he served with distinction in the army. In the post-war years he quickly became known as an unconventional and modernist composer, but within the decade he began to display a more traditional and romantic side in his music. In the 1920s and 1930s he composed extensively not only for the concert hall, but also for films and ballet.

In the Second World War, Bliss returned to England from the US to work for the BBC and became its director of music. After the war he resumed his work as a composer, and was appointed Master of the Queen's Music.

In Bliss's later years, his work was respected but was thought old-fashioned, and it was eclipsed by the music of younger colleagues such as William Walton and Benjamin Britten. Since his death, his compositions have been well represented in recordings, and many of his better-known works remain in the repertoire of British orchestras.

Biography

Early years

 
Diverse influences on the young Bliss: Elgar and Stravinsky (top); Vaughan Williams (lower left) and Ravel

Bliss was born in Barnes, a London suburb, the eldest of three sons of Francis Edward Bliss (1847–1930), a businessman from Massachusetts, and his second wife, Agnes Kennard née Davis (1858–1895).[1]

Agnes Bliss died in 1895, and the boys were brought up by their father, who instilled in them a love for the arts.[2] Bliss was educated at Bilton Grange preparatory school, Rugby and Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he studied classics, but also took lessons in music from Charles Wood.[1] Other influences on him during his Cambridge days were Edward Elgar, whose music made a lasting impression on him, and E.J. Dent.[3]

Bliss graduated in classics and music in 1913 and then studied at the Royal College of Music in London for a year.[1] At the RCM he found his composition tutor, Sir Charles Stanford, of little help to him,[2][n 1] but found inspiration from Ralph Vaughan Williams and Gustav Holst and his fellow-students, Herbert Howells, Eugene Goossens and Arthur Benjamin.[5]

In his brief time at the college he got to know the music of the Second Viennese School and the repertory of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, with music by modern composers such as Debussy, Ravel and Stravinsky.[2]

When the First World War broke out, Bliss joined the army, and fought in France as an officer in the Royal Fusiliers until 1917 and then in the Grenadier Guards for the rest of the war. His bravery earned him a mention in despatches, and he was twice wounded and once gassed.[2][5]

His younger brother, Kennard, was killed in the war, and his death affected Bliss deeply. The music scholar Byron Adams writes, "Despite the apparent heartiness and equilibrium of the composer's public persona, the emotional wounds inflicted by the war were deep and lasting."[6] In 1918, Bliss converted to Roman Catholicism.[1]

Early compositions

 
Bliss, caricatured in 1921 by F. Sancha

Although he had begun composing while still a schoolboy, Bliss later suppressed all his juvenilia, and, with the single exception of his 1916 Pastoral for clarinet and piano, reckoned the 1918 work Madam Noy as his first official composition.[2] With the return of peace, his career took off rapidly as a composer of what were, for British audiences, startlingly new pieces, often for unusual ensembles, strongly influenced by Ravel, Stravinsky and the young French composers of Les Six.[1] Among these are a concerto for wordless tenor voice, piano and strings (1920),[n 2] and Rout for wordless soprano and chamber ensemble (subsequently revised for orchestra), which received a double encore at its first performance.[n 3]

In 1919, he arranged incidental music from Elizabethan sources for As You Like It at Stratford-on-Avon, and conducted a series of Sunday concerts at Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, where he also conducted Pergolesi's opera La serva padrona.[7] Viola Tree's production of The Tempest at the Aldwych Theatre in 1921, interspersed incidental music by Thomas Arne and Arthur Sullivan, with new music by Bliss for an ensemble of male voices, piano, trumpet, trombone, gongs and five percussionists dispersed through the theatre.[8]

The Times wrote that "Bliss was acquiring a reputation as a tearaway" by the time he was commissioned, through Elgar's influence, to write a large-scale symphonic work (A Colour Symphony) for the Three Choirs Festival of 1922.[5] The work was well received; in The Manchester Guardian, Samuel Langford called Bliss "far and away the cleverest writer among the English composers of our time";[9] The Times praised it highly (though doubting if much was gained by the designation of the four movements as purple, red, blue and green) and commented that the symphony confirmed Bliss's transition from youthful experimenter to serious composer.[10] After the third performance of the work, at the Queen's Hall under Sir Henry Wood, The Times wrote, "Continually changing patterns scintillate … till one is hypnotised by the ingenuity of the thing."[11] Elgar, who attended the first performance, complained that the work was "disconcertingly modern."[12]

In 1923 Bliss's father, who had remarried, decided to retire in the US. He and his wife settled in California. Bliss went with them and remained there for two years, working as a conductor, lecturer, pianist and occasional critic.[5] While there he met Gertrude "Trudy" Hoffmann (1904–2008), youngest daughter of Ralph and Gertrude Hoffmann. They were married in 1925. The marriage was happy and lasted for the rest of Bliss's life; there were two daughters. Soon after the marriage, Bliss and his wife moved to England.[1]

 
Bliss in 1932 by Mark Gertler

From the mid-1920s onwards Bliss moved more into the established English musical tradition, leaving behind the influence of Stravinsky and the French modernists, and in the words of the critic Frank Howes, "after early enthusiastic flirtations with aggressive modernism admitted to a romantic heart and [has] given rein to its less and less inhibited promptings"[13] He wrote two major works with American orchestras in mind, the Introduction and Allegro (1926), dedicated to the Philadelphia Orchestra and Leopold Stokowski, and Hymn to Apollo (1926) for the Boston Symphony and Pierre Monteux.[1]

Bliss began the 1930s with Pastoral (1930). In the same year he wrote Morning Heroes, a work for narrator, chorus and orchestra, written in the hope of exorcising the spectre of the First World War: "Although the war had been over for more than ten years, I was still troubled by frequent nightmares; they all took the same form. I was still there in the trenches with a few men; we knew the armistice had been signed, but we had been forgotten; so had a section of the Germans opposite. It was as though we were both doomed to fight on till extinction. I used to wake with horror."[14]

During the decade Bliss wrote chamber works for leading soloists including a Clarinet Quintet for Frederick Thurston (1932) and a Viola Sonata for Lionel Tertis (1933). In 1935, in the words of the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, "he firmly established his position as Elgar's natural successor with the Romantic, expansive and richly scored Music for Strings."[3] Two dramatic works from this decade remain well known, the music for Alexander Korda's 1936 film of H. G. Wells's Things to Come,[5] and a ballet score to his own scenario based on a chess game. Choreographed by Ninette de Valois, Checkmate was still in the repertoire of the Royal Ballet in 2011.[15]

By the late 1930s, Bliss was no longer viewed as a modernist; the works of his juniors William Walton and the youthful Benjamin Britten were increasingly prominent, and Bliss's music began to seem old-fashioned.[16][17] His last large-scale work of the 1930s was his Piano Concerto, composed for the pianist Solomon, who gave the world premiere at the World's Fair in New York in June 1939. Bliss and his family attended the performance and then stayed on in the US for a holiday. While they were there, the Second World War broke out. Bliss initially stayed in America, teaching at the University of California, Berkeley. He felt impelled to return to England to do what he could for the war effort, and in 1941, leaving his wife and children in California, he made the hazardous Atlantic crossing.[1]

1940s

At first, Bliss found little useful work to do in England. He joined the BBC's overseas music service in May 1941,[18] but was plainly under-employed. He suggested to Sir Adrian Boult, who was at that time both the chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the BBC's director of music, that Boult should step down in his favour from the latter post.[19] Bliss wrote to his wife: "I want more power as I have a lot to give which my comparatively minor post does not allow me to use fully."[20] Boult agreed to the proposal, which freed him to concentrate on conducting.[20][n 4] Bliss served as director of music at the BBC from 1942 to 1944, laying the foundations for the launch of the Third Programme after the war.[1] During the war, he also served on the music committee of the British Council together with Vaughan Williams and William Walton.[22]

In 1944, when Bliss's family returned from the US, he resigned from the BBC and returned to composing, having written nothing since his String Quartet in 1941.[23] He composed more film music, and two ballets, Miracle in the Gorbals (1944),[24] and Adam Zero (1946).[25]

In 1948, Bliss turned his attention to opera, with The Olympians. He and the novelist and playwright J. B. Priestley had been friends for many years, and they agreed to collaborate on an opera, despite their lack of any operatic experience. Priestley's libretto was based on a legend that "the pagan deities, robbed of their divinity, became a troupe of itinerant players, wandering down the centuries".[26] The opera portrays the confusion that results when the actors unexpectedly find themselves restored to deity.[n 5] The opera opened the 1949–50 Covent Garden season. It was directed by Peter Brook, with choreography by Frederick Ashton. The doyen of English music critics, Ernest Newman,[29] praised it highly: "here is a composer with real talent for opera ... in Mr. Priestley he has been fortunate enough to find an English Boito", but generally it received a polite rather than a rapturous reception.[30] Priestley attributed this to the failure of the conductor, Karl Rankl to learn the music or to cooperate with Brook, and to lack of rehearsal of the last act.[26] The critics attributed it to Priestley's inexperience as an opera librettist, and to the occasional lack of "the soaring tune for the human voice" in Bliss's music.[28] After the Covent Garden run of ten performances,[30] the company presented the work in Manchester,[31] but did not revive it in subsequent years; it received a concert performance and broadcast in 1972.[32]

Later years

In 1950, Bliss was knighted.[23] After the death of Sir Arnold Bax he was appointed Master of the Queen's Music in 1953, to the relief of Walton, who feared he would be asked to take the post.[33] In The Times, Howes commented, "The duties of a Master of the Queen's Music are what he chooses to make of them, but they include the composition of ceremonial and occasional music".[13] Bliss, who composed quickly and with facility, was able to discharge the many duties of the post, providing music as required for state occasions, from the birth of a child to the Queen, to the funeral of Winston Churchill, to the investiture of the Prince of Wales.[3][34][35] Howes commended Bliss's Processional for the 1953 coronation, and A Song of Welcome, Bliss's first official pièce d'occasion.[13]

In 1956, Bliss headed the first delegation by British musicians to the Soviet Union since the end of the Second World War. The party included the violinist Alfredo Campoli, the oboist Léon Goossens, the soprano Jennifer Vyvyan, the conductor Clarence Raybould and the pianist Gerald Moore.[36] Bliss returned to Moscow in 1958, as a member of the jury of the International Tchaikovsky Competition, with fellow jurors including Emil Gilels and Sviatoslav Richter.[37]

 
Coventry Cathedral for which Bliss composed The Beatitudes

In addition to his official functions, Bliss continued to compose steadily throughout the 1950s. His works from that decade include his Second String Quartet (1950); a scena, The Enchantress (1951), for the contralto Kathleen Ferrier; a Piano Sonata (1952); and a Violin Concerto (1955), for Campoli. The orchestral Meditations on a Theme by John Blow (1955) was a particularly deep-felt work, and Bliss regarded it highly among his output.[1] In 1959–60 he collaborated with the librettist Christopher Hassall on an opera for television, based on the scriptural story of Tobias and the Angel . It won praise for the way in which Bliss and Hassall had understood and adapted to the more intimate medium of television,[38] though some critics thought Bliss's music competent but unremarkable.[39]

In 1961, Bliss and Hassall collaborated on a cantata, The Beatitudes, commissioned for the opening of the new Coventry Cathedral. Reviews were friendly,[40] but the work has rarely been performed since, and has been eclipsed by another choral work written for Coventry at the same time, Britten's War Requiem.[n 6] Bliss followed this with two further large-scale choral works, Mary of Magdala (1962) and The Golden Cantata (1963).[3]

Throughout his life, Bliss was vigilant on the state of music in Britain, about which he had written extensively since the 1920s.[42] In 1969 he publicly censured the BBC for its plan to cut its classical music budget and disband several of its orchestras. He was delegated by his colleagues Walton, Britten, Peter Maxwell Davies and Richard Rodney Bennett to make a strong protest to William Glock, the BBC's controller of music.[n 7]

Bliss continued to compose into his eighth and ninth decades, in which his works included the Cello Concerto (1970) for Mstislav Rostropovich, the Metamorphic Variations for orchestra (1972),[3] and a final cantata, Shield of Faith (1974), for soprano, baritone, chorus and organ, celebrating 500 years of St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, setting poems chosen from each of the five centuries of the chapel's existence.[44]

Bliss died at his London home in 1975 at the age of 83.[5] His wife Trudy outlived him by 33 years, dying in 2008 at the age of 104.[45]

Music

Early works

The musicologist Christopher Palmer was censorious of those who sought to characterise Bliss's music as "an early tendency to enfant terribilisme yielding very quickly to a compromise with the Establishment and a perpetuating of the Elgar tradition".[17] Nonetheless, as a young man Bliss was certainly regarded as avant garde. Madam Noy, a "witchery" song, was first performed in June 1920. The lyric is by an anonymous author, and the setting is for soprano with flute, clarinet, bassoon, harp, viola, and bass. In a 1923 study of Bliss, Edwin Evans wrote that the piquant instrumental background to the gruesome story established the direction that Bliss was to take. The second Chamber Rhapsody (1919) is "an idyllic work for soprano, tenor, flute, cor anglais, and bass, the two voices vocalising on 'Ah' throughout, and being placed as instruments in the ensemble."[7] Bliss contrasted the pastoral tone of that work with Rout (1920) an uproarious piece for soprano and instrumental ensemble; " the music conveys an impression such as one might gather at an open window at carnival time … the singer is given a series of meaningless syllables chosen for their phonetic effect".[7] In his next work, Conversations for violin, viola, cello, flute and oboe (1921), Bliss chose a deliberately prosaic subject. It consists of five sections, entitled "Committee Meeting," "In the Wood," "In the Ball-room," "Soliloquy," and "In the Tube at Oxford Circus." Evans wrote of this work that although the instrumentation is ingenious, "much of [the] interest is polyphonic, especially in the first and last numbers."[7]

Bliss followed these works with three compositions for larger forces, a Concerto (1920) and Two Orchestral Studies (1920). The Concerto, for piano, voice and orchestra, was experimental, and Bliss later revised it, removing the vocal part. The Melée Fantasque (1921) showed Bliss's skill in writing glittering orchestration.[8]

Mature works

Of Bliss's early works, Rout is occasionally performed, and has been recorded, but the first of his works to enter the repertoire (at least in the UK) is the Colour Symphony. Each of the four movements represents a colour: "purple, the colour of amethysts, pageantry, royalty, and death; red, the colour of rubies, wine, revelry, furnaces, courage, and magic; blue, the colour of sapphires, deep water, skies, loyalty, and melancholy; and green, the colour of emeralds, hope, joy, youth, spring, and victory." The first and third are slow movements, the second a scherzo, and the fourth fugal, described by the Bliss specialist Andrew Burn as "a compositional tour de force, a superbly constructed double fugue, the initial subject slow and angular for strings, gradually becoming an Elgarian ceremonial march, the second a bubbling theme for winds."[46] Burn observes that in three works written soon after his marriage, the Oboe Quintet (1927), Pastoral (1929) and Serenade (1929), "Bliss's voice assumed the mantle of maturity … all are imbued with a quality of contentment reflecting his serenity."[2]

Of the works of Bliss's maturity, Burn comments that many of them were inspired by external stimuli. Some by the performers for whom they were written, such as the concertos for piano (1938), violin (1955) and cello (1970); some by literary and theatrical partners, such as the film music, ballets, cantatas and The Olympians; some by painters, such as the Serenade and the Metamorphic Variations; some by classical literature, such as Hymn to Apollo (1926), The Enchantress, and Pastoral.[2] Of Bliss's works after the Second World War, his opera, The Olympians is generally considered a failure. The idiom was judged to be old-fashioned. A contemporary critic, in a broadly favourable review, wrote, "Bliss has wisely cleared his idiom of modern harmonic astringency. He uses quite a lot of common chords and progressions; in fact, he has gone back to the harmony of the musical gods. The result, inevitably, is a certain air of reminiscence."[47]

Among the late works, the Cello Concerto is one of the more frequently played. When its dedicatee, Rostropovich, gave the first performance at the 1970 Aldeburgh Festival, Britten, who conducted the performance, regarded it as a major work and persuaded Bliss to change its title from "Concertino" to "Concerto". It is an approachable piece of which Bliss said "There are no problems for the listener – only for the soloist".[48]

Both Palmer and Burn comment on a sinister vein that sometimes breaks out in Bliss's music, in passages such as the Interlude "Through the valley of the shadow of Death" in The Meditations on a Theme of John Blow, and the orchestral introduction to The Beatitudes. In Burn's words, such moments can be profoundly disquieting.[2][17] Palmer comments that the musical forerunner of such passages is probably "the extraordinary spectral march-like irruption" in the Scherzo of Elgar's Second Symphony.[17]

In a centenary assessment of Bliss's music, Burn singles out for mention "the youthful vigour of A Colour Symphony", "the poignant humanity of Morning Heroes", "the romantic lyricism of the Clarinet Quintet", "the drama of Checkmate, Miracle in the Gorbals and Things to Come", and "the spiritual probing of the Meditations on a Theme of John Blow and Shield of Faith."[2] Other works of Bliss classed by Palmer as among the finest are the Introduction and Allegro, the Music for Strings, the Oboe Quintet, A Knot of Riddles and the Golden Cantata.[17]

Honours, legacy and reputation

In addition to his knighthood, Bliss was appointed KCVO (1969) and CH (1971).[23] He received honorary degrees from the universities of Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Lancaster, and London, as well as from Princeton University.[23] The London Symphony Orchestra appointed him its honorary President in 1958.[n 8] In 1963, he received the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society.[23]

Bliss's archive is kept at Cambridge University Library. There is an Arthur Bliss Road in Newport, an Arthur Bliss Gardens in Cheltenham and a block of flats, Sir Arthur Bliss Court, in Mitcham, South London.

The Arthur Bliss Society was founded in 2003 to further the knowledge and appreciation of Bliss's music. The society's website includes listings of forthcoming performances of Bliss's works; in March 2011 the following works were listed as scheduled for performance in the UK and U.S.: Ceremonial Prelude; Clarinet Quartet (2 performances); Four Songs for Voice, Violin and Piano; Music for Strings; Pastoral (Lie strewn the white flocks); Royal Fanfares; Seven American Poems; String Quartet No. 2 (5 performances); Things to Come Suite (2 performances); Things to Come March.[50]

Many of Bliss's works have been recorded. He was a capable conductor, and was in charge of some of the recordings. The Library of Cambridge University maintains a complete Bliss discography. In March 2011 it contained details of 281 recordings: 120 orchestral, 56 chamber and instrumental, 58 choral and vocal, and 47 stage and screen works. Among the works that have received multiple recordings are A Colour Symphony (6 recordings); the Cello Concerto (6); the Piano Concerto (6); Music for Strings (7); the Oboe Quintet (7); the Viola Sonata (The violin sonata was first recorded in 2010) (7); and Checkmate (complete ballet and ballet suite (9)).[51]

On receiving the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1963, Bliss said, "I don't claim to have done more than light a small taper at the shrine of music. I do not upbraid Fate for not having given me greater gifts. Endeavour has been the joy".[52] A hundred years after Bliss's birth, Byron Adams wrote,

Of the smaller stars that shone in the ample firmament of twentieth-century English music, the light that coruscated with the greatest brilliance was Sir Arthur Bliss.[6]

See also

Notes and references

Notes
  1. ^ Bliss later made fun of Stanford's reactionary views in a lecture to the Royal Musical Association.[4]
  2. ^ Bliss later revised the work, dropping the vocal part.[5]
  3. ^ The original version was for soprano, flute, clarinet, harp, string quartet, bass, glockenspiel, and side-drum, but Bliss later arranged it for full orchestra, in which form it was subsequently given as an interlude during the 1921 season of the Ballets Russes.[7]
  4. ^ Boult later had cause to regret his generosity. After Bliss left, a director of music was appointed who had a grudge against Boult and engineered his compulsory retirement.[21]
  5. ^ The similarity of Priestley's plot device to that of W. S. Gilbert's for Thespis[27] was unremarked by the critics of The Times, The Manchester Guardian and The Observer.[28]
  6. ^ At 2011, there had been 11 recordings released of the Britten work;[41] the Bliss work had received none.
  7. ^ Of the six BBC orchestras under threat, three survived, but it is not known whether the composers' protests influenced the outcome.[43]
  8. ^ The only other composers to hold this post were Walton (1948–1957) and Leonard Bernstein (1987–1990)[49]
References
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Burn, Andrew. "Bliss, Sir Arthur Edward Drummond (1891–1975)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, October 2009, accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Burn, Andrew. "From Rebel to Romantic: The Music of Arthur Bliss". The Musical Times, August 1991, pp. 383–386; accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  3. ^ a b c d e Cole, Hugo and Andrew Burn. "Bliss, Sir Arthur." Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online; accessed 21 March 2011. (subscription required)
  4. ^ Bliss, Arthur. "Some Aspects of the Present Musical Situation". Proceedings of the Musical Association, 49th Session (1922–1923), pp. 59–77, accessed 23 March 2011 (subscription required)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Obituary, The Times, 29 March 1975, p. 14
  6. ^ a b Adams, Byron. "Bliss on Music", Notes, December 1992), pp. 586–588; accessed 22 March 2011 (subscription required)
  7. ^ a b c d e Evans, Edwin. "Arthur Bliss". The Musical Times, January 1923, pp. 20–23; accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  8. ^ a b Evans, Edwin. "Arthur Bliss". The Musical Times, February 1923, pp. 95–99, accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  9. ^ Langford, Samuel. "Bliss's Colour Symphony", The Manchester Guardian, 8 September 1922, p. 9
  10. ^ "The Three Choirs Festival", The Times, 8 September 1922, p. 13
  11. ^ "Bliss's 'Colour Symphony.' Queen's Hall Concert", The Times, 12 March 1923, p. 15
  12. ^ Program notes of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic Orchestra's February 2010 performance
  13. ^ a b c Howes, Frank, "Sir Arthur Bliss – A modern romantic", The Times, 27 April 1956, p. 3
  14. ^ Bliss (1970), p. 96, quoted in Palmer, Christopher. "Aspects of Bliss". The Musical Times, August 1971, pp. 743–745, accessed 22 March 2011 (subscription required)
  15. ^ "Checkmate". 13 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Birmingham Royal Ballet, accessed 21 March 2011.
  16. ^ Kennedy (1989), p. 96
  17. ^ a b c d e Palmer, Christopher. "Aspects of Bliss". The Musical Times, August 1971, pp. 743–745; accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  18. ^ "New BBC Director of Music", The Times, 1 April 1942, p. 7
  19. ^ Jacobs, p. 367
  20. ^ a b Kennedy, p. 195
  21. ^ Kennedy, p. 215
  22. ^ "News in Brief", The Times, 7 May 1943, p. 6
  23. ^ a b c d e "Bliss, Sir Arthur", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 21 March 2011 (subscription required)
  24. ^ "Sadler's Wells Ballet", The Times, 27 October 1944, p. 6
  25. ^ "Arthur Bliss's New Ballet", The Times, 11 April 1946, p. 6
  26. ^ a b Priestley, J. B. "My Friend Bliss", The Musical Times, August 1971, pp. 740–741, accessed 22 March 2011 (subscription required)
  27. ^ Rees, pp. 30–57
  28. ^ a b "The Royal Opera – 'The Olympians'", The Times, 30 September 1949, p. 6; Hope-Wallace, Philip, "The Olympians", The Manchester Guardian, 30 September 1949, p. 5; and Blom, Eric, "Priestley for Bliss", The Observer 2 October 1949, p. 6
  29. ^ Herbage, Julian. Shostakovitch's Eighth Symphony", The Musical Times, July 1944, p. 201 (subscription required)
  30. ^ a b Haltrecht, p. 132
  31. ^ "Palace Theatre – 'The Olympians'", The Manchester Guardian, 25 March 1950, p. 5
  32. ^ Greenfield, Edward. "The Olympians on Radio 3", The Guardian, 22 February 1972, p. 10
  33. ^ Kennedy (1989) p. 170
  34. ^ Arnold-Forster, Mark. "Birthday Song", The Observer, 21 February 1960, p. 1
  35. ^ Tracey, Edmund. "March of Homage set the stately tone", The Observer, 31 January 1965, p. 4
  36. ^ Bliss, Arthur, "A musical embassy to the USSR – Russia through English eyes", The Times, 1 June 1956, p. 11
  37. ^ "The Jury – 1958" 3 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Tchaikovsky Competition, accessed 22 March 2011
  38. ^ "Bliss's New Opera for Television", The Times, 18 May 1960, p. 18
  39. ^ Heyworth, Peter. "Piedmont in Seville", The Observer, 22 May 1960, p. 22; and Mason, Colin. "Opera on stage and screen." The Guardian, 18 May 1960. p. 7
  40. ^ "Sacred music, but in a secular atmosphere", The Times, 26 May 1962, p. 4; and Mason, Colin. "New music at the Coventry Festival", The Guardian, 26 May 1962, p. 5A
  41. ^ "Britten War Requiem", Gramophone.net; accessed 22 March 2011.
  42. ^ See for example, Bliss, Arthur. "Some Aspects of the Present Musical Situation". Proceedings of the Musical Association, 49th Session (1922–1923), pp. 59–77, accessed 23 March 2011 (subscription required); and Bliss, Arthur. "Aspects of Contemporary Music", The Musical Times, May 1934, pp. 401–05; accessed 23 March 2011 (subscription required)
  43. ^ "Sir Arthur Bliss leads protest on BBC orchestras", The Times, 30 June 1969, p. 3
  44. ^ Howard, Philip. "For England and St George", The Times, 23 April 1975, p. 16
  45. ^ "Lady Bliss". The Telegraph. 21 November 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  46. ^ Burn, Andrew (2006). Notes to Chandos CD CHAN 10380
  47. ^ "The Olympians", The Musical Times, October 1949, pp. 367–368
  48. ^ Burn, Andrew (1991). Notes to Chandos CD CHAN 8818
  49. ^ "London Symphony Orchestra – Title Holders". London Symphony Orchestra, accessed 22 March 2011
  50. ^ "Live Performances", The Arthur Bliss Society, accessed 23 March 2011
  51. ^ "Sir Arthur Bliss, Recordings and CDs" 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Cambridge University Library, accessed 22 March 2011
  52. ^ Bliss (1991), p. 209

Sources

  • Bliss, Arthur (1970). As I Remember. London: Faber and Faber. OCLC 656105053.
  • Bliss, Arthur (1991). Roscow, Gregory (ed.). Bliss on Music: Selected Writings of Arthur Bliss, 1920–1975. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198162227.
  • Haltrecht, Montagu (1975). The Quiet Showman – Sir David Webster and the Royal Opera House. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-211163-2.
  • Jacobs, Arthur (1994). Henry J. Wood: Maker of the Proms. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-69340-6.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1987). Adrian Boult. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-333-48752-4.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1989). Portrait of Walton. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816705-9.
  • Rees, Terence (1964). Thespis. London: Dillon's University Bookshop. OCLC 5116329.

External links

  • Texts and translations of vocal music by Arthur Bliss at the LiederNet Archive
  • Sir Arthur Bliss biography and credits at the BFI's Screenonline
  • of Cello Concerto
  • Arthur Bliss @ Boosey & Hawkes
  • , performance by Chamber Domaine, which includes the Bliss Piano Quartet in A from 1915, given at Gresham College, 26 September 2007 (available as an MP3 or MP4 download, as well as a text file).
  • "Archival material relating to Arthur Bliss". UK National Archives.  
  • Portraits of Sir Arthur Edward Drummond Bliss at the National Portrait Gallery, London  

Videos

  • The Lady of Shalott rehearsal sequence from 1975 on YouTube A short video of the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eric Pinkett.
  • The Lady of Shalott on YouTube Played on the piano by Sir Arthur Bliss

Girl in a Broken Mirror A documentary featuring the ballet The Lady of Shallot performed by school pupils from Leicestershire and the LSSO conducted by Eric Pinkett.

Court offices
Preceded by Master of the Queen's Music
1953–1975
Succeeded by

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This article is about the composer For the horticulturist see A J Bliss Sir Arthur Edward Drummond Bliss CH KCVO 2 August 1891 27 March 1975 was an English composer and conductor Arthur Bliss c 1922 photograph by Herbert Lambert Bliss s musical training was cut short by the First World War in which he served with distinction in the army In the post war years he quickly became known as an unconventional and modernist composer but within the decade he began to display a more traditional and romantic side in his music In the 1920s and 1930s he composed extensively not only for the concert hall but also for films and ballet In the Second World War Bliss returned to England from the US to work for the BBC and became its director of music After the war he resumed his work as a composer and was appointed Master of the Queen s Music In Bliss s later years his work was respected but was thought old fashioned and it was eclipsed by the music of younger colleagues such as William Walton and Benjamin Britten Since his death his compositions have been well represented in recordings and many of his better known works remain in the repertoire of British orchestras Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early compositions 1 3 1940s 1 4 Later years 2 Music 2 1 Early works 2 2 Mature works 3 Honours legacy and reputation 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Sources 7 External links 7 1 VideosBiography EditEarly years Edit Diverse influences on the young Bliss Elgar and Stravinsky top Vaughan Williams lower left and Ravel Bliss was born in Barnes a London suburb the eldest of three sons of Francis Edward Bliss 1847 1930 a businessman from Massachusetts and his second wife Agnes Kennard nee Davis 1858 1895 1 Agnes Bliss died in 1895 and the boys were brought up by their father who instilled in them a love for the arts 2 Bliss was educated at Bilton Grange preparatory school Rugby and Pembroke College Cambridge where he studied classics but also took lessons in music from Charles Wood 1 Other influences on him during his Cambridge days were Edward Elgar whose music made a lasting impression on him and E J Dent 3 Bliss graduated in classics and music in 1913 and then studied at the Royal College of Music in London for a year 1 At the RCM he found his composition tutor Sir Charles Stanford of little help to him 2 n 1 but found inspiration from Ralph Vaughan Williams and Gustav Holst and his fellow students Herbert Howells Eugene Goossens and Arthur Benjamin 5 In his brief time at the college he got to know the music of the Second Viennese School and the repertory of Diaghilev s Ballets Russes with music by modern composers such as Debussy Ravel and Stravinsky 2 When the First World War broke out Bliss joined the army and fought in France as an officer in the Royal Fusiliers until 1917 and then in the Grenadier Guards for the rest of the war His bravery earned him a mention in despatches and he was twice wounded and once gassed 2 5 His younger brother Kennard was killed in the war and his death affected Bliss deeply The music scholar Byron Adams writes Despite the apparent heartiness and equilibrium of the composer s public persona the emotional wounds inflicted by the war were deep and lasting 6 In 1918 Bliss converted to Roman Catholicism 1 Early compositions Edit Bliss caricatured in 1921 by F Sancha Although he had begun composing while still a schoolboy Bliss later suppressed all his juvenilia and with the single exception of his 1916 Pastoral for clarinet and piano reckoned the 1918 work Madam Noy as his first official composition 2 With the return of peace his career took off rapidly as a composer of what were for British audiences startlingly new pieces often for unusual ensembles strongly influenced by Ravel Stravinsky and the young French composers of Les Six 1 Among these are a concerto for wordless tenor voice piano and strings 1920 n 2 and Rout for wordless soprano and chamber ensemble subsequently revised for orchestra which received a double encore at its first performance n 3 In 1919 he arranged incidental music from Elizabethan sources for As You Like It at Stratford on Avon and conducted a series of Sunday concerts at Lyric Theatre Hammersmith where he also conducted Pergolesi s opera La serva padrona 7 Viola Tree s production of The Tempest at the Aldwych Theatre in 1921 interspersed incidental music by Thomas Arne and Arthur Sullivan with new music by Bliss for an ensemble of male voices piano trumpet trombone gongs and five percussionists dispersed through the theatre 8 The Times wrote that Bliss was acquiring a reputation as a tearaway by the time he was commissioned through Elgar s influence to write a large scale symphonic work A Colour Symphony for the Three Choirs Festival of 1922 5 The work was well received in The Manchester Guardian Samuel Langford called Bliss far and away the cleverest writer among the English composers of our time 9 The Times praised it highly though doubting if much was gained by the designation of the four movements as purple red blue and green and commented that the symphony confirmed Bliss s transition from youthful experimenter to serious composer 10 After the third performance of the work at the Queen s Hall under Sir Henry Wood The Times wrote Continually changing patterns scintillate till one is hypnotised by the ingenuity of the thing 11 Elgar who attended the first performance complained that the work was disconcertingly modern 12 In 1923 Bliss s father who had remarried decided to retire in the US He and his wife settled in California Bliss went with them and remained there for two years working as a conductor lecturer pianist and occasional critic 5 While there he met Gertrude Trudy Hoffmann 1904 2008 youngest daughter of Ralph and Gertrude Hoffmann They were married in 1925 The marriage was happy and lasted for the rest of Bliss s life there were two daughters Soon after the marriage Bliss and his wife moved to England 1 Bliss in 1932 by Mark Gertler From the mid 1920s onwards Bliss moved more into the established English musical tradition leaving behind the influence of Stravinsky and the French modernists and in the words of the critic Frank Howes after early enthusiastic flirtations with aggressive modernism admitted to a romantic heart and has given rein to its less and less inhibited promptings 13 He wrote two major works with American orchestras in mind theIntroduction and Allegro 1926 dedicated to the Philadelphia Orchestra and Leopold Stokowski and Hymn to Apollo 1926 for the Boston Symphony and Pierre Monteux 1 Bliss began the 1930s with Pastoral 1930 In the same year he wrote Morning Heroes a work for narrator chorus and orchestra written in the hope of exorcising the spectre of the First World War Although the war had been over for more than ten years I was still troubled by frequent nightmares they all took the same form I was still there in the trenches with a few men we knew the armistice had been signed but we had been forgotten so had a section of the Germans opposite It was as though we were both doomed to fight on till extinction I used to wake with horror 14 During the decade Bliss wrote chamber works for leading soloists including a Clarinet Quintet for Frederick Thurston 1932 and a Viola Sonata for Lionel Tertis 1933 In 1935 in the words of the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians he firmly established his position as Elgar s natural successor with the Romantic expansive and richly scored Music for Strings 3 Two dramatic works from this decade remain well known the music for Alexander Korda s 1936 film of H G Wells s Things to Come 5 and a ballet score to his own scenario based on a chess game Choreographed by Ninette de Valois Checkmate was still in the repertoire of the Royal Ballet in 2011 15 By the late 1930s Bliss was no longer viewed as a modernist the works of his juniors William Walton and the youthful Benjamin Britten were increasingly prominent and Bliss s music began to seem old fashioned 16 17 His last large scale work of the 1930s was his Piano Concerto composed for the pianist Solomon who gave the world premiere at the World s Fair in New York in June 1939 Bliss and his family attended the performance and then stayed on in the US for a holiday While they were there the Second World War broke out Bliss initially stayed in America teaching at the University of California Berkeley He felt impelled to return to England to do what he could for the war effort and in 1941 leaving his wife and children in California he made the hazardous Atlantic crossing 1 1940s Edit At first Bliss found little useful work to do in England He joined the BBC s overseas music service in May 1941 18 but was plainly under employed He suggested to Sir Adrian Boult who was at that time both the chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the BBC s director of music that Boult should step down in his favour from the latter post 19 Bliss wrote to his wife I want more power as I have a lot to give which my comparatively minor post does not allow me to use fully 20 Boult agreed to the proposal which freed him to concentrate on conducting 20 n 4 Bliss served as director of music at the BBC from 1942 to 1944 laying the foundations for the launch of the Third Programme after the war 1 During the war he also served on the music committee of the British Council together with Vaughan Williams and William Walton 22 In 1944 when Bliss s family returned from the US he resigned from the BBC and returned to composing having written nothing since his String Quartet in 1941 23 He composed more film music and two ballets Miracle in the Gorbals 1944 24 and Adam Zero 1946 25 In 1948 Bliss turned his attention to opera with The Olympians He and the novelist and playwright J B Priestley had been friends for many years and they agreed to collaborate on an opera despite their lack of any operatic experience Priestley s libretto was based on a legend that the pagan deities robbed of their divinity became a troupe of itinerant players wandering down the centuries 26 The opera portrays the confusion that results when the actors unexpectedly find themselves restored to deity n 5 The opera opened the 1949 50 Covent Garden season It was directed by Peter Brook with choreography by Frederick Ashton The doyen of English music critics Ernest Newman 29 praised it highly here is a composer with real talent for opera in Mr Priestley he has been fortunate enough to find an English Boito but generally it received a polite rather than a rapturous reception 30 Priestley attributed this to the failure of the conductor Karl Rankl to learn the music or to cooperate with Brook and to lack of rehearsal of the last act 26 The critics attributed it to Priestley s inexperience as an opera librettist and to the occasional lack of the soaring tune for the human voice in Bliss s music 28 After the Covent Garden run of ten performances 30 the company presented the work in Manchester 31 but did not revive it in subsequent years it received a concert performance and broadcast in 1972 32 Later years Edit In 1950 Bliss was knighted 23 After the death of Sir Arnold Bax he was appointed Master of the Queen s Music in 1953 to the relief of Walton who feared he would be asked to take the post 33 In The Times Howes commented The duties of a Master of the Queen s Music are what he chooses to make of them but they include the composition of ceremonial and occasional music 13 Bliss who composed quickly and with facility was able to discharge the many duties of the post providing music as required for state occasions from the birth of a child to the Queen to the funeral of Winston Churchill to the investiture of the Prince of Wales 3 34 35 Howes commended Bliss s Processional for the 1953 coronation and A Song of Welcome Bliss s first official piece d occasion 13 In 1956 Bliss headed the first delegation by British musicians to the Soviet Union since the end of the Second World War The party included the violinist Alfredo Campoli the oboist Leon Goossens the soprano Jennifer Vyvyan the conductor Clarence Raybould and the pianist Gerald Moore 36 Bliss returned to Moscow in 1958 as a member of the jury of the International Tchaikovsky Competition with fellow jurors including Emil Gilels and Sviatoslav Richter 37 Coventry Cathedral for which Bliss composed The Beatitudes In addition to his official functions Bliss continued to compose steadily throughout the 1950s His works from that decade include his Second String Quartet 1950 a scena The Enchantress 1951 for the contralto Kathleen Ferrier a Piano Sonata 1952 and a Violin Concerto 1955 for Campoli The orchestral Meditations on a Theme by John Blow 1955 was a particularly deep felt work and Bliss regarded it highly among his output 1 In 1959 60 he collaborated with the librettist Christopher Hassall on an opera for television based on the scriptural story of Tobias and the Angel It won praise for the way in which Bliss and Hassall had understood and adapted to the more intimate medium of television 38 though some critics thought Bliss s music competent but unremarkable 39 In 1961 Bliss and Hassall collaborated on a cantata The Beatitudes commissioned for the opening of the new Coventry Cathedral Reviews were friendly 40 but the work has rarely been performed since and has been eclipsed by another choral work written for Coventry at the same time Britten s War Requiem n 6 Bliss followed this with two further large scale choral works Mary of Magdala 1962 and The Golden Cantata 1963 3 Throughout his life Bliss was vigilant on the state of music in Britain about which he had written extensively since the 1920s 42 In 1969 he publicly censured the BBC for its plan to cut its classical music budget and disband several of its orchestras He was delegated by his colleagues Walton Britten Peter Maxwell Davies and Richard Rodney Bennett to make a strong protest to William Glock the BBC s controller of music n 7 Bliss continued to compose into his eighth and ninth decades in which his works included the Cello Concerto 1970 for Mstislav Rostropovich the Metamorphic Variations for orchestra 1972 3 and a final cantata Shield of Faith 1974 for soprano baritone chorus and organ celebrating 500 years of St George s Chapel Windsor Castle setting poems chosen from each of the five centuries of the chapel s existence 44 Bliss died at his London home in 1975 at the age of 83 5 His wife Trudy outlived him by 33 years dying in 2008 at the age of 104 45 Music EditSee also List of compositions by Arthur Bliss Early works Edit The musicologist Christopher Palmer was censorious of those who sought to characterise Bliss s music as an early tendency to enfant terribilisme yielding very quickly to a compromise with the Establishment and a perpetuating of the Elgar tradition 17 Nonetheless as a young man Bliss was certainly regarded as avant garde Madam Noy a witchery song was first performed in June 1920 The lyric is by an anonymous author and the setting is for soprano with flute clarinet bassoon harp viola and bass In a 1923 study of Bliss Edwin Evans wrote that the piquant instrumental background to the gruesome story established the direction that Bliss was to take The second Chamber Rhapsody 1919 is an idyllic work for soprano tenor flute cor anglais and bass the two voices vocalising on Ah throughout and being placed as instruments in the ensemble 7 Bliss contrasted the pastoral tone of that work with Rout 1920 an uproarious piece for soprano and instrumental ensemble the music conveys an impression such as one might gather at an open window at carnival time the singer is given a series of meaningless syllables chosen for their phonetic effect 7 In his next work Conversations for violin viola cello flute and oboe 1921 Bliss chose a deliberately prosaic subject It consists of five sections entitled Committee Meeting In the Wood In the Ball room Soliloquy and In the Tube at Oxford Circus Evans wrote of this work that although the instrumentation is ingenious much of the interest is polyphonic especially in the first and last numbers 7 Bliss followed these works with three compositions for larger forces a Concerto 1920 and Two Orchestral Studies 1920 The Concerto for piano voice and orchestra was experimental and Bliss later revised it removing the vocal part The Melee Fantasque 1921 showed Bliss s skill in writing glittering orchestration 8 Mature works Edit Of Bliss s early works Rout is occasionally performed and has been recorded but the first of his works to enter the repertoire at least in the UK is the Colour Symphony Each of the four movements represents a colour purple the colour of amethysts pageantry royalty and death red the colour of rubies wine revelry furnaces courage and magic blue the colour of sapphires deep water skies loyalty and melancholy and green the colour of emeralds hope joy youth spring and victory The first and third are slow movements the second a scherzo and the fourth fugal described by the Bliss specialist Andrew Burn as a compositional tour de force a superbly constructed double fugue the initial subject slow and angular for strings gradually becoming an Elgarian ceremonial march the second a bubbling theme for winds 46 Burn observes that in three works written soon after his marriage the Oboe Quintet 1927 Pastoral 1929 and Serenade 1929 Bliss s voice assumed the mantle of maturity all are imbued with a quality of contentment reflecting his serenity 2 Of the works of Bliss s maturity Burn comments that many of them were inspired by external stimuli Some by the performers for whom they were written such as the concertos for piano 1938 violin 1955 and cello 1970 some by literary and theatrical partners such as the film music ballets cantatas and The Olympians some by painters such as the Serenade and the Metamorphic Variations some by classical literature such as Hymn to Apollo 1926 The Enchantress and Pastoral 2 Of Bliss s works after the Second World War his opera The Olympians is generally considered a failure The idiom was judged to be old fashioned A contemporary critic in a broadly favourable review wrote Bliss has wisely cleared his idiom of modern harmonic astringency He uses quite a lot of common chords and progressions in fact he has gone back to the harmony of the musical gods The result inevitably is a certain air of reminiscence 47 Among the late works the Cello Concerto is one of the more frequently played When its dedicatee Rostropovich gave the first performance at the 1970 Aldeburgh Festival Britten who conducted the performance regarded it as a major work and persuaded Bliss to change its title from Concertino to Concerto It is an approachable piece of which Bliss said There are no problems for the listener only for the soloist 48 Both Palmer and Burn comment on a sinister vein that sometimes breaks out in Bliss s music in passages such as the Interlude Through the valley of the shadow of Death in The Meditations on a Theme of John Blow and the orchestral introduction to The Beatitudes In Burn s words such moments can be profoundly disquieting 2 17 Palmer comments that the musical forerunner of such passages is probably the extraordinary spectral march like irruption in the Scherzo of Elgar s Second Symphony 17 In a centenary assessment of Bliss s music Burn singles out for mention the youthful vigour of A Colour Symphony the poignant humanity of Morning Heroes the romantic lyricism of the Clarinet Quintet the drama of Checkmate Miracle in the Gorbals and Things to Come and the spiritual probing of the Meditations on a Theme of John Blow and Shield of Faith 2 Other works of Bliss classed by Palmer as among the finest are the Introduction and Allegro the Music for Strings the Oboe Quintet A Knot of Riddles and the Golden Cantata 17 Honours legacy and reputation EditIn addition to his knighthood Bliss was appointed KCVO 1969 and CH 1971 23 He received honorary degrees from the universities of Bristol Cambridge Edinburgh Glasgow Lancaster and London as well as from Princeton University 23 The London Symphony Orchestra appointed him its honorary President in 1958 n 8 In 1963 he received the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society 23 Bliss s archive is kept at Cambridge University Library There is an Arthur Bliss Road in Newport an Arthur Bliss Gardens in Cheltenham and a block of flats Sir Arthur Bliss Court in Mitcham South London The Arthur Bliss Society was founded in 2003 to further the knowledge and appreciation of Bliss s music The society s website includes listings of forthcoming performances of Bliss s works in March 2011 the following works were listed as scheduled for performance in the UK and U S Ceremonial Prelude Clarinet Quartet 2 performances Four Songs for Voice Violin and Piano Music for Strings Pastoral Lie strewn the white flocks Royal Fanfares Seven American Poems String Quartet No 2 5 performances Things to Come Suite 2 performances Things to Come March 50 Many of Bliss s works have been recorded He was a capable conductor and was in charge of some of the recordings The Library of Cambridge University maintains a complete Bliss discography In March 2011 it contained details of 281 recordings 120 orchestral 56 chamber and instrumental 58 choral and vocal and 47 stage and screen works Among the works that have received multiple recordings are A Colour Symphony 6 recordings the Cello Concerto 6 the Piano Concerto 6 Music for Strings 7 the Oboe Quintet 7 the Viola Sonata The violin sonata was first recorded in 2010 7 and Checkmate complete ballet and ballet suite 9 51 On receiving the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1963 Bliss said I don t claim to have done more than light a small taper at the shrine of music I do not upbraid Fate for not having given me greater gifts Endeavour has been the joy 52 A hundred years after Bliss s birth Byron Adams wrote Of the smaller stars that shone in the ample firmament of twentieth century English music the light that coruscated with the greatest brilliance was Sir Arthur Bliss 6 See also EditColor symbolismNotes and references EditNotes Bliss later made fun of Stanford s reactionary views in a lecture to the Royal Musical Association 4 Bliss later revised the work dropping the vocal part 5 The original version was for soprano flute clarinet harp string quartet bass glockenspiel and side drum but Bliss later arranged it for full orchestra in which form it was subsequently given as an interlude during the 1921 season of the Ballets Russes 7 Boult later had cause to regret his generosity After Bliss left a director of music was appointed who had a grudge against Boult and engineered his compulsory retirement 21 The similarity of Priestley s plot device to that of W S Gilbert s for Thespis 27 was unremarked by the critics of The Times The Manchester Guardian and The Observer 28 At 2011 there had been 11 recordings released of the Britten work 41 the Bliss work had received none Of the six BBC orchestras under threat three survived but it is not known whether the composers protests influenced the outcome 43 The only other composers to hold this post were Walton 1948 1957 and Leonard Bernstein 1987 1990 49 References a b c d e f g h i j Burn Andrew Bliss Sir Arthur Edward Drummond 1891 1975 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition October 2009 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required a b c d e f g h i Burn Andrew From Rebel to Romantic The Music of Arthur Bliss The Musical Times August 1991 pp 383 386 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required a b c d e Cole Hugo and Andrew Burn Bliss Sir Arthur Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required Bliss Arthur Some Aspects of the Present Musical Situation Proceedings of the Musical Association 49th Session 1922 1923 pp 59 77 accessed 23 March 2011 subscription required a b c d e f g Obituary The Times 29 March 1975 p 14 a b Adams Byron Bliss on Music Notes December 1992 pp 586 588 accessed 22 March 2011 subscription required a b c d e Evans Edwin Arthur Bliss The Musical Times January 1923 pp 20 23 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required a b Evans Edwin Arthur Bliss The Musical Times February 1923 pp 95 99 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required Langford Samuel Bliss s Colour Symphony The Manchester Guardian 8 September 1922 p 9 The Three Choirs Festival The Times 8 September 1922 p 13 Bliss s Colour Symphony Queen s Hall Concert The Times 12 March 1923 p 15 Program notes of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic Orchestra s February 2010 performance a b c Howes Frank Sir Arthur Bliss A modern romantic The Times 27 April 1956 p 3 Bliss 1970 p 96 quoted in Palmer Christopher Aspects of Bliss The Musical Times August 1971 pp 743 745 accessed 22 March 2011 subscription required Checkmate Archived 13 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Birmingham Royal Ballet accessed 21 March 2011 Kennedy 1989 p 96 a b c d e Palmer Christopher Aspects of Bliss The Musical Times August 1971 pp 743 745 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required New BBC Director of Music The Times 1 April 1942 p 7 Jacobs p 367 a b Kennedy p 195 Kennedy p 215 News in Brief The Times 7 May 1943 p 6 a b c d e Bliss Sir Arthur Who Was Who A amp C Black 1920 2008 online edition Oxford University Press December 2007 accessed 21 March 2011 subscription required Sadler s Wells Ballet The Times 27 October 1944 p 6 Arthur Bliss s New Ballet The Times 11 April 1946 p 6 a b Priestley J B My Friend Bliss The Musical Times August 1971 pp 740 741 accessed 22 March 2011 subscription required Rees pp 30 57 a b The Royal Opera The Olympians The Times 30 September 1949 p 6 Hope Wallace Philip The Olympians The Manchester Guardian 30 September 1949 p 5 and Blom Eric Priestley for Bliss The Observer 2 October 1949 p 6 Herbage Julian Shostakovitch s Eighth Symphony The Musical Times July 1944 p 201 subscription required a b Haltrecht p 132 Palace Theatre The Olympians The Manchester Guardian 25 March 1950 p 5 Greenfield Edward The Olympians on Radio 3 The Guardian 22 February 1972 p 10 Kennedy 1989 p 170 Arnold Forster Mark Birthday Song The Observer 21 February 1960 p 1 Tracey Edmund March of Homage set the stately tone The Observer 31 January 1965 p 4 Bliss Arthur A musical embassy to the USSR Russia through English eyes The Times 1 June 1956 p 11 The Jury 1958 Archived 3 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Tchaikovsky Competition accessed 22 March 2011 Bliss s New Opera for Television The Times 18 May 1960 p 18 Heyworth Peter Piedmont in Seville The Observer 22 May 1960 p 22 and Mason Colin Opera on stage and screen The Guardian 18 May 1960 p 7 Sacred music but in a secular atmosphere The Times 26 May 1962 p 4 and Mason Colin New music at the Coventry Festival The Guardian 26 May 1962 p 5A Britten War Requiem Gramophone net accessed 22 March 2011 See for example Bliss Arthur Some Aspects of the Present Musical Situation Proceedings of the Musical Association 49th Session 1922 1923 pp 59 77 accessed 23 March 2011 subscription required and Bliss Arthur Aspects of Contemporary Music The Musical Times May 1934 pp 401 05 accessed 23 March 2011 subscription required Sir Arthur Bliss leads protest on BBC orchestras The Times 30 June 1969 p 3 Howard Philip For England and St George The Times 23 April 1975 p 16 Lady Bliss The Telegraph 21 November 2008 Retrieved 2 August 2021 Burn Andrew 2006 Notes to Chandos CD CHAN 10380 The Olympians The Musical Times October 1949 pp 367 368 Burn Andrew 1991 Notes to Chandos CD CHAN 8818 London Symphony Orchestra Title Holders London Symphony Orchestra accessed 22 March 2011 Live Performances The Arthur Bliss Society accessed 23 March 2011 Sir Arthur Bliss Recordings and CDs Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Cambridge University Library accessed 22 March 2011 Bliss 1991 p 209Sources EditBliss Arthur 1970 As I Remember London Faber and Faber OCLC 656105053 Bliss Arthur 1991 Roscow Gregory ed Bliss on Music Selected Writings of Arthur Bliss 1920 1975 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0198162227 Haltrecht Montagu 1975 The Quiet Showman Sir David Webster and the Royal Opera House London Collins ISBN 0 00 211163 2 Jacobs Arthur 1994 Henry J Wood Maker of the Proms London Methuen ISBN 0 413 69340 6 Kennedy Michael 1987 Adrian Boult London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 0 333 48752 4 Kennedy Michael 1989 Portrait of Walton Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816705 9 Rees Terence 1964 Thespis London Dillon s University Bookshop OCLC 5116329 External links EditTexts and translations of vocal music by Arthur Bliss at the LiederNet Archive The Arthur Bliss society Sir Arthur Bliss biography and credits at the BFI s Screenonline Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra website Review of Cello Concerto Arthur Bliss Boosey amp Hawkes Music from the Western Front performance by Chamber Domaine which includes the Bliss Piano Quartet in A from 1915 given at Gresham College 26 September 2007 available as an MP3 or MP4 download as well as a text file Archival material relating to Arthur Bliss UK National Archives Portraits of Sir Arthur Edward Drummond Bliss at the National Portrait Gallery London Videos Edit The Lady of Shalott rehearsal sequence from 1975 on YouTube A short video of the Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eric Pinkett The Lady of Shalott on YouTube Played on the piano by Sir Arthur BlissGirl in a Broken Mirror A documentary featuring the ballet The Lady of Shallot performed by school pupils from Leicestershire and the LSSO conducted by Eric Pinkett Part 1 on YouTube Part 2 on YouTube Part 3 on YouTube Part 4 on YouTube Part 5 on YouTubeCourt officesPreceded bySir Arnold Bax Master of the Queen s Music1953 1975 Succeeded byMalcolm Williamson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Bliss amp oldid 1137815260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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