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Bernard van Dieren

Bernard Hélène Joseph van Dieren (27 December 1887 – 24 April 1936) was a Dutch composer, critic, author, and writer on music, much of whose working life was spent in England.

Bernard van Dieren
Bust of Bernard van Dieren, by Jacob Epstein
Background information
Birth nameBernard Hélène Joseph van Dieren
Born(1887-12-27)27 December 1887
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Died24 April 1936(1936-04-24) (aged 48)
London, England
Occupation(s)Composer, writer

Biography edit

Van Dieren was the last of five children of a Dutch Rotterdam wine merchant, Bernard Joseph van Dieren, and his French second wife, Julie Françoise Adelle Labbé. Details of his education are unknown but it seems that his early training was as a scientist, as a research assistant in a laboratory. Gifted in science, extremely intelligent and with a phenomenal memory, he was also well-versed in literature as well as an able violinist and amateur artist.

His career as composer began when he was twenty when some of his early works were published in the Netherlands. In 1909 he relocated to London as a correspondent for the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant with his wife-to-be, Frida Kindler (1879–1964), a very gifted concert pianist whom he married on 1 January 1910. By this time he had decided to study music seriously.[1] A son, Hans Jean Jules Maximilian Navarre Benvenuto Bernard van Dieren (1910–74), was born the same year.[2] In the same year, he took British nationality.[3] They settled at 35A St George's Road, West Hampstead in the 1920s,[4] and later at 68, Clifton Hill, St John's Wood.[5]

He was largely self-taught, though he spent 1912 in Europe where he met the composers Busoni and Schoenberg.[6] His early contact with the music world was as a musical correspondent for several European newspapers and periodicals. During the First World War he was for a short time involved in secret service in the Netherlands, as a cypher expert in the Intelligence Department.

He suffered most of his life from ill health and had numerous operations for kidney-related complaints. To relieve the recurring pain, morphine was prescribed, and it is thought that in later life he became addicted to the drug. Because of these frequent bouts of illness, his wife, a former pupil of Busoni, supported the family by teaching the piano and by giving recitals. They also relied on financial support from a group of admirers and friends, which included notable personalities such as Jacob Epstein, Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell, Augustus John, Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji, Philip Heseltine (the composer Peter Warlock) and Cecil Gray.[7] The latter two were especially drawn by his charismatic and powerful personality and gave untiring support for his cause by prompting performances and publication of his works.

However, this sometimes over enthusiastic support generated a backlash from non-believers. Eric Coates, who played viola in the under-rehearsed premiere of Diaphony (1916), witnessed the contempt of the musical establishment - Parry, Stanford and others - towards van Dieren.[8] Heseltine made van Dieren his heir in his will, inspiring claims by Heseltine's son Nigel that van Dieren had murdered Heseltine.[9]

In 1925 van Dieren worked for the Philips electrical company but recurring illness forced him to resign the following year. Some of his works were published in 1927 and in the same year his Fourth String Quartet was performed at the Frankfurt Festival. In 1930 he completed his comic opera The Tailor[10] (begun in 1916 at Heseltine and Gray's request).[11] He also wrote a book on Epstein (1920)[12] and published a collection of controversial essays entitled Down Among the Dead Men (1935). In his writings van Dieren championed composers such as Alkan, Bellini, Busoni, Liszt and Meyerbeer.[13]

Eventually two of his more important works were broadcast by the BBC: Diaphony in 1934 and the Chinese Symphony in 1935. He died on 24 April 1936 in London, and is buried on the edge of the graveyard of St Lawrence's Church, West Wycombe. Constant Lambert, who conducted the first public performance of the Chinese Symphony from BBC Broadcasting House on 15 March 1935,[14] claimed that the theme for the opening movement, "Palindromic Prelude", from his 1938 ballet Horoscope, was dictated from beyond the grave by van Dieren.[15]

Musical style edit

The music of van Dieren is harmonically chromatic, rhythmically fluid and freely polyphonic, tonally anarchic rather than atonal [16] and often notated without barlines.[17] At the same time melody, particularly the importance of the singing line, is central.[18] Wilfrid Mellers rated him "a great melodist".[19] This is most evident in the songs, championed by the baritone John Goss and the soprano Megan Foster in the 1920s and 1930s.[20][21] He set some German texts (particularly Heine), but mostly chose from the English Romantic poets, including Shelley, Byron, Keats, Beddoes and Walter Savage Landor. According to Stephen Banfield,[16] van Dieren, “if he belongs anywhere”, is best positioned as part of the inter-war lyrical tradition.

In his chamber music the influence of Schoenberg can be detected, along with “a textual complexity (comparable with Busoni) which engages the imagination”.[22] The six quartets gained immediate attention from leading performers of the day: for instance the Second String Quartet was premiered by the Amar Quartet, with Paul Hindemith on viola, at the Donaueschingen Festival in 1922.[22] The Third, dedicated to Delius, shows some of the serenity of its dedicatee. It was a favourite of the Brosa Quartet.[23] The Fourth Quartet is written for the unorthodox combination of two violins, viola and double bass.[24] The fifth quartet, composed in 1925, was originally written for violin, viola, cello and double bass, but in 1931 van Dieren re-scored it for conventional quartet. The composer Ronald Stevenson later transcribed it for solo piano "as a piano sonata (which B. v. D. never composed)".[18]

The piano music illustrates van Dieren's shifts in style, from the atonal and terse Six Sketches (1910-11) to the more approachable, lyrical and tonally oriented style of the Three Studies (early 1920s) and Tema Con Variazione (1927). Many of these pieces were premiered by the composer's wife Frida, but they have also been performed over the years by Kathleen Long, Robert Collet (1905-1993) Erik Chisholm, Ronald Stevenson, Eiluned Davies and (most recently) Christopher Guild.[25]

The Chinese Symphony (1912–14) [26] shows the characteristic style of the songs and chamber work could be applied to large forces: it is scored for five soloists, chorus and orchestra. The text uses German translations by Hans Bethge of Chinese poetry, also used by Mahler in Das Lied von der Erde a few years earlier. Along with Schoenberg and Busoni, the rhapsodic and lyrical style of Delius can often be heard in the Chinese Symphony and other orchestral works, such as the Elegy for cello and orchestra.[27]

Although Oxford University Press (under Hubert Foss)[28] published some scores from 1925 onward,[29] much of van Dieren's work remained in manuscript and hard to find for many years after his death, until work of reconstructing missing scores and instrumental parts was carried out by Denis ApIvor and Alastair Chisholm in the 1970s. More recently, Barry Ould of Bardic Edition has been making previously unpublished scores available again.[30]

Major works edit

Orchestral
  • Elegy for cello and orchestra (1908)
  • Symphonic Epilogue to 'The Cenci', Op. 3 (1910)
  • Belsazar for baritone and orchestra (1911)
  • Symphony No. 1 Chinese, Op. 6 (1914)
  • Diaphony for baritone and chamber orchestra (1916)
  • Overture to an Imaginary Comedy for 16 instruments (1916)
  • Introit to Topers’ Tropes ‘Les Propos des Beuveurs’ after Rabelais (1921)
  • Serenade for chamber orchestra (1925)
  • Anjou (Comedy Overture) for orchestra (1935)
  • Symphony No. 2 (In Three Dance Movements) (unfinished)

Chamber and Solo

  • Impromptu for violin (1909)
  • String Quartet No. 1, Op. 5 (1912)
  • Ballad de Villon, string quartet and recitation (1917)[31]
  • String Quartet No. 2, Op. 9 (1917)
  • String Quartet No. 3, Op. 15 (1919)
  • String Quartet No. 4, Op. 16 (1923)
  • String Quartet No 5 (1925, re-scored 1931)
  • String Quartet No. 6 (1927)
  • Sonatina Tyroica for violin and piano (1927)
  • Sonata for solo violin (1928)
  • Sonata for solo cello (1930)
  • Estemporales, harp solo (1931)

Piano

  • Six Sketches Op. 4a (1911)
  • Toccata (1912)
  • Netherlands Melodies (1917)
  • Three Studies (1925)
  • Tema con Variazione (1928)
  • Adagio Cantando, transcription from String Quartet No. 5 (1931)
  • Piccolo Pralinudettino Fridato (1934)

Song

  • Mir träumte von einem Konigskind (Heine)
  • Wer zum ersten Male liebt (Heine) (1908)
  • Wenn ich auf dem Lager liege (Heine) (1908)
  • Und wüssten's die Blumen (Heine) (1908)
  • Lebewohl (Morike, 1908)
  • Song from 'The Cenci' (Shelley) (1909) (string quartet)
  • Es fällt ein Stern herunter (Heine, 1911)
  • Die Trennung (Hans Bethge, 1912)
  • Epiphanias (Goethe, 1914)
  • Mädchenlied: An einem jungen Rosenblatt (Bierbaum) (1914)
  • Green (Verlaine, 1915)
  • Ich wandelte unter den Bäumen (Heine, 1918)
  • Mon bras pressait ta taille frêle (Hugo, 1921)
  • À Cassandre (De Ronsard, 1924)
  • Sonetto VII (Spenser), for tenor and 11 instruments (1925)
  • Dream Pedlary (Thomas Lovell Beddoes) (1925)
  • Oh! Quand je dors (Hugo, 1925)
  • Rhapsodia (De Quincey, 1925) (string quartet)
  • Schön Rohtraut (Morike, 1925)
  • Spring song of the Birds (King James I of Scotland, 1925)
  • Take, O, Take Those Lips Away (Shakespeare, 1925)
  • Weep you no more sad fountains (anon.) (1925)
  • With Margerain Gentle (Skelton, 1925)
  • Der Asra (Heine, 1927)
  • Last Days (Landor, 1927)
  • Love Must Be Gone (Landor, 1927)
  • She I Love (Landor, 1927)
  • Les roses étaient toutes rouges (Verlaine) (1927)
  • Mon cœur se recommande à vous (Lassus, arr. van Dieren, 1927)
  • Spleen (Verlaine, 1927)
  • Spring, the sweet Spring (Thomas Nashe) (1927)
  • Ach, Ich sehne mich nach Thränen (Heine, 1930)
  • Der Kastraten Urteil und Gesang (Heine, 1930)
  • Seraphine (Heine, 1930)
  • A Prayer (Joyce, 1930)
  • Frail the White Rose (Joyce, 1930)
  • Nightpiece (James Joyce) (1930)
  • Mit deinen blauen Augen (Heine) (1930)
  • Dawn (John Ford) (dated 26/4/1935)

Opera

  • The Tailor (1917–30)

Discography edit

  • Piano Music Volumes 1 and 2: Six Sketches, Toccata, Tema con Variazione, Three Studies, Piccolo Pralinudettino Fridato, Adagio Cantando, Netherlands Melodies, Eiluned Davies (piano), British Music Society BMS 402 (1983) and BMS 405 (1986).[32]
  • The Bernard van Dieren Collection: Songs for High Voice and String Quartet, Heine Songs, Song from The Cenci, Rhapsodia, Sonata for solo violin, Sonatina Tyroica, Estemporales for harp. Ludmilla Andrew, Philip Thomas, Emperor String Quartet etc., British Music Society BML 001 (1992).[33]
  • String Quartets from the Twenties: String Quartet No 6. Utrecht String Quartet, NM Classics (2000).[34]
  • Chinese Symphony: Symphony No.1 Chinese Op.6, Intriot, Elegy for cello and orchestra. BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales, conducted by William Boughton, Raphael Wallfisch (cello), Lyrita (2016).[35]
  • Ronald Stevenson, Piano Music Vol. Five: Transcription of String Quartet No 5 for piano. Christopher Guild (piano). Toccata Classics TOCC0606 (2021)
  • Complete Piano Music: (also includes Ballad de Villon). Christopher Guild. Piano Classics PCL10241 (2022)

There are also a dozen or so recordings on YouTube that haven't been commercially released, including songs, piano works and the String Quartets Nos 1, 4 and 5.[36][37]

References edit

  1. ^ Eaglefield Hull, Arthur. A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians (1924), pp. 122-3
  2. ^ "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
  3. ^ 'Dieren, Bernard van' in the Collins Encyclopedia of Music, London : Chancellor Press, edition 1989, p. 165
  4. ^ Gerald Norris. A Musical Gazetteer of Great Britain & Ireland (1981), p. 72
  5. ^ Lewis Foreman. From Parry to Britten: British Music in Letters (1987), p.158
  6. ^ "String Quartet No. 6 | Details". AllMusic.
  7. ^ Davies, Hywel (1988). "Bernard van Dieren, Philip Heseltine and Cecil Gray: A Significant Affiliation". Music & Letters. 69 (1): 30–48. doi:10.1093/ml/69.1.30. JSTOR 855464 – via JSTOR.
  8. ^ Coates, Eric (23 April 1953). "Suite in Four Movements: An Autobiography". London – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Heseltine, Nigel (23 April 1992). Capriol for mother: a memoir of Philip Heseltine (Peter Warlock). Thames Publishing. OCLC 33887773 – via Open WorldCat.
  10. ^ Gazzoni, Giovanni and John Goss (1930). "Bernard van Dieren's 'The Tailor'," The Musical Times, Vol. 71, No. 1053, pp. 999–1000.
  11. ^ The autograph score is in The British Library
  12. ^ Van Dieren, Bernard (1920). Epstein. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head.
  13. ^ Van Dieren, Bernard (1935). Down Among the Dead Men and other Essays. London: Oxford University Press.
  14. ^ Listing, BBC Radio Times 15 March 1935]
  15. ^ "Elegy, for piano | Details". AllMusic.
  16. ^ a b Banfield, Stephen (11 April 1985). Sensibility and English Song: Volume 2: Critical Studies of the Early Twentieth Century. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521303606 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Quartet for Strings No 2 (IMSLP)
  18. ^ a b "Ronald Stevenson: Piano Music, Volume Five | Toccata Music Group | Toccata Classics | Toccata Press | Toccata Next". toccataclassics.com/.
  19. ^ Mellers, Wilfrid. ‘Bernard van Dieren: Musical Intelligence and “The New Language”’, in Scrutiny, 1936, p. 273
  20. ^ "Gossiana – A Tribute to John Goss | Divine Art Recordings".
  21. ^ Radio Times Issue 510, 7 July 1933, p 55
  22. ^ a b "Webshop - Utrecht String Quartet". utrechtstringquartet.com.
  23. ^ Robert Williams. 'Bernard van Dieren (1887–1936)', in British Music 1 (July 1979), pp.53-63
  24. ^ Bacharach, A.L. (ed.) British Music of Our Time, Penguin (1951) p 193.
  25. ^ Alistair Chisholm: Notes to Piano Classics CD PCL10241 (2022)
  26. ^ "Donemus Webshop — Symphony no 1". webshop.donemus.com.
  27. ^ "Bernard van Dieren 'Chinese Symphony'". www.wyastone.co.uk.
  28. ^ *Lloyd, Stephen, Sparkes, Diana, Sparkes, Brian (editors): Music in Their Time: The Memoirs and Letters of Dora and Hubert Foss 2019-10-14 at the Wayback Machine, 2019.
  29. ^ "Category:Dieren, Bernard van - IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download". imslp.org.
  30. ^ "Bardic Edition, Music Publishers".
  31. ^ also arranged for piano and recitation by Peter Warlock
  32. ^ listing at Discogs
  33. ^ "Bernard van Dieren Collection [RB]: Classical CD Reviews- May 2001 MusicWeb(UK)". musicweb-international.com.
  34. ^ "Utrecht String Quartet - String Quartets From The Twenties". 17 September 2023 – via www.discogs.com.
  35. ^ "VAN DIEREN - Symphony No 1, Introit & Elegie Lyrita SRCD357 [JF] Classical Music Reviews: October 2016 - MusicWeb-International". www.musicweb-international.com.
  36. ^ "Bernard van Dieren--String Quartet #5 (1927)" – via www.youtube.com.
  37. ^ "Bernard+van+Dieren results on SoundCloud - Listen to music". SoundCloud.

Further reading edit

  • ApIvor, D (1976–7). "Bernard van Dieren", Composer No. 69, pp. 13–16
  • Banfield, S (1985). Sensibility and English Song, Critical Studies of the Early Twentieth Century, CUP, pp. 310–316.
  • Chisholm, Alastair (1984). Bernard van Dieren: An Introduction. London: Thames Publishing.
  • Cronshaw, J (2010). "Bernard van Dieren", in Carving a Legacy: The Identity of Jacob Epstein. (Ph.D. Thesis, University of Leeds, 2010).
  • Davenport, John (1955). "Bernard van Dieren", The Musical Times, Vol. 96, No. 1346, pp. 188–190.
  • Davies, Hywel (1987). "Bernard van Dieren (1887–1936)", The Musical Times, Vol. 128, No. 1738, pp. 675–678.
  • Davies, Hywel (1988). "Bernard van Dieren, Philip Heseltine and Cecil Gray: A Significant Affiliation", Music & Letters, Vol. 69, No. 1, pp. 30–48.
  • Davis, Edgar (1938). "Bernard van Dieren", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 24, No. 2, pp. 169–175.
  • East, L (1973). "Bernard van Dieren", colloquium, Faculty of Music, King's College, London (typescript).
  • Mellers, W. H (1937) "Bernard van Dieren", The Listener Vol. 17, Issue 429, p. 50, 31 March 1937.
  • Riley, Patrick Robert (1985). The String Quartets of Bernard van Dieren. Ph.D. diss. University of Iowa.
  • Smith, B (1996), Peter Warlock: The Life of Philip Heseltine. Oxford University Press.
  • Smith, B, "Dieren, Bernard Hélène Joseph van (1887–1936)", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online (subscription only) accessed 2 May 2013.
  • Tomlinson, F (1978). Warlock and van Dieren (With a van Dieren Catalogue), Thames Publishing
  • Williams, L. Henderson (1931). "Philandering Round' Mr. van Dieren's Quartets," The Sackbut, Vol 9, pp. 325–329.
  • Williams, Robert. 'Bernard van Dieren' in British Music (British Music Society), Volume 1 (1979)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Bernard van Dieren at Wikimedia Commons
  • Bardic Edition
  • Bernard van Dieren, by Dr Erik Chisholm
  • Free scores by Bernard van Dieren at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Bernard Van Dieren 60th Commemoration Concert by Eiluned Davies and Olga Wilson piano, Angela Amato violin
  • McMaster University Library: The Denis ApIvor collection of Christian Darnton and Bernard Van Dieren.
  • Portrait of Frida Kindler, by Jacob Epstein
  • Jacob Epstein: The Risen Christ, National Galleries of Scotland

bernard, dieren, bernard, hélène, joseph, dieren, december, 1887, april, 1936, dutch, composer, critic, author, writer, music, much, whose, working, life, spent, england, bust, jacob, epsteinbackground, informationbirth, namebernard, hélène, joseph, dierenborn. Bernard Helene Joseph van Dieren 27 December 1887 24 April 1936 was a Dutch composer critic author and writer on music much of whose working life was spent in England Bernard van DierenBust of Bernard van Dieren by Jacob EpsteinBackground informationBirth nameBernard Helene Joseph van DierenBorn 1887 12 27 27 December 1887Rotterdam NetherlandsDied24 April 1936 1936 04 24 aged 48 London EnglandOccupation s Composer writer Contents 1 Biography 2 Musical style 3 Major works 4 Discography 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography editVan Dieren was the last of five children of a Dutch Rotterdam wine merchant Bernard Joseph van Dieren and his French second wife Julie Francoise Adelle Labbe Details of his education are unknown but it seems that his early training was as a scientist as a research assistant in a laboratory Gifted in science extremely intelligent and with a phenomenal memory he was also well versed in literature as well as an able violinist and amateur artist His career as composer began when he was twenty when some of his early works were published in the Netherlands In 1909 he relocated to London as a correspondent for the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant with his wife to be Frida Kindler 1879 1964 a very gifted concert pianist whom he married on 1 January 1910 By this time he had decided to study music seriously 1 A son Hans Jean Jules Maximilian Navarre Benvenuto Bernard van Dieren 1910 74 was born the same year 2 In the same year he took British nationality 3 They settled at 35A St George s Road West Hampstead in the 1920s 4 and later at 68 Clifton Hill St John s Wood 5 He was largely self taught though he spent 1912 in Europe where he met the composers Busoni and Schoenberg 6 His early contact with the music world was as a musical correspondent for several European newspapers and periodicals During the First World War he was for a short time involved in secret service in the Netherlands as a cypher expert in the Intelligence Department He suffered most of his life from ill health and had numerous operations for kidney related complaints To relieve the recurring pain morphine was prescribed and it is thought that in later life he became addicted to the drug Because of these frequent bouts of illness his wife a former pupil of Busoni supported the family by teaching the piano and by giving recitals They also relied on financial support from a group of admirers and friends which included notable personalities such as Jacob Epstein Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell Augustus John Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji Philip Heseltine the composer Peter Warlock and Cecil Gray 7 The latter two were especially drawn by his charismatic and powerful personality and gave untiring support for his cause by prompting performances and publication of his works However this sometimes over enthusiastic support generated a backlash from non believers Eric Coates who played viola in the under rehearsed premiere of Diaphony 1916 witnessed the contempt of the musical establishment Parry Stanford and others towards van Dieren 8 Heseltine made van Dieren his heir in his will inspiring claims by Heseltine s son Nigel that van Dieren had murdered Heseltine 9 In 1925 van Dieren worked for the Philips electrical company but recurring illness forced him to resign the following year Some of his works were published in 1927 and in the same year his Fourth String Quartet was performed at the Frankfurt Festival In 1930 he completed his comic opera The Tailor 10 begun in 1916 at Heseltine and Gray s request 11 He also wrote a book on Epstein 1920 12 and published a collection of controversial essays entitled Down Among the Dead Men 1935 In his writings van Dieren championed composers such as Alkan Bellini Busoni Liszt and Meyerbeer 13 Eventually two of his more important works were broadcast by the BBC Diaphony in 1934 and the Chinese Symphony in 1935 He died on 24 April 1936 in London and is buried on the edge of the graveyard of St Lawrence s Church West Wycombe Constant Lambert who conducted the first public performance of the Chinese Symphony from BBC Broadcasting House on 15 March 1935 14 claimed that the theme for the opening movement Palindromic Prelude from his 1938 ballet Horoscope was dictated from beyond the grave by van Dieren 15 Musical style editThe music of van Dieren is harmonically chromatic rhythmically fluid and freely polyphonic tonally anarchic rather than atonal 16 and often notated without barlines 17 At the same time melody particularly the importance of the singing line is central 18 Wilfrid Mellers rated him a great melodist 19 This is most evident in the songs championed by the baritone John Goss and the soprano Megan Foster in the 1920s and 1930s 20 21 He set some German texts particularly Heine but mostly chose from the English Romantic poets including Shelley Byron Keats Beddoes and Walter Savage Landor According to Stephen Banfield 16 van Dieren if he belongs anywhere is best positioned as part of the inter war lyrical tradition In his chamber music the influence of Schoenberg can be detected along with a textual complexity comparable with Busoni which engages the imagination 22 The six quartets gained immediate attention from leading performers of the day for instance the Second String Quartet was premiered by the Amar Quartet with Paul Hindemith on viola at the Donaueschingen Festival in 1922 22 The Third dedicated to Delius shows some of the serenity of its dedicatee It was a favourite of the Brosa Quartet 23 The Fourth Quartet is written for the unorthodox combination of two violins viola and double bass 24 The fifth quartet composed in 1925 was originally written for violin viola cello and double bass but in 1931 van Dieren re scored it for conventional quartet The composer Ronald Stevenson later transcribed it for solo piano as a piano sonata which B v D never composed 18 The piano music illustrates van Dieren s shifts in style from the atonal and terse Six Sketches 1910 11 to the more approachable lyrical and tonally oriented style of the Three Studies early 1920s and Tema Con Variazione 1927 Many of these pieces were premiered by the composer s wife Frida but they have also been performed over the years by Kathleen Long Robert Collet 1905 1993 Erik Chisholm Ronald Stevenson Eiluned Davies and most recently Christopher Guild 25 The Chinese Symphony 1912 14 26 shows the characteristic style of the songs and chamber work could be applied to large forces it is scored for five soloists chorus and orchestra The text uses German translations by Hans Bethge of Chinese poetry also used by Mahler in Das Lied von der Erde a few years earlier Along with Schoenberg and Busoni the rhapsodic and lyrical style of Delius can often be heard in the Chinese Symphony and other orchestral works such as the Elegy for cello and orchestra 27 Although Oxford University Press under Hubert Foss 28 published some scores from 1925 onward 29 much of van Dieren s work remained in manuscript and hard to find for many years after his death until work of reconstructing missing scores and instrumental parts was carried out by Denis ApIvor and Alastair Chisholm in the 1970s More recently Barry Ould of Bardic Edition has been making previously unpublished scores available again 30 Major works editOrchestral Elegy for cello and orchestra 1908 Symphonic Epilogue to The Cenci Op 3 1910 Belsazar for baritone and orchestra 1911 Symphony No 1 Chinese Op 6 1914 Diaphony for baritone and chamber orchestra 1916 Overture to an Imaginary Comedy for 16 instruments 1916 Introit to Topers Tropes Les Propos des Beuveurs after Rabelais 1921 Serenade for chamber orchestra 1925 Anjou Comedy Overture for orchestra 1935 Symphony No 2 In Three Dance Movements unfinished Chamber and Solo Impromptu for violin 1909 String Quartet No 1 Op 5 1912 Ballad de Villon string quartet and recitation 1917 31 String Quartet No 2 Op 9 1917 String Quartet No 3 Op 15 1919 String Quartet No 4 Op 16 1923 String Quartet No 5 1925 re scored 1931 String Quartet No 6 1927 Sonatina Tyroica for violin and piano 1927 Sonata for solo violin 1928 Sonata for solo cello 1930 Estemporales harp solo 1931 Piano Six Sketches Op 4a 1911 Toccata 1912 Netherlands Melodies 1917 Three Studies 1925 Tema con Variazione 1928 Adagio Cantando transcription from String Quartet No 5 1931 Piccolo Pralinudettino Fridato 1934 Song Mir traumte von einem Konigskind Heine Wer zum ersten Male liebt Heine 1908 Wenn ich auf dem Lager liege Heine 1908 Und wussten s die Blumen Heine 1908 Lebewohl Morike 1908 Song from The Cenci Shelley 1909 string quartet Es fallt ein Stern herunter Heine 1911 Die Trennung Hans Bethge 1912 Epiphanias Goethe 1914 Madchenlied An einem jungen Rosenblatt Bierbaum 1914 Green Verlaine 1915 Ich wandelte unter den Baumen Heine 1918 Mon bras pressait ta taille frele Hugo 1921 A Cassandre De Ronsard 1924 Sonetto VII Spenser for tenor and 11 instruments 1925 Dream Pedlary Thomas Lovell Beddoes 1925 Oh Quand je dors Hugo 1925 Rhapsodia De Quincey 1925 string quartet Schon Rohtraut Morike 1925 Spring song of the Birds King James I of Scotland 1925 Take O Take Those Lips Away Shakespeare 1925 Weep you no more sad fountains anon 1925 With Margerain Gentle Skelton 1925 Der Asra Heine 1927 Last Days Landor 1927 Love Must Be Gone Landor 1927 She I Love Landor 1927 Les roses etaient toutes rouges Verlaine 1927 Mon cœur se recommande a vous Lassus arr van Dieren 1927 Spleen Verlaine 1927 Spring the sweet Spring Thomas Nashe 1927 Ach Ich sehne mich nach Thranen Heine 1930 Der Kastraten Urteil und Gesang Heine 1930 Seraphine Heine 1930 A Prayer Joyce 1930 Frail the White Rose Joyce 1930 Nightpiece James Joyce 1930 Mit deinen blauen Augen Heine 1930 Dawn John Ford dated 26 4 1935 Opera The Tailor 1917 30 Discography editPiano Music Volumes 1 and 2 Six Sketches Toccata Tema con Variazione Three Studies Piccolo Pralinudettino Fridato Adagio Cantando Netherlands Melodies Eiluned Davies piano British Music Society BMS 402 1983 and BMS 405 1986 32 The Bernard van Dieren Collection Songs for High Voice and String Quartet Heine Songs Song from The Cenci Rhapsodia Sonata for solo violin Sonatina Tyroica Estemporales for harp Ludmilla Andrew Philip Thomas Emperor String Quartet etc British Music Society BML 001 1992 33 String Quartets from the Twenties String Quartet No 6 Utrecht String Quartet NM Classics 2000 34 Chinese Symphony Symphony No 1 Chinese Op 6 Intriot Elegy for cello and orchestra BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales conducted by William Boughton Raphael Wallfisch cello Lyrita 2016 35 Ronald Stevenson Piano Music Vol Five Transcription of String Quartet No 5 for piano Christopher Guild piano Toccata Classics TOCC0606 2021 Complete Piano Music also includes Ballad de Villon Christopher Guild Piano Classics PCL10241 2022 There are also a dozen or so recordings on YouTube that haven t been commercially released including songs piano works and the String Quartets Nos 1 4 and 5 36 37 References edit Eaglefield Hull Arthur A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians 1924 pp 122 3 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Dieren Bernard van in the Collins Encyclopedia of Music London Chancellor Press edition 1989 p 165 Gerald Norris A Musical Gazetteer of Great Britain amp Ireland 1981 p 72 Lewis Foreman From Parry to Britten British Music in Letters 1987 p 158 String Quartet No 6 Details AllMusic Davies Hywel 1988 Bernard van Dieren Philip Heseltine and Cecil Gray A Significant Affiliation Music amp Letters 69 1 30 48 doi 10 1093 ml 69 1 30 JSTOR 855464 via JSTOR Coates Eric 23 April 1953 Suite in Four Movements An Autobiography London via Google Books Heseltine Nigel 23 April 1992 Capriol for mother a memoir of Philip Heseltine Peter Warlock Thames Publishing OCLC 33887773 via Open WorldCat Gazzoni Giovanni and John Goss 1930 Bernard van Dieren s The Tailor The Musical Times Vol 71 No 1053 pp 999 1000 The autograph score is in The British Library Van Dieren Bernard 1920 Epstein London John Lane The Bodley Head Van Dieren Bernard 1935 Down Among the Dead Men and other Essays London Oxford University Press Listing BBC Radio Times 15 March 1935 Elegy for piano Details AllMusic a b Banfield Stephen 11 April 1985 Sensibility and English Song Volume 2 Critical Studies of the Early Twentieth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521303606 via Google Books Quartet for Strings No 2 IMSLP a b Ronald Stevenson Piano Music Volume Five Toccata Music Group Toccata Classics Toccata Press Toccata Next toccataclassics com Mellers Wilfrid Bernard van Dieren Musical Intelligence and The New Language in Scrutiny 1936 p 273 Gossiana A Tribute to John Goss Divine Art Recordings Radio Times Issue 510 7 July 1933 p 55 a b Webshop Utrecht String Quartet utrechtstringquartet com Robert Williams Bernard van Dieren 1887 1936 in British Music 1 July 1979 pp 53 63 Bacharach A L ed British Music of Our Time Penguin 1951 p 193 Alistair Chisholm Notes to Piano Classics CD PCL10241 2022 Donemus Webshop Symphony no 1 webshop donemus com Bernard van Dieren Chinese Symphony www wyastone co uk Lloyd Stephen Sparkes Diana Sparkes Brian editors Music in Their Time The Memoirs and Letters of Dora and Hubert Foss Archived 2019 10 14 at the Wayback Machine 2019 Category Dieren Bernard van IMSLP Free Sheet Music PDF Download imslp org Bardic Edition Music Publishers also arranged for piano and recitation by Peter Warlock listing at Discogs Bernard van Dieren Collection RB Classical CD Reviews May 2001 MusicWeb UK musicweb international com Utrecht String Quartet String Quartets From The Twenties 17 September 2023 via www discogs com VAN DIEREN Symphony No 1 Introit amp Elegie Lyrita SRCD357 JF Classical Music Reviews October 2016 MusicWeb International www musicweb international com Bernard van Dieren String Quartet 5 1927 via www youtube com Bernard van Dieren results on SoundCloud Listen to music SoundCloud Further reading editApIvor D 1976 7 Bernard van Dieren Composer No 69 pp 13 16 Banfield S 1985 Sensibility and English Song Critical Studies of the Early Twentieth Century CUP pp 310 316 Chisholm Alastair 1984 Bernard van Dieren An Introduction London Thames Publishing Cronshaw J 2010 Bernard van Dieren in Carving a Legacy The Identity of Jacob Epstein Ph D Thesis University of Leeds 2010 Davenport John 1955 Bernard van Dieren The Musical Times Vol 96 No 1346 pp 188 190 Davies Hywel 1987 Bernard van Dieren 1887 1936 The Musical Times Vol 128 No 1738 pp 675 678 Davies Hywel 1988 Bernard van Dieren Philip Heseltine and Cecil Gray A Significant Affiliation Music amp Letters Vol 69 No 1 pp 30 48 Davis Edgar 1938 Bernard van Dieren The Musical Quarterly Vol 24 No 2 pp 169 175 East L 1973 Bernard van Dieren colloquium Faculty of Music King s College London typescript Mellers W H 1937 Bernard van Dieren The Listener Vol 17 Issue 429 p 50 31 March 1937 Riley Patrick Robert 1985 The String Quartets of Bernard van Dieren Ph D diss University of Iowa Smith B 1996 Peter Warlock The Life of Philip Heseltine Oxford University Press Smith B Dieren Bernard Helene Joseph van 1887 1936 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online subscription only accessed 2 May 2013 Tomlinson F 1978 Warlock and van Dieren With a van Dieren Catalogue Thames Publishing Williams L Henderson 1931 Philandering Round Mr van Dieren s Quartets The Sackbut Vol 9 pp 325 329 Williams Robert Bernard van Dieren in British Music British Music Society Volume 1 1979 External links edit nbsp Media related to Bernard van Dieren at Wikimedia Commons Bardic Edition Bernard van Dieren by Dr Erik Chisholm Free scores by Bernard van Dieren at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Bernard Van Dieren 60th Commemoration Concert by Eiluned Davies and Olga Wilson piano Angela Amato violin McMaster University Library The Denis ApIvor collection of Christian Darnton and Bernard Van Dieren Portrait of Frida Kindler by Jacob Epstein Jacob Epstein The Risen Christ National Galleries of Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bernard van Dieren amp oldid 1212333305, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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