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Enigma Variations

Edward Elgar composed his Variations on an Original Theme, Op. 36, popularly known as the Enigma Variations,[a] between October 1898 and February 1899. It is an orchestral work comprising fourteen variations on an original theme.

Elgar in 1903

Elgar dedicated the work "to my friends pictured within", each variation being a musical sketch of one of his circle of close acquaintances (see musical cryptogram). Those portrayed include Elgar's wife Alice, his friend and publisher Augustus J. Jaeger and Elgar himself. In a programme note for a performance in 1911 Elgar wrote:

This work, commenced in a spirit of humour & continued in deep seriousness, contains sketches of the composer's friends. It may be understood that these personages comment or reflect on the original theme & each one attempts a solution of the Enigma, for so the theme is called. The sketches are not 'portraits' but each variation contains a distinct idea founded on some particular personality or perhaps on some incident known only to two people. This is the basis of the composition, but the work may be listened to as a 'piece of music' apart from any extraneous consideration.[b]

In naming his theme "Enigma", Elgar posed a challenge which has generated much speculation but has never been conclusively answered. The Enigma is widely believed to involve a hidden melody.[citation needed]

After its 1899 London premiere the Variations achieved immediate popularity and established Elgar's international reputation.

History Edit

Elgar described how on the evening of 21 October 1898, after a tiring day's teaching, he sat down at the piano. A melody he played caught the attention of his wife and he began to improvise variations on it in styles which reflected the character of some of his friends. These improvisations, expanded and orchestrated, became the Enigma Variations.[1] Elgar considered including variations portraying Arthur Sullivan and Hubert Parry, but was unable to assimilate their musical styles without pastiche and dropped the idea.[2]

The piece was finished on 18 February 1899 and published by Novello & Co. It was first performed at St James's Hall in London on 19 June 1899, conducted by Hans Richter. Critics were at first irritated by the layer of mystification, but most praised the substance, structure and orchestration of the work. Elgar later revised the final variation, adding 96 new bars and an organ part. The new version (which is usually played today) was first heard at the Worcester Three Choirs Festival on 13 September 1899, with Elgar conducting.[3]

The European premiere was performed in Düsseldorf, Germany on 7 February 1901, under Julius Buths (who also conducted the European premiere of The Dream of Gerontius in December 1901).[4] The work quickly achieved many international performances, from Saint Petersburg, where it delighted Alexander Glazunov and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1904, to New York, where Gustav Mahler conducted it in 1910.[5]

Orchestration Edit

The work is scored for an orchestra consisting of 2 flutes (one doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns in F, 3 trumpets in F, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, side drum, triangle, bass drum, cymbals, organ (ad lib) and strings.

Structure Edit

 
Edward and Alice Elgar, 1891

The theme is followed by 14 variations. The variations spring from the theme's melodic, harmonic and rhythmic elements, and the extended fourteenth variation forms a grand finale.

Elgar dedicated the piece to "my friends pictured within" and in the score each variation is prefaced the initials, name or nickname of the friend depicted. As was common with painted portraits of the time, Elgar's musical portraits depict their subjects at two levels. Each movement conveys a general impression of its subject's personality. In addition, many of them contain a musical reference to a specific characteristic or event, such as a laugh, a habit of speech or a memorable conversation. The sections of the work are as follows.

Theme (Enigma: Andante) Edit

The unusual melodic contours of the G minor opening theme convey a sense of searching introspection:

 

A switch to the major key introduces a flowing motif which briefly lightens the mood before the first theme returns, now accompanied by a sustained bass line and emotionally charged counterpoints.

In a programme note for a 1912 performance of his setting of Arthur O'Shaughnessy's ode The Music Makers, Elgar wrote of this theme (which he quoted in the later work), "it expressed when written (in 1898) my sense of the loneliness of the artist as described in the first six lines of the Ode, and to me, it still embodies that sense."[6]

Elgar's personal identification with the theme is evidenced by his use of its opening phrase (which matches the rhythm and inflection of his name) as a signature in letters to friends.[7]

The theme leads into Variation I without a pause.

Variation I (L'istesso tempo) "C.A.E." Edit

Caroline Alice Elgar, Elgar's wife. The variation repeats a four-note melodic fragment which Elgar reportedly whistled when arriving home to his wife. After Alice's death, Elgar wrote, "The variation is really a prolongation of the theme with what I wished to be romantic and delicate additions; those who knew C.A.E. will understand this reference to one whose life was a romantic and delicate inspiration."

(In these notes Elgar's words are quoted from his posthumous publication My Friends Pictured Within which draws on the notes he provided for the Aeolian Company's 1929 pianola rolls edition of the Variations.)

 

Variation II (Allegro) "H.D.S-P." Edit

Hew David Steuart-Powell. Elgar wrote, "Hew David Steuart-Powell was a well-known amateur pianist and a great player of chamber music. He was associated with B.G.N. (cello) and the composer (violin) for many years in this playing. His characteristic diatonic run over the keys before beginning to play is here humorously travestied in the semiquaver passages; these should suggest a Toccata, but chromatic beyond H.D.S-P.'s liking."

 

Variation III (Allegretto) "R.B.T." Edit

Richard Baxter Townshend, Oxford don and author of the Tenderfoot series of books; brother-in-law of the W.M.B. depicted in Variation IV. This variation references R.B.T's presentation of an old man in some amateur theatricals ‒ the low voice flying off occasionally into "soprano" timbre.

Variation IV (Allegro di molto) "W.M.B." Edit

William Meath Baker, squire of Hasfield, Gloucestershire and benefactor of several public buildings in Fenton, Stoke-on-Trent, brother-in-law of R.B.T. depicted in Variation III, and (step) uncle of Dora Penny in Variation X. He "expressed himself somewhat energetically". This is the shortest of the variations.

Variation V (Moderato) "R.P.A." Edit

Richard Penrose Arnold, the son of the poet Matthew Arnold, and an amateur pianist. This variation leads into the next without pause.

Variation VI (Andantino) "Ysobel" Edit

Isabel Fitton, a viola pupil of Elgar. Elgar explained, "It may be noticed that the opening bar, a phrase made use of throughout the variation, is an 'exercise' for crossing the strings – a difficulty for beginners; on this is built a pensive and, for a moment, romantic movement."

 

Variation VII (Presto) "Troyte" Edit

Arthur Troyte Griffith, a Malvern architect and one of Elgar's firmest friends. The variation, with a time signature of 1
1
, good-naturedly mimics his enthusiastic incompetence on the piano. It may also refer to an occasion when Griffith and Elgar were out walking and got caught in a thunderstorm. The pair took refuge in the house of Winifred and Florence Norbury (Sherridge, Leigh Sinton, near Malvern), to which the next variation refers.

Variation VIII (Allegretto) "W.N." Edit

Winifred Norbury, one of the secretaries of the Worcester Philharmonic Society. "Really suggested by an eighteenth-century house. The gracious personalities of the ladies are sedately shown. W.N. was more connected with the music than others of the family, and her initials head the movement; to justify this position a little suggestion of a characteristic laugh is given."

This variation is linked to the next by a single note held by the first violins.

Variation IX (Adagio) "Nimrod" Edit

The name of the variation refers to Augustus J. Jaeger, who was employed as a music editor by the London publisher Novello & Co. He was a close friend of Elgar's, giving him useful advice but also severe criticism, something Elgar greatly appreciated. Elgar later related how Jaeger had encouraged him as an artist and had stimulated him to continue composing despite setbacks. Nimrod is described in the Old Testament as "a mighty hunter before the Lord", Jäger being German for hunter.

In 1904 Elgar told Dora Penny ("Dorabella") that this variation is not really a portrait, but "the story of something that happened".[8] Once, when Elgar had been very depressed and was about to give it all up and write no more music, Jaeger had visited him and encouraged him to continue composing. He referred to Ludwig van Beethoven, who had a lot of worries, but wrote more and more beautiful music. "And that is what you must do", Jaeger said, and he sang the theme of the second movement of Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 8 Pathétique. Elgar disclosed to Dora that the opening bars of "Nimrod" were made to suggest that theme. "Can't you hear it at the beginning? Only a hint, not a quotation."

This variation has become popular in its own right and is sometimes used at British funerals, memorial services, and other solemn occasions. It is always played at the Cenotaph, Whitehall in London at the National Service of Remembrance. A version was also played during the Hong Kong handover ceremony in 1997 and at the opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games. The "Nimrod" variation was the final orchestral composition (before the national anthem) played by the Greek National Orchestra in a televised June 2013 concert, before the 75-year-old Athenian ensemble was dissolved in the wake of severe government cutbacks.[9]

An adaptation of the piece appears at the ending of the 2017 film Dunkirk in the score by Hans Zimmer.[10][11]

Variation X (Intermezzo: Allegretto) "Dorabella" Edit

Dora Penny, a friend whose stutter is gently parodied by the woodwinds. Dora, later Mrs. Richard Powell, was the daughter of the Revd (later Canon) Alfred Penny. Her stepmother was the sister of William Meath Baker, the subject of Variation IV. She was the recipient of another of Elgar's enigmas, the so-called Dorabella Cipher. She described the "Friends Pictured Within" and "The Enigma" in two chapters of her book Edward Elgar, Memories of a Variation. This variation features a melody for solo viola.

 

Variation XI (Allegro di molto) "G.R.S." Edit

George Robertson Sinclair, the energetic organist of Hereford Cathedral. In the words of Elgar: "The variation, however, has nothing to do with organs or cathedrals, or, except remotely, with G.R.S. The first few bars were suggested by his great bulldog, Dan (a well-known character) falling down the steep bank into the River Wye (bar 1); his paddling upstream to find a landing place (bars 2 and 3); and his rejoicing bark on landing (second half of bar 5). G.R.S. said, 'Set that to music'. I did; here it is."[12]

Variation XII (Andante) "B.G.N." Edit

Basil George Nevinson, an accomplished amateur cellist who played chamber music with Elgar. The variation is introduced and concluded by a solo cello. This variation leads into the next without pause.

Variation XIII (Romanza: Moderato) " * * * " Edit

Possibly, Lady Mary Lygon of Madresfield Court near Malvern, a sponsor of a local music festival. "The asterisks take the place of the name of a lady[c] who was, at the time of the composition, on a sea voyage. The drums suggest the distant throb of the engines of a liner, over which the clarinet quotes a phrase from Mendelssohn's Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage."

 

If it is Lady Mary, Elgar may have withheld her initials because of superstition surrounding the number 13,[13] or he may have felt uneasy about publicly associating the name of a prominent local figure with music that had taken on a powerful emotional intensity.[14] There is credible evidence to support the view that the variation's atmosphere of brooding melancholy and its subtitle "Romanza" are tokens of a covert tribute to another woman, the name most frequently mentioned in this connection being that of Helen Weaver, who had broken off her engagement to Elgar in 1884 before sailing out of his life forever aboard a ship bound for New Zealand.[15][16][17][18][19]

Variation XIV (Finale: Allegro) "E.D.U." Edit

Elgar himself, nicknamed Edu by his wife, from the German Eduard. The themes from two variations are echoed: "Nimrod" and "C.A.E.", referring to Jaeger and Elgar's wife Alice, "two great influences on the life and art of the composer", as Elgar wrote in 1927. Elgar called these references "entirely fitting to the intention of the piece".[20]

The original version of this variation is nearly 100 bars shorter than the one now usually played. In July 1899, one month after the original version was finished Jaeger urged Elgar to make the variation a little longer. After some cajoling Elgar agreed, and also added an organ part. The new version was played for the first time at the Worcester Three Choirs Festival, with Elgar himself conducting, on 13 September 1899.[3]

Final inscription Edit

At the end of the full score he inscribed the words "Bramo assai, poco spero, nulla chieggio". This is a quote from Torquato Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, Book II, Stanza 16 (1595), albeit slightly altered from third to first person. It means: "I long for much, I hope for little, I ask nothing". Like Elgar's own name, this sentence too can be fitted easily into the Enigma theme.[21]

Arrangements Edit

Arrangements of the Variations include:

  • The composer's arrangement of the complete work for piano solo
  • The composer's arrangement of the complete work for piano duet (two pianos)
  • Duet (piano, four hands) – by John E. West F.R.A.M., F.R.C.O (1863–1929), organist, composer and musical adviser to Novello & Co
  • Transcription for chamber ensemble/orchestra by George Morton (UK)[22]
  • Brass band – by composer Eric Ball
  • There are many arrangements of individual variations, particularly Variation IX "Nimrod"
  • Variation X "Dorabella" was published separately in its orchestral version
  • Transcription for Wind Band by Earl Slocum (USA)
  • Transcription for Symphonic Wind Band by John Morrison (UK)
  • Transcription for Symphonic Band by Douglas McLain
  • Transcription for the Wanamaker Organ by Peter Richard Conte
  • 2013 – Transcription for Symphonic Wind Ensemble by Donald C. Patterson for the United States Marine Band
  • 2017 – Hans Zimmer included themes from Elgar's Variations in the soundtrack for the original motion picture soundtrack Dunkirk.

The Enigma Edit

The word "Enigma", serving as a title for the theme of the Variations, was added to the score at a late stage, after the manuscript had been delivered to the publisher. Despite a series of hints provided by Elgar, the precise nature of the implied puzzle remains unknown.

Confirmation that Enigma is the name of the theme is provided by Elgar's 1911 programme note ("... Enigma, for so the theme is called")[b] and in a letter to Jaeger dated 30 June 1899 he associates this name specifically with what he calls the "principal motive" – the G minor theme heard in the work's opening bars, which (perhaps significantly) is terminated by a double bar.[23] Whatever the nature of the attendant puzzle, it is likely to be closely connected with this "Enigma theme".

Elgar's first public pronouncement on the Enigma appeared in Charles A. Barry's programme note for the first performance of the Variations:

The Enigma I will not explain – its "dark saying" must be left unguessed, and I warn you that the connexion between the Variations and the Theme is often of the slightest texture; further, through and over the whole set another and larger theme "goes", but is not played . . . . So the principal Theme never appears, even as in some late dramas – eg Maeterlinck's L'Intruse and Les sept Princesses – the chief character is never on the stage.[24]

Far from clarifying matters, this utterance seems to envelop the Enigma in further mysteries. The phrase "dark saying" can be read straightforwardly as an archaic synonym for enigma but might equally plausibly be interpreted as a cryptic clue, while the word "further" seems to suggest that the "larger theme" is distinct from the Enigma, forming a separate component of the puzzle.

Elgar provided another clue in an interview he gave in October 1900 to the editor of the Musical Times, F. G. Edwards, who reported:

Mr Elgar tells us that the heading Enigma is justified by the fact that it is possible to add another phrase, which is quite familiar, above the original theme that he has written. What that theme is no one knows except the composer. Thereby hangs the Enigma.[25]

Five years later, Robert John Buckley stated in his biography of Elgar (written with the composer's close cooperation):[26] "The theme is a counterpoint on some well-known melody which is never heard."[27]

Attempted solutions to the Enigma commonly propose a well-known melody which is claimed to be either a counterpoint to Elgar's theme or in some other way linked to it. Musical solutions of this sort are supported by Dora Penny and Carice Elgar's testimony that the solution was generally understood to involve a tune,[28] and by the evidence from an anecdote describing how Elgar encoded the solution in a numbered sequence of piano keys.[29][30] A rival school of thought holds that the "larger theme" which "goes" "through and over the whole set" is an abstract idea rather than a musical theme. The interpretation placed on the "larger theme" forms the basis of the grouping of solutions in the summary that follows.

Julian Rushton has suggested that any solution should satisfy five criteria: a "dark saying" must be involved; the theme "is not played"; the theme should be "well known" (as Elgar stated multiple times); it should explain Elgar's remark that Dora Penny should have been, "of all people", the one to solve the Enigma;[28] and fifthly, some musical observations in the notes Elgar provided to accompany the pianola roll edition may be part of the solution. Furthermore, the solution (if it exists) "must be multivalent, must deal with musical as well as cryptographic issues, must produce workable counterpoint within Elgar's stylistic range, and must at the same time seem obvious (and not just to its begetter)".[31]

Elgar accepted none of the solutions proposed in his lifetime, and took the secret with him to the grave.

The prospect of gaining new insights into Elgar's character and composition methods, and perhaps revealing new music, continues to motivate the search for a definitive solution. But Norman Del Mar expressed the view that "there would be considerable loss if the solution were to be found, much of the work's attraction lying in the impenetrability of the riddle itself", and that interest in the work would not be as strong had the Enigma been solved during Elgar's lifetime.[32]

Counterpoints Edit

Solutions in this category suggest a well-known tune which (in the proponent's view) forms a counterpoint to the theme of the Variations.

  • After Elgar's death in 1934 Richard Powell (husband of Dorabella) published a solution proposing Auld Lang Syne as the countermelody.[33] This theory has been elaborated by Roger Fiske,[34] Eric Sams[35] and Derek Hudson.[36] Elgar himself, however, is on record as stating "Auld Lang Syne won't do".[37]
  • Reviewing published Enigma solutions in 1939, Ernest Newman failed to identify any that met what he considered to be the required musical standard.[38]
  • A competition organized by the American magazine The Saturday Review in 1953 yielded one proposed counterpoint – the aria Una bella serenata from Mozart's Così fan tutte (transposed to the minor key).[39]
  • In 1993 Brian Trowell, surmising that Elgar conceived the theme in E minor, proposed a simple counterpoint consisting of repeated semibreve E's doubled at the octave – a device occasionally used by Elgar as a signature.[40]
  • In 1999 Julian Rushton[41] reviewed solutions based on counterpoints with melodies including Home, Sweet Home, Loch Lomond, a theme from Brahms's fourth symphony, the Meditation from Elgar's oratorio The Light of Life[42] and God Save the Queen – the last being Troyte Griffith's suggestion from 1924, which Elgar had dismissed with the words "Of course not, but it is so well-known that it is extraordinary no-one has found it".[38]
  • In 2009, composer Robert Padgett[43] proposed Martin Luther's "Ein feste Burg" as a solution, which was later described as "[lying] at the bottom of a rabbit hole of anagrams, cryptography, the poet Longfellow, the composer Mendelssohn, the Shroud of Turin, and Jesus, all of which he believes he found hiding in plain sight in the music."[44]
  • In 2021, architectural acoustician Zackery Belanger proposed Elgar's own "Like to the Damask Rose" as a solution, claiming that the fourteen deaths described in the song align with the fourteen variations. Belanger arrived at this conclusion in his attempt to solve Elgar's Dorabella Cipher, which he proposes has a rose-shaped key assembled from the cipher's symbols.[45]

A few more solutions of this type have been published in recent years. In the following three examples the counterpoints involve complete renditions of both the Enigma theme and the proposed "larger theme", and the associated texts have obvious "dark" connotations.

  • In his book on the Variations Patrick Turner advanced a solution based on a counterpoint with a minor key version the nursery rhyme Twinkle, twinkle, little star.[46]
  • Clive McClelland has proposed a counterpoint with Sabine Baring-Gould's tune for the hymn Now the Day Is Over (also transposed to the minor).[47]
  • Tallis's canon, the tune for the hymn Glory to Thee, my God, this night, features as a cantus firmus in a solution which interprets the Enigma as a puzzle canon. This reading is suggested by the words "for fuga", which appear among Elgar's annotations to his sketch of the theme.[48]

Another theory has been published in 2007 by Hans Westgeest.[49] He has argued that the real theme of the work consists of only nine notes: G–E–A–F–B–F–F–A–G.[50][51] The rhythm of this theme (in 4
4
time, with a crotchet rest on the first beat of each bar) is based on the rhythm of Edward Elgar's own name ("Edward Elgar": short-short-long-long, then reversed long-long-short-short and a final note). Elgar meaningfully composed this short "Elgar theme" as a countermelody to the beginning of the hidden "principal Theme" of the piece, i.e. the theme of the slow movement of Beethoven's Pathétique sonata, a melody which indeed is "larger" and "well-known".

 
The opening notes of the Beethoven theme (top) are repeated in the "Elgar theme" (bottom).

When the two themes are combined each note of (the first part of) the Beethoven theme is followed by the same note in the Elgar theme. So musically Elgar "follows" Beethoven closely, as Jaeger told him to do (see above, Var. IX) and, by doing so, in the vigorous, optimistic Finale the artist triumphs over his sadness and loneliness, expressed in the minor melody from the beginning. The whole piece is based on this "Elgar theme", in which the Beethoven theme is hidden (and so the latter "goes through and over the whole set, but is not played"). Dora Penny could not solve the enigma. Elgar had expected she would: "I'm surprised. I thought that you of all people would guess it." Even later she could not when Elgar had told her in private about the Beethoven story and the Pathétique theme behind the Jaeger/Nimrod-variation (see above, Var. IX) because she did not see the connection between this and the enigma.

Other musical themes Edit

If Robert John Buckley's statement about the theme being "a counterpoint to some well-known melody" (which is endorsed by what Elgar himself disclosed to F. G. Edwards in 1900) is disregarded or discounted the field opens up to admit other kinds of connection with well-known themes.

  • Entries in this category submitted to the Saturday Review competition included the suggestions: When I am laid in earth from Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, the Agnus Dei from Bach's Mass in B minor, the song None shall part us from Iolanthe and the theme from the slow movement of Beethoven's Pathétique sonata.[52] Elgar himself affirmed that this Beethoven theme is alluded to in variation IX.[53]
  • In 1985 Marshall Portnoy suggested that the key to the Enigma is Bach's The Art of Fugue.[54] Contrapunctus XIV of that work contains the BACH motif (in English notation, B–A–C–B) which, in Portnoy's view, can also be found in the Variations. Moreover, the Art of Fugue consists of 14 individual fugues on the same subject (just as the Enigma variations are 14 variations on the same subject), and Bach signed his name "B-A-C-H" within the 14th fugue (just as Elgar signed his name "EDU" on the 14th variation), as well as other clues.
  • Theodore van Houten proposed Rule, Britannia! as the hidden melody on the strength of a resemblance between one of its phrases and the opening of the Enigma theme. The word which is sung to this phrase – a thrice-repeated "never" – appears twice in Elgar's programme note, and the figure of Britannia on the penny coin provides a link with Dora Penny.[55][56][57][58] The hypothesis has been further elaborated by Van Houten and others,[59][60] and its credibility has received a boost from a report that it was endorsed by Elgar himself.[61]
  • Ed-Newton Rex superimposed the enigma theme on Pergolesi's Stabat Mater, showing a clear contrapuntal relationship. He claims that the theme being written on top of existing music is the logical way of theme being created, so that is the approach to be used in solving the enigma. It is also worth noting the double barline which encloses the area based on the Stabat Mater.[62]
  • Other tunes which have been suggested on the basis of a postulated melodic or harmonic connection to Elgar's theme include Chopin's Nocturne in G minor,[63] John Dunstable's Ave Maris Stella,[64] the Benedictus from Stanford's Requiem,[65] Pop Goes the Weasel,[66] Brahms's "Four Serious Songs",[67] William Boyce's Heart of Oak (transposed to the minor),[68] the Dies irae plainchant[69] and Gounod's March to Calvary.[70]

Non-musical themes Edit

  • Ian Parrott wrote in his book on Elgar[71] that the "dark saying", and possibly the whole of the Enigma, had a biblical source, 1 Corinthians 13:12, which in the Authorised Version reads, "For now we see through a glass, darkly (enigmate in the Latin of the Vulgate); but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known." The verse is from St. Paul's essay on love. Elgar was a practising Roman Catholic and on 12 February 1899, eight days before the completion of the Variations, he attended a Mass at which this verse was read.[72]
  • Edmund Green suggested that the "larger theme" is Shakespeare's sixty-sixth sonnet and that the word "Enigma" stands for the real name of the Dark Lady of the Sonnets.[73]
  • Andrew Moodie, casting doubt on the idea of a hidden melody, postulated that Elgar constructed the Enigma theme using a cipher based on the name of his daughter, Carice.[74]
  • In 2010 Charles and Matthew Santa argued that the enigma was based on pi, following the misguided attempt by the Indiana House of Representatives to legislate the value of pi in 1897. Elgar created an original melody containing three references to Pi based on this humorous incident. The first four notes are scale degree 3–1–4–2, decimal pi, and fractional pi is hidden in the "two drops of a seventh" following the first 11 notes leading to 27 × 11 = 227, fractional pi. His "dark saying" is a pun set off by an unexplained double bar after the first 24 notes (all black notes)..."Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie (pi)". Shortly before his death, Elgar wrote three sentences about the variations and each sentence contains a hint at pi.[75]
  • Some writers have argued that the "larger theme" is friendship, or an aspect of Elgar's personality, or that the Enigma is a private joke with little or no substance.[38][76][77][78]
  • Inspector Mark Pitt has recently suggested (as reported by the Sunday Telegraph) that the larger theme is 'Prudentia' which in turn is related to the initials from the variation titles which then forms the Principal 'Enigma' Variations theme.[79]

Subsequent history Edit

Elgar himself quoted many of his own works, including "Nimrod" (Variation IX), in his choral piece of 1912, The Music Makers. On 24 May 1912 Elgar conducted a performance of the Variations at a Memorial Concert in aid of the family survivors of musicians who had been lost in the Titanic disaster.[80]

There is some speculation that the Enigma machine employed extensively by Nazi Germany during World War II was named after Elgar's Enigma Variations.[81][dubious ]

Frederick Ashton's ballet Enigma Variations (My Friends Pictured Within) is choreographed to Elgar's score with the exception of the finale, which uses Elgar's original shorter ending (see above), transcribed from the manuscript by John Lanchbery. The ballet, which depicts the friends and Elgar as he awaits Richter's decision about conducting the premiere, received its first performance on 25 October 1968 at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London.[82]

The acclaimed 1974 television play Penda's Fen includes a scene where the young protagonist has a vision of an aged Elgar who whispers to him the "solution" to the Enigma, occasioning astonishment on the face of the recipient. A solution to the Enigma also features in Peter Sutton's 2007 play Elgar and Alice.

Elgar suggested that in case the Variations were to be a ballet the Enigma would have to be represented by "a veiled dancer". Elgar's remark suggested that the Enigma in fact pictured "a friend", just like the variations. His use of the word "veiled" possibly indicates that it was a female character.

The Enigma Variations inspired a drama in the form of a dialogue – original title Variations Énigmatiques (1996) – by the French dramatist Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt.

The 2017 film Dunkirk features adapted versions of Elgar's Variation IX (Nimrod), the primary adaptation given the name "Variation 15" on the soundtrack in honor of its inspiration.

Recordings Edit

There have been more than sixty recordings of the Variations since Elgar's first recording, made by the acoustic process in 1924. Elgar himself conducted the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra for its first electrical recording in 1926 on the HMV label. That recording has been remastered for compact disc; the EMI CD couples it with Elgar's Violin Concerto conducted by the composer with Yehudi Menuhin as the soloist. Sixty years later, Menuhin took the baton to conduct the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the Variations for Philips, as a coupling to the Cello Concerto with Julian Lloyd Webber. Other conductors who have recorded the work include Arturo Toscanini, Sir John Barbirolli, Daniel Barenboim, Sir Georg Solti, Leonard Bernstein, Giuseppe Sinopoli, Leopold Stokowski, Eugene Ormandy, Pierre Monteux, William Steinberg and André Previn, as well as leading English conductors from Sir Henry Wood and Sir Adrian Boult to Sir Simon Rattle.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Also published as Variations for Orchestra, Variations on an Original Theme, etc.
  2. ^ a b Elgar's programme note for a performance of the Variations in Turin, October 1911
  3. ^ Elgar's original text names Lady Mary Lygon. She sailed for Australia after the completion of the Variations but before the work's first performance.

References Edit

  1. ^ Moore 1984, pp. 247–252.
  2. ^ Moore 1984, p. 252.
  3. ^ a b Moore 1984, pp. 273, 289
  4. ^ Moore 1984, p. 350.
  5. ^ Kennedy 1987, p. 179.
  6. ^ McVeagh 2007, p. 146.
  7. ^ For example see Powell 1947, p. 39
  8. ^ As she wrote later in her book (Powell 1947, pp. 110–111).
  9. ^ "Greek tragedy: Orchestra plays emotional farewell as state broadcaster closes". ITV News. 17 June 2013. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  10. ^ Lane, Anthony (24 July 2017). "Christopher Nolan's Wartime Epic". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 24 July 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  11. ^ Burr, Ty (20 July 2017). "Dunkirk is a towering achievement, made with craft, sinew, and honesty". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 24 July 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  12. ^ Quotation from the booklet by Elgar 1946
  13. ^ Kennedy 1987, p. 96.
  14. ^ Moore, Jerrold Northrop (November 1999). "The Return of the Dove to the Ark – "Enigma" Variations a Century on" (PDF). Elgar Society Journal. 11 (3). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  15. ^ Burley & Carruthers 1972, pp. 125–127.
  16. ^ Atkins 1984, pp. 477–480.
  17. ^ Kennedy 1987, pp. 96–97, 330.
  18. ^ Blamires, Ernest (July 2005). "'Loveliest, Brightest, Best': a reappraisal of 'Enigma's' Variation XIII (Part I)" (PDF). Elgar Society Journal. 14 (2): 19–34. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  19. ^ Blamires, Ernest (November 2005). "'Loveliest, Brightest, Best': a reappraisal of 'Enigma's' Variation XIII (Part II)" (PDF). Elgar Society Journal. 14 (3): 25–38. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  20. ^ Elgar 1946, Var. XIV.
  21. ^ Ernest Parkin, "Elgar and Literature", The Elgar Society Journal, November 2004
  22. ^ "Edward Elgar – Enigma Variations, chamber edition, georgeconducts.co.uk
  23. ^ Young 1965, p. 54.
  24. ^ Turner 2007, p. 46.
  25. ^ Edwards 1900.
  26. ^ In the introduction to his book, Buckley claims that he stayed as close as possible to the truth and to the actual words of the composer (Buckley 1905, p. ix).
  27. ^ Buckley 1905, pp. 54–55.
  28. ^ a b Powell 1947, pp. 119–120
  29. ^ Turner 2007, p. 50.
  30. ^ Atkins 1984, p. 428.
  31. ^ Rushton 1999, p. 77.
  32. ^ Del Mar, Norman (1998). Conducting Elgar. Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-816557-9.
  33. ^ Powell, Richard C., "Elgar's Enigma", Music & Letters, vol. 15 (July 1934), p. 203; quoted in Portnoy 1985.
  34. ^ Fiske, Roger, "The Enigma: A Solution", The Musical Times, vol. 110 (November 1969), 1124, quoted in Portnoy 1985.
  35. ^ Sams, Eric, "Variations on an Original Theme (Enigma)", The Musical Times, vol. 111 (March 1970); quoted in Portnoy 1985.
  36. ^ Hudson, Derek (1984). "Elgar's Enigma: the Trail of the Evidence". The Musical Times. 125 (1701): 636–9. doi:10.2307/962081. JSTOR 962081.
  37. ^ Westrup, J. A., "Elgar's Enigma", Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association, 86th Sess. (1959–1960), pp. 79–97, Taylor & Francis for the Royal Musical Association, accessed 2 December 2010 (subscription required)
  38. ^ a b c
    • Newman, Ernest (16 April 1939). "Elgar and his Variations: What was the "Enigma"?". The World of Music. The Sunday Times. No. 6,053. London. p. 5.
    • Newman, Ernest (23 April 1939). "Elgar and his Enigma—II: An Innocent Mystification". The World of Music. The Sunday Times. No. 6,054. London. p. 5.
    • Newman, Ernest (30 April 1939). "Elgar and his Enigma—III: Some Snags". The World of Music. The Sunday Times. No. 6,055. London. p. 5.
    • Newman, Ernest (7 May 1939). "Elgar and his Enigma—IV". The World of Music. The Sunday Times. No. 6,056. London. p. 7.
  39. ^ "What is the Enigma?". Saturday Review. 30 May 1953.
  40. ^ Trowell, B. Edward Elgar: Music and Literature in Monk 1993, p. 307
  41. ^ Rushton 1999, pp. 71–73.
  42. ^ Rollet, J. M. (November 1997). "New Light on Elgar's Enigma". Elgar Society Journal. 10 (3).
  43. ^ Padgett, Robert (10 April 2016). "Evidence for "Ein feste Burg" as the Covert Theme to Elgar's Enigma Variations".
  44. ^ Estrin, Daniel (1 February 2017). "Breaking Elgar's Enigma". New Republic.
  45. ^ Belanger, Zackery (23 October 2022). "Edward Elgar's Enigma and "Like to the Damask Rose"". Medium. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  46. ^ Turner 2007, pp. 111–116 (reviewed in The Elgar Society Journal, March 1999).
  47. ^ McClelland, Clive (2007). "Shadows of the evening: new light on Elgar's "dark saying"". The Musical Times. 148 (1901): 43–48. doi:10.2307/25434495. JSTOR 25434495.
  48. ^ Gough, Martin (April 2013). "Variations on a Canonical Theme – Elgar and the Enigmatic Tradition". Elgar Society Journal. 18 (1).
  49. ^ "The most plausible theory so far is by Hans Westgeest. He demonstrates that the theme has the same contours as the melody from the second movement of Beethoven's Sonata Pathétique. The link can indeed be demonstrated and the connection with the anecdote of Augustus Jaeger gives the link credibility." (transl.) Prof. Dr. Francis Maes (University Ghent). Program note Concertgebouw Brugge (BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, cond. Martyn Brabbins, 3 June 2018).
  50. ^ See Westgeest 2007. The book has been reviewed in the Elgar Society Journal, vol. 15, no. 5 (July 2008), pp. 37–39, and no. 6 (November 2008), p. 64.
  51. ^ "Hans Westgeest – Biografie". Hanswestgeest.nl. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  52. ^ "What is the Enigma?", Saturday Review, 30 May 1953. The arguments which J. F. Wohlwill gave to sustain his Pathétique-solution are very vague and seem to be inspired just by what Elgar had written in the programme notes for the pianola rolls (1929); see Westgeest 2007, pp. 48–49.
  53. ^ Powell 1947, p. 111.
  54. ^ Portnoy, Marshall A. (1985). "The Answer to Elgar's 'Enigma'". The Musical Quarterly. Oxford University Press. 71 (2): 205–210. doi:10.1093/mq/LXXI.2.205. JSTOR 948136. (subscription required)
  55. ^ van Houten, Theodore (30 December 1975). de Volkskrant. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[full citation needed]
  56. ^ van Houten, Theodore (16 January 1976). "The Theme Never Appears". Cultureel Supplement JRC Handelsblad.
  57. ^ van Houten, Theodore (January 1976). "The Enigma – A Solution from Holland". Elgar Society Newsletter.
  58. ^ van Houten, Theodore (May 1976). "You of all people". The Music Review. 37 (2): 131–142.
  59. ^ van Houten, Theodore (2008). "The enigma I will not explain". Mens & Melodie. 63 (4): 14–17.
  60. ^ Pickett, Stephen (November 2004). "Elgar's Enigma: a decryption?". Elgar Society Journal. 13 (6).
  61. ^ Walters, Frank; Christine Walters (March 2010). "Some Memories of Elgar: and a note on the Variations". Elgar Society Journal. 16 (4).
  62. ^ "Young composer 'solves' Elgar's Enigma – and it's pretty convincing" by Maddy Shaw Roberts, Classic FM, 1 May 2019
  63. ^ Eric Blom's suggestion. See Reed 1939, p. 52: "For a few bars it fits in counterpoint with Chopin's G minor Nocturne, Op. 37, No. 1. – E. B."
  64. ^ Laversuch, Robert (1976). Elgar Society Newsletter: 22. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  65. ^ Berlins, Marcel (20 August 1977). "Enigma of Elgar's debt to a fellow composer: Comparisons show that much-admired theme may not be original". The Times. No. 60,087. London. pp. 1–2.
  66. ^ "Pop Goes the Enigma", letter in Music and Musicians, XXVI (1977), pp. 4–5.
  67. ^ Skouenberg, Ulrik (1984). Music Review. 43: 161–168. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  68. ^ Ross, Charles (September 1994). "A Key to the Enigma". Elgar Society Journal. 8 (6).
  69. ^ Kingdon, Ben (May 1979). "The 'Enigma' – A Hidden 'Dark Saying'". Elgar Society Journal. 1 (2).
  70. ^ Edgecombe, Rodney (November 1997). "A Source for Elgar's Enigma". Elgar Society Journal. 10 (3).
  71. ^ Parrott 1971, pp. 46–49.
  72. ^ Alice Elgar's diary, 12 February 1899: "E. to St. Joseph's"
  73. ^ Green, Edmund (November 2004). "Elgar's "Enigma": a Shakespearian solution". Elgar Society Journal. 13 (6).
  74. ^ Moodie, Andrew (November 2004). "Elgar's 'Enigma': the solution?". Elgar Society Journal. 13 (6).
  75. ^ Santa, Charles Richard; Matthew Santa (Spring 2010). "Solving Elgar's Enigma". Current Musicology (89).
  76. ^ Moore, Jerrold Northrop (February 1959). Music Review: 38–44. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[incomplete short citation]
  77. ^ Kennedy 1987, p. 85.
  78. ^ Ling, John (July 2008). "The Prehistory of Elgar's Enigma". Elgar Society Journal. 15 (5).
  79. ^ Bird, Steve (12 January 2019). "Police inspector claims he has solved the mystery behind Elgar's Enigma Variations". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  80. ^ Moore 1984, p. 634.
  81. ^ "Has a Cleveland policeman cracked the secret of Elgar's Enigma Variations?". The Guardian. 3 May 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  82. ^ Lanchbery J. Enigma Variations, in Royal Opera House programme, 1984.

Bibliography Edit

  • Atkins, Wulstan (1984). The Elgar-Atkins Friendship. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
  • Buckley, Robert John (1905). Sir Edward Elgar. London / New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Burley, Rosa; Carruthers, Frank C. (1972). Edward Elgar: The Record of a Friendship. London: Barrie and Jenkins. ISBN 9780214654107.
  • Edwards, F. G. (1900). "Edward Elgar". The Musical Times. 41. Reprinted in: Redwood 1982, pp. 35–49.
  • Elgar, Edward (1946). My Friends Pictured Within. The subjects of the Enigma Variations as portrayed in contemporary photographs and Elgar's manuscript. London: Novello.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1987). Portrait of Elgar (Third ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-284017-7.
  • McVeagh, Diana (2007). Elgar the Music Maker. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-295-9.
  • Monk, Raymond, ed. (1993). Edward Elgar – Music and Literature. Aldershot: Scolar Press.
  • Moore, Jerrold Northrop (1984). Edward Elgar: A Creative Life. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-315447-1.
  • Parrott, Ian (1971). Master Musicians – Elgar. London: J. M. Dent & Sons.
  • Powell, Mrs. Richard (1947). Edward Elgar: Memories of a Variation (2nd ed.). London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Redwood, Christopher, ed. (1982). An Elgar Companion. Ashbourne.
  • Reed, W. H. (1939). Elgar. London: J. M. Dent and Sons.
  • Rushton, Julian (1999). Elgar: 'Enigma' Variations. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63637-7.
  • Turner, Patrick (2007). Elgar's 'Enigma' Variations – A Centenary Celebration (second ed.). London: Thames Publishing.
  • Westgeest, Hans (2007). Elgar's Enigma Variations. The Solution. Leidschendam-Voorburg: Corbulo Press. ISBN 978-90-79291-01-4. (hardcover), ISBN 978-90-79291-03-8 (paperback)
  • Young, Percy M., ed. (1965). Letters to Nimrod. London: Dobson Books.

Further reading Edit

  • Adams, Byron (Spring 2000). "The 'Dark Saying' of the Enigma: Homoeroticism and the Elgarian Paradox". 19th-Century Music. 23 (3): 218–235. doi:10.2307/746879. JSTOR 746879.
  • Nice, David (1996). Edward Elgar: An Essential Guide to His Life and Works. London: Pavilion. ISBN 1-85793-977-8.

External links Edit

  • Enigma Variations CDs
  • (104KB) The theme and its 14 variations are located at ca. [00:00, 00:55, 02:05, 02:55, 04:20, 04:50, 06:25, 07:30, 08:28, 09:50, 12:22, 14:55, 15:53, 17:38, 19:13] in this 24-min track.
  • Enigma Variations: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Julia Trevelyan Oman Archive University of Bristol Theatre Collection, University of Bristol
  • John Pickard, "Variations on an Original Theme (Enigma) (1898–9)" from BBC Radio 3
  • Discovering Music Enigma Variations
  • The Enigma I Will Not Explain on BBC Radio 4
  • Video on YouTube, Leonard Slatkin introduced Elgar's Enigma Variations, from BBC Proms 1995 (includes original ending)
  • Elgar Society Journal archive
  • Enigma variations, Op. 36 on Musopen

Variation IX Edit

enigma, variations, enigma, records, compilation, album, album, edward, elgar, composed, variations, original, theme, popularly, known, between, october, 1898, february, 1899, orchestral, work, comprising, fourteen, variations, original, theme, elgar, 1903elga. For the Enigma Records compilation album see Enigma Variations album Edward Elgar composed his Variations on an Original Theme Op 36 popularly known as the Enigma Variations a between October 1898 and February 1899 It is an orchestral work comprising fourteen variations on an original theme Elgar in 1903Elgar dedicated the work to my friends pictured within each variation being a musical sketch of one of his circle of close acquaintances see musical cryptogram Those portrayed include Elgar s wife Alice his friend and publisher Augustus J Jaeger and Elgar himself In a programme note for a performance in 1911 Elgar wrote This work commenced in a spirit of humour amp continued in deep seriousness contains sketches of the composer s friends It may be understood that these personages comment or reflect on the original theme amp each one attempts a solution of the Enigma for so the theme is called The sketches are not portraits but each variation contains a distinct idea founded on some particular personality or perhaps on some incident known only to two people This is the basis of the composition but the work may be listened to as a piece of music apart from any extraneous consideration b In naming his theme Enigma Elgar posed a challenge which has generated much speculation but has never been conclusively answered The Enigma is widely believed to involve a hidden melody citation needed After its 1899 London premiere the Variations achieved immediate popularity and established Elgar s international reputation Contents 1 History 2 Orchestration 3 Structure 3 1 Theme Enigma Andante 3 2 Variation I L istesso tempo C A E 3 3 Variation II Allegro H D S P 3 4 Variation III Allegretto R B T 3 5 Variation IV Allegro di molto W M B 3 6 Variation V Moderato R P A 3 7 Variation VI Andantino Ysobel 3 8 Variation VII Presto Troyte 3 9 Variation VIII Allegretto W N 3 10 Variation IX Adagio Nimrod 3 11 Variation X Intermezzo Allegretto Dorabella 3 12 Variation XI Allegro di molto G R S 3 13 Variation XII Andante B G N 3 14 Variation XIII Romanza Moderato 3 15 Variation XIV Finale Allegro E D U 4 Final inscription 5 Arrangements 6 The Enigma 6 1 Counterpoints 6 2 Other musical themes 6 3 Non musical themes 7 Subsequent history 8 Recordings 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 Variation IXHistory EditElgar described how on the evening of 21 October 1898 after a tiring day s teaching he sat down at the piano A melody he played caught the attention of his wife and he began to improvise variations on it in styles which reflected the character of some of his friends These improvisations expanded and orchestrated became the Enigma Variations 1 Elgar considered including variations portraying Arthur Sullivan and Hubert Parry but was unable to assimilate their musical styles without pastiche and dropped the idea 2 The piece was finished on 18 February 1899 and published by Novello amp Co It was first performed at St James s Hall in London on 19 June 1899 conducted by Hans Richter Critics were at first irritated by the layer of mystification but most praised the substance structure and orchestration of the work Elgar later revised the final variation adding 96 new bars and an organ part The new version which is usually played today was first heard at the Worcester Three Choirs Festival on 13 September 1899 with Elgar conducting 3 The European premiere was performed in Dusseldorf Germany on 7 February 1901 under Julius Buths who also conducted the European premiere of The Dream of Gerontius in December 1901 4 The work quickly achieved many international performances from Saint Petersburg where it delighted Alexander Glazunov and Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov in 1904 to New York where Gustav Mahler conducted it in 1910 5 Orchestration EditThe work is scored for an orchestra consisting of 2 flutes one doubling piccolo 2 oboes 2 clarinets in B 2 bassoons contrabassoon 4 horns in F 3 trumpets in F 3 trombones tuba timpani side drum triangle bass drum cymbals organ ad lib and strings Structure Edit Theme Enigma Andante source source Variation II Allegro H D S P source source Variation III Allegretto R B T source source Variation IV Allegro di molto W M B source source Variation V Moderato R P A source source Variation VI Andantino Ysobel source source Variation VII Presto Troyte source source Performed by the Halle Orchestra conducted by Sir John Barbirolli Problems playing these files See media help Edward and Alice Elgar 1891 Variation VIII Allegretto W N source source Variation IX Adagio Nimrod source source Variation X Intermezzo Allegretto Dorabella source source Variation XI Allegro di molto G R S source source Variation XII Andante B G N source source Variation XIII Romanza Moderato source source Variation XIV Finale Allegro E D U source source Performed by the Halle Orchestra conducted by Sir John Barbirolli The theme is followed by 14 variations The variations spring from the theme s melodic harmonic and rhythmic elements and the extended fourteenth variation forms a grand finale Elgar dedicated the piece to my friends pictured within and in the score each variation is prefaced the initials name or nickname of the friend depicted As was common with painted portraits of the time Elgar s musical portraits depict their subjects at two levels Each movement conveys a general impression of its subject s personality In addition many of them contain a musical reference to a specific characteristic or event such as a laugh a habit of speech or a memorable conversation The sections of the work are as follows Theme Enigma Andante Edit The unusual melodic contours of the G minor opening theme convey a sense of searching introspection source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A switch to the major key introduces a flowing motif which briefly lightens the mood before the first theme returns now accompanied by a sustained bass line and emotionally charged counterpoints In a programme note for a 1912 performance of his setting of Arthur O Shaughnessy s ode The Music Makers Elgar wrote of this theme which he quoted in the later work it expressed when written in 1898 my sense of the loneliness of the artist as described in the first six lines of the Ode and to me it still embodies that sense 6 Elgar s personal identification with the theme is evidenced by his use of its opening phrase which matches the rhythm and inflection of his name as a signature in letters to friends 7 The theme leads into Variation I without a pause Variation I L istesso tempo C A E Edit Caroline Alice Elgar Elgar s wife The variation repeats a four note melodic fragment which Elgar reportedly whistled when arriving home to his wife After Alice s death Elgar wrote The variation is really a prolongation of the theme with what I wished to be romantic and delicate additions those who knew C A E will understand this reference to one whose life was a romantic and delicate inspiration In these notes Elgar s words are quoted from his posthumous publication My Friends Pictured Within which draws on the notes he provided for the Aeolian Company s 1929 pianola rolls edition of the Variations source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Variation II Allegro H D S P Edit Hew David Steuart Powell Elgar wrote Hew David Steuart Powell was a well known amateur pianist and a great player of chamber music He was associated with B G N cello and the composer violin for many years in this playing His characteristic diatonic run over the keys before beginning to play is here humorously travestied in the semiquaver passages these should suggest a Toccata but chromatic beyond H D S P s liking source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Variation III Allegretto R B T Edit Richard Baxter Townshend Oxford don and author of the Tenderfoot series of books brother in law of the W M B depicted in Variation IV This variation references R B T s presentation of an old man in some amateur theatricals the low voice flying off occasionally into soprano timbre Variation IV Allegro di molto W M B Edit William Meath Baker squire of Hasfield Gloucestershire and benefactor of several public buildings in Fenton Stoke on Trent brother in law of R B T depicted in Variation III and step uncle of Dora Penny in Variation X He expressed himself somewhat energetically This is the shortest of the variations Variation V Moderato R P A Edit Richard Penrose Arnold the son of the poet Matthew Arnold and an amateur pianist This variation leads into the next without pause Variation VI Andantino Ysobel Edit Isabel Fitton a viola pupil of Elgar Elgar explained It may be noticed that the opening bar a phrase made use of throughout the variation is an exercise for crossing the strings a difficulty for beginners on this is built a pensive and for a moment romantic movement source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Variation VII Presto Troyte Edit Arthur Troyte Griffith a Malvern architect and one of Elgar s firmest friends The variation with a time signature of 11 good naturedly mimics his enthusiastic incompetence on the piano It may also refer to an occasion when Griffith and Elgar were out walking and got caught in a thunderstorm The pair took refuge in the house of Winifred and Florence Norbury Sherridge Leigh Sinton near Malvern to which the next variation refers Variation VIII Allegretto W N Edit Winifred Norbury one of the secretaries of the Worcester Philharmonic Society Really suggested by an eighteenth century house The gracious personalities of the ladies are sedately shown W N was more connected with the music than others of the family and her initials head the movement to justify this position a little suggestion of a characteristic laugh is given This variation is linked to the next by a single note held by the first violins Variation IX Adagio Nimrod Edit The name of the variation refers to Augustus J Jaeger who was employed as a music editor by the London publisher Novello amp Co He was a close friend of Elgar s giving him useful advice but also severe criticism something Elgar greatly appreciated Elgar later related how Jaeger had encouraged him as an artist and had stimulated him to continue composing despite setbacks Nimrod is described in the Old Testament as a mighty hunter before the Lord Jager being German for hunter In 1904 Elgar told Dora Penny Dorabella that this variation is not really a portrait but the story of something that happened 8 Once when Elgar had been very depressed and was about to give it all up and write no more music Jaeger had visited him and encouraged him to continue composing He referred to Ludwig van Beethoven who had a lot of worries but wrote more and more beautiful music And that is what you must do Jaeger said and he sang the theme of the second movement of Beethoven s Piano Sonata No 8 Pathetique Elgar disclosed to Dora that the opening bars of Nimrod were made to suggest that theme Can t you hear it at the beginning Only a hint not a quotation This variation has become popular in its own right and is sometimes used at British funerals memorial services and other solemn occasions It is always played at the Cenotaph Whitehall in London at the National Service of Remembrance A version was also played during the Hong Kong handover ceremony in 1997 and at the opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games The Nimrod variation was the final orchestral composition before the national anthem played by the Greek National Orchestra in a televised June 2013 concert before the 75 year old Athenian ensemble was dissolved in the wake of severe government cutbacks 9 An adaptation of the piece appears at the ending of the 2017 film Dunkirk in the score by Hans Zimmer 10 11 Variation X Intermezzo Allegretto Dorabella Edit Dora Penny a friend whose stutter is gently parodied by the woodwinds Dora later Mrs Richard Powell was the daughter of the Revd later Canon Alfred Penny Her stepmother was the sister of William Meath Baker the subject of Variation IV She was the recipient of another of Elgar s enigmas the so called Dorabella Cipher She described the Friends Pictured Within and The Enigma in two chapters of her book Edward Elgar Memories of a Variation This variation features a melody for solo viola source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Variation XI Allegro di molto G R S Edit George Robertson Sinclair the energetic organist of Hereford Cathedral In the words of Elgar The variation however has nothing to do with organs or cathedrals or except remotely with G R S The first few bars were suggested by his great bulldog Dan a well known character falling down the steep bank into the River Wye bar 1 his paddling upstream to find a landing place bars 2 and 3 and his rejoicing bark on landing second half of bar 5 G R S said Set that to music I did here it is 12 Variation XII Andante B G N Edit Basil George Nevinson an accomplished amateur cellist who played chamber music with Elgar The variation is introduced and concluded by a solo cello This variation leads into the next without pause Variation XIII Romanza Moderato Edit Possibly Lady Mary Lygon of Madresfield Court near Malvern a sponsor of a local music festival The asterisks take the place of the name of a lady c who was at the time of the composition on a sea voyage The drums suggest the distant throb of the engines of a liner over which the clarinet quotes a phrase from Mendelssohn s Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file If it is Lady Mary Elgar may have withheld her initials because of superstition surrounding the number 13 13 or he may have felt uneasy about publicly associating the name of a prominent local figure with music that had taken on a powerful emotional intensity 14 There is credible evidence to support the view that the variation s atmosphere of brooding melancholy and its subtitle Romanza are tokens of a covert tribute to another woman the name most frequently mentioned in this connection being that of Helen Weaver who had broken off her engagement to Elgar in 1884 before sailing out of his life forever aboard a ship bound for New Zealand 15 16 17 18 19 Variation XIV Finale Allegro E D U Edit Elgar himself nicknamed Edu by his wife from the German Eduard The themes from two variations are echoed Nimrod and C A E referring to Jaeger and Elgar s wife Alice two great influences on the life and art of the composer as Elgar wrote in 1927 Elgar called these references entirely fitting to the intention of the piece 20 The original version of this variation is nearly 100 bars shorter than the one now usually played In July 1899 one month after the original version was finished Jaeger urged Elgar to make the variation a little longer After some cajoling Elgar agreed and also added an organ part The new version was played for the first time at the Worcester Three Choirs Festival with Elgar himself conducting on 13 September 1899 3 Final inscription EditAt the end of the full score he inscribed the words Bramo assai poco spero nulla chieggio This is a quote from Torquato Tasso s Jerusalem Delivered Book II Stanza 16 1595 albeit slightly altered from third to first person It means I long for much I hope for little I ask nothing Like Elgar s own name this sentence too can be fitted easily into the Enigma theme 21 Arrangements EditArrangements of the Variations include The composer s arrangement of the complete work for piano solo The composer s arrangement of the complete work for piano duet two pianos Duet piano four hands by John E West F R A M F R C O 1863 1929 organist composer and musical adviser to Novello amp Co Transcription for chamber ensemble orchestra by George Morton UK 22 Brass band by composer Eric Ball There are many arrangements of individual variations particularly Variation IX Nimrod Variation X Dorabella was published separately in its orchestral version Transcription for Wind Band by Earl Slocum USA Transcription for Symphonic Wind Band by John Morrison UK Transcription for Symphonic Band by Douglas McLain Transcription for the Wanamaker Organ by Peter Richard Conte 2013 Transcription for Symphonic Wind Ensemble by Donald C Patterson for the United States Marine Band 2017 Hans Zimmer included themes from Elgar s Variations in the soundtrack for the original motion picture soundtrack Dunkirk The Enigma EditThe word Enigma serving as a title for the theme of the Variations was added to the score at a late stage after the manuscript had been delivered to the publisher Despite a series of hints provided by Elgar the precise nature of the implied puzzle remains unknown Confirmation that Enigma is the name of the theme is provided by Elgar s 1911 programme note Enigma for so the theme is called b and in a letter to Jaeger dated 30 June 1899 he associates this name specifically with what he calls the principal motive the G minor theme heard in the work s opening bars which perhaps significantly is terminated by a double bar 23 Whatever the nature of the attendant puzzle it is likely to be closely connected with this Enigma theme Elgar s first public pronouncement on the Enigma appeared in Charles A Barry s programme note for the first performance of the Variations The Enigma I will not explain its dark saying must be left unguessed and I warn you that the connexion between the Variations and the Theme is often of the slightest texture further through and over the whole set another and larger theme goes but is not played So the principal Theme never appears even as in some late dramas eg Maeterlinck s L Intruse and Les sept Princesses the chief character is never on the stage 24 Far from clarifying matters this utterance seems to envelop the Enigma in further mysteries The phrase dark saying can be read straightforwardly as an archaic synonym for enigma but might equally plausibly be interpreted as a cryptic clue while the word further seems to suggest that the larger theme is distinct from the Enigma forming a separate component of the puzzle Elgar provided another clue in an interview he gave in October 1900 to the editor of the Musical Times F G Edwards who reported Mr Elgar tells us that the heading Enigma is justified by the fact that it is possible to add another phrase which is quite familiar above the original theme that he has written What that theme is no one knows except the composer Thereby hangs the Enigma 25 Five years later Robert John Buckley stated in his biography of Elgar written with the composer s close cooperation 26 The theme is a counterpoint on some well known melody which is never heard 27 Attempted solutions to the Enigma commonly propose a well known melody which is claimed to be either a counterpoint to Elgar s theme or in some other way linked to it Musical solutions of this sort are supported by Dora Penny and Carice Elgar s testimony that the solution was generally understood to involve a tune 28 and by the evidence from an anecdote describing how Elgar encoded the solution in a numbered sequence of piano keys 29 30 A rival school of thought holds that the larger theme which goes through and over the whole set is an abstract idea rather than a musical theme The interpretation placed on the larger theme forms the basis of the grouping of solutions in the summary that follows Julian Rushton has suggested that any solution should satisfy five criteria a dark saying must be involved the theme is not played the theme should be well known as Elgar stated multiple times it should explain Elgar s remark that Dora Penny should have been of all people the one to solve the Enigma 28 and fifthly some musical observations in the notes Elgar provided to accompany the pianola roll edition may be part of the solution Furthermore the solution if it exists must be multivalent must deal with musical as well as cryptographic issues must produce workable counterpoint within Elgar s stylistic range and must at the same time seem obvious and not just to its begetter 31 Elgar accepted none of the solutions proposed in his lifetime and took the secret with him to the grave The prospect of gaining new insights into Elgar s character and composition methods and perhaps revealing new music continues to motivate the search for a definitive solution But Norman Del Mar expressed the view that there would be considerable loss if the solution were to be found much of the work s attraction lying in the impenetrability of the riddle itself and that interest in the work would not be as strong had the Enigma been solved during Elgar s lifetime 32 Counterpoints Edit Solutions in this category suggest a well known tune which in the proponent s view forms a counterpoint to the theme of the Variations After Elgar s death in 1934 Richard Powell husband of Dorabella published a solution proposing Auld Lang Syne as the countermelody 33 This theory has been elaborated by Roger Fiske 34 Eric Sams 35 and Derek Hudson 36 Elgar himself however is on record as stating Auld Lang Syne won t do 37 Reviewing published Enigma solutions in 1939 Ernest Newman failed to identify any that met what he considered to be the required musical standard 38 A competition organized by the American magazine The Saturday Review in 1953 yielded one proposed counterpoint the aria Una bella serenata from Mozart s Cosi fan tutte transposed to the minor key 39 In 1993 Brian Trowell surmising that Elgar conceived the theme in E minor proposed a simple counterpoint consisting of repeated semibreve E s doubled at the octave a device occasionally used by Elgar as a signature 40 In 1999 Julian Rushton 41 reviewed solutions based on counterpoints with melodies including Home Sweet Home Loch Lomond a theme from Brahms s fourth symphony the Meditation from Elgar s oratorio The Light of Life 42 and God Save the Queen the last being Troyte Griffith s suggestion from 1924 which Elgar had dismissed with the words Of course not but it is so well known that it is extraordinary no one has found it 38 In 2009 composer Robert Padgett 43 proposed Martin Luther s Ein feste Burg as a solution which was later described as lying at the bottom of a rabbit hole of anagrams cryptography the poet Longfellow the composer Mendelssohn the Shroud of Turin and Jesus all of which he believes he found hiding in plain sight in the music 44 In 2021 architectural acoustician Zackery Belanger proposed Elgar s own Like to the Damask Rose as a solution claiming that the fourteen deaths described in the song align with the fourteen variations Belanger arrived at this conclusion in his attempt to solve Elgar s Dorabella Cipher which he proposes has a rose shaped key assembled from the cipher s symbols 45 A few more solutions of this type have been published in recent years In the following three examples the counterpoints involve complete renditions of both the Enigma theme and the proposed larger theme and the associated texts have obvious dark connotations In his book on the Variations Patrick Turner advanced a solution based on a counterpoint with a minor key version the nursery rhyme Twinkle twinkle little star 46 Clive McClelland has proposed a counterpoint with Sabine Baring Gould s tune for the hymn Now the Day Is Over also transposed to the minor 47 Tallis s canon the tune for the hymn Glory to Thee my God this night features as a cantus firmus in a solution which interprets the Enigma as a puzzle canon This reading is suggested by the words for fuga which appear among Elgar s annotations to his sketch of the theme 48 Another theory has been published in 2007 by Hans Westgeest 49 He has argued that the real theme of the work consists of only nine notes G E A F B F F A G 50 51 The rhythm of this theme in 44 time with a crotchet rest on the first beat of each bar is based on the rhythm of Edward Elgar s own name Edward Elgar short short long long then reversed long long short short and a final note Elgar meaningfully composed this short Elgar theme as a countermelody to the beginning of the hidden principal Theme of the piece i e the theme of the slow movement of Beethoven s Pathetique sonata a melody which indeed is larger and well known The opening notes of the Beethoven theme top are repeated in the Elgar theme bottom When the two themes are combined each note of the first part of the Beethoven theme is followed by the same note in the Elgar theme So musically Elgar follows Beethoven closely as Jaeger told him to do see above Var IX and by doing so in the vigorous optimistic Finale the artist triumphs over his sadness and loneliness expressed in the minor melody from the beginning The whole piece is based on this Elgar theme in which the Beethoven theme is hidden and so the latter goes through and over the whole set but is not played Dora Penny could not solve the enigma Elgar had expected she would I m surprised I thought that you of all people would guess it Even later she could not when Elgar had told her in private about the Beethoven story and the Pathetique theme behind the Jaeger Nimrod variation see above Var IX because she did not see the connection between this and the enigma Other musical themes Edit If Robert John Buckley s statement about the theme being a counterpoint to some well known melody which is endorsed by what Elgar himself disclosed to F G Edwards in 1900 is disregarded or discounted the field opens up to admit other kinds of connection with well known themes Entries in this category submitted to the Saturday Review competition included the suggestions When I am laid in earth from Purcell s Dido and Aeneas the Agnus Dei from Bach s Mass in B minor the song None shall part us from Iolanthe and the theme from the slow movement of Beethoven s Pathetique sonata 52 Elgar himself affirmed that this Beethoven theme is alluded to in variation IX 53 In 1985 Marshall Portnoy suggested that the key to the Enigma is Bach s The Art of Fugue 54 Contrapunctus XIV of that work contains the BACH motif in English notation B A C B which in Portnoy s view can also be found in the Variations Moreover the Art of Fugue consists of 14 individual fugues on the same subject just as the Enigma variations are 14 variations on the same subject and Bach signed his name B A C H within the 14th fugue just as Elgar signed his name EDU on the 14th variation as well as other clues Theodore van Houten proposed Rule Britannia as the hidden melody on the strength of a resemblance between one of its phrases and the opening of the Enigma theme The word which is sung to this phrase a thrice repeated never appears twice in Elgar s programme note and the figure of Britannia on the penny coin provides a link with Dora Penny 55 56 57 58 The hypothesis has been further elaborated by Van Houten and others 59 60 and its credibility has received a boost from a report that it was endorsed by Elgar himself 61 Ed Newton Rex superimposed the enigma theme on Pergolesi s Stabat Mater showing a clear contrapuntal relationship He claims that the theme being written on top of existing music is the logical way of theme being created so that is the approach to be used in solving the enigma It is also worth noting the double barline which encloses the area based on the Stabat Mater 62 Other tunes which have been suggested on the basis of a postulated melodic or harmonic connection to Elgar s theme include Chopin s Nocturne in G minor 63 John Dunstable s Ave Maris Stella 64 the Benedictus from Stanford s Requiem 65 Pop Goes the Weasel 66 Brahms s Four Serious Songs 67 William Boyce s Heart of Oak transposed to the minor 68 the Dies irae plainchant 69 and Gounod s March to Calvary 70 Non musical themes Edit Ian Parrott wrote in his book on Elgar 71 that the dark saying and possibly the whole of the Enigma had a biblical source 1 Corinthians 13 12 which in the Authorised Version reads For now we see through a glass darkly enigmate in the Latin of the Vulgate but then face to face now I know in part but then shall I know even as also I am known The verse is from St Paul s essay on love Elgar was a practising Roman Catholic and on 12 February 1899 eight days before the completion of the Variations he attended a Mass at which this verse was read 72 Edmund Green suggested that the larger theme is Shakespeare s sixty sixth sonnet and that the word Enigma stands for the real name of the Dark Lady of the Sonnets 73 Andrew Moodie casting doubt on the idea of a hidden melody postulated that Elgar constructed the Enigma theme using a cipher based on the name of his daughter Carice 74 In 2010 Charles and Matthew Santa argued that the enigma was based on pi following the misguided attempt by the Indiana House of Representatives to legislate the value of pi in 1897 Elgar created an original melody containing three references to Pi based on this humorous incident The first four notes are scale degree 3 1 4 2 decimal pi and fractional pi is hidden in the two drops of a seventh following the first 11 notes leading to 2 7 11 22 7 fractional pi His dark saying is a pun set off by an unexplained double bar after the first 24 notes all black notes Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie pi Shortly before his death Elgar wrote three sentences about the variations and each sentence contains a hint at pi 75 Some writers have argued that the larger theme is friendship or an aspect of Elgar s personality or that the Enigma is a private joke with little or no substance 38 76 77 78 Inspector Mark Pitt has recently suggested as reported by the Sunday Telegraph that the larger theme is Prudentia which in turn is related to the initials from the variation titles which then forms the Principal Enigma Variations theme 79 Subsequent history EditElgar himself quoted many of his own works including Nimrod Variation IX in his choral piece of 1912 The Music Makers On 24 May 1912 Elgar conducted a performance of the Variations at a Memorial Concert in aid of the family survivors of musicians who had been lost in the Titanic disaster 80 There is some speculation that the Enigma machine employed extensively by Nazi Germany during World War II was named after Elgar s Enigma Variations 81 dubious discuss Frederick Ashton s ballet Enigma Variations My Friends Pictured Within is choreographed to Elgar s score with the exception of the finale which uses Elgar s original shorter ending see above transcribed from the manuscript by John Lanchbery The ballet which depicts the friends and Elgar as he awaits Richter s decision about conducting the premiere received its first performance on 25 October 1968 at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden London 82 The acclaimed 1974 television play Penda s Fen includes a scene where the young protagonist has a vision of an aged Elgar who whispers to him the solution to the Enigma occasioning astonishment on the face of the recipient A solution to the Enigma also features in Peter Sutton s 2007 play Elgar and Alice Elgar suggested that in case the Variations were to be a ballet the Enigma would have to be represented by a veiled dancer Elgar s remark suggested that the Enigma in fact pictured a friend just like the variations His use of the word veiled possibly indicates that it was a female character The Enigma Variations inspired a drama in the form of a dialogue original title Variations Enigmatiques 1996 by the French dramatist Eric Emmanuel Schmitt The 2017 film Dunkirk features adapted versions of Elgar s Variation IX Nimrod the primary adaptation given the name Variation 15 on the soundtrack in honor of its inspiration Recordings EditMain article Enigma Variations discography There have been more than sixty recordings of the Variations since Elgar s first recording made by the acoustic process in 1924 Elgar himself conducted the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra for its first electrical recording in 1926 on the HMV label That recording has been remastered for compact disc the EMI CD couples it with Elgar s Violin Concerto conducted by the composer with Yehudi Menuhin as the soloist Sixty years later Menuhin took the baton to conduct the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the Variations for Philips as a coupling to the Cello Concerto with Julian Lloyd Webber Other conductors who have recorded the work include Arturo Toscanini Sir John Barbirolli Daniel Barenboim Sir Georg Solti Leonard Bernstein Giuseppe Sinopoli Leopold Stokowski Eugene Ormandy Pierre Monteux William Steinberg and Andre Previn as well as leading English conductors from Sir Henry Wood and Sir Adrian Boult to Sir Simon Rattle Notes Edit Also published as Variations for Orchestra Variations on an Original Theme etc a b Elgar s programme note for a performance of the Variations in Turin October 1911 Elgar s original text names Lady Mary Lygon She sailed for Australia after the completion of the Variations but before the work s first performance References Edit Moore 1984 pp 247 252 Moore 1984 p 252 a b Moore 1984 pp 273 289 Moore 1984 p 350 Kennedy 1987 p 179 McVeagh 2007 p 146 For example see Powell 1947 p 39 As she wrote later in her book Powell 1947 pp 110 111 Greek tragedy Orchestra plays emotional farewell as state broadcaster closes ITV News 17 June 2013 Retrieved 27 March 2018 Lane Anthony 24 July 2017 Christopher Nolan s Wartime Epic The New Yorker Archived from the original on 24 July 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2021 Burr Ty 20 July 2017 Dunkirk is a towering achievement made with craft sinew and honesty The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 24 July 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2021 Quotation from the booklet by Elgar 1946 Kennedy 1987 p 96 Moore Jerrold Northrop November 1999 The Return of the Dove to the Ark Enigma Variations a Century on PDF Elgar Society Journal 11 3 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Burley amp Carruthers 1972 pp 125 127 Atkins 1984 pp 477 480 Kennedy 1987 pp 96 97 330 Blamires Ernest July 2005 Loveliest Brightest Best a reappraisal of Enigma s Variation XIII Part I PDF Elgar Society Journal 14 2 19 34 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Blamires Ernest November 2005 Loveliest Brightest Best a reappraisal of Enigma s Variation XIII Part II PDF Elgar Society Journal 14 3 25 38 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Elgar 1946 Var XIV Ernest Parkin Elgar and Literature The Elgar Society Journal November 2004 Edward Elgar Enigma Variations chamber edition georgeconducts co uk Young 1965 p 54 Turner 2007 p 46 Edwards 1900 In the introduction to his book Buckley claims that he stayed as close as possible to the truth and to the actual words of the composer Buckley 1905 p ix Buckley 1905 pp 54 55 a b Powell 1947 pp 119 120 Turner 2007 p 50 Atkins 1984 p 428 Rushton 1999 p 77 Del Mar Norman 1998 Conducting Elgar Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 816557 9 Powell Richard C Elgar s Enigma Music amp Letters vol 15 July 1934 p 203 quoted in Portnoy 1985 Fiske Roger The Enigma A Solution The Musical Times vol 110 November 1969 1124 quoted in Portnoy 1985 Sams Eric Variations on an Original Theme Enigma The Musical Times vol 111 March 1970 quoted in Portnoy 1985 Hudson Derek 1984 Elgar s Enigma the Trail of the Evidence The Musical Times 125 1701 636 9 doi 10 2307 962081 JSTOR 962081 Westrup J A Elgar s Enigma Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association 86th Sess 1959 1960 pp 79 97 Taylor amp Francis for the Royal Musical Association accessed 2 December 2010 subscription required a b c Newman Ernest 16 April 1939 Elgar and his Variations What was the Enigma The World of Music The Sunday Times No 6 053 London p 5 Newman Ernest 23 April 1939 Elgar and his Enigma II An Innocent Mystification The World of Music The Sunday Times No 6 054 London p 5 Newman Ernest 30 April 1939 Elgar and his Enigma III Some Snags The World of Music The Sunday Times No 6 055 London p 5 Newman Ernest 7 May 1939 Elgar and his Enigma IV The World of Music The Sunday Times No 6 056 London p 7 What is the Enigma Saturday Review 30 May 1953 Trowell B Edward Elgar Music and Literature in Monk 1993 p 307 Rushton 1999 pp 71 73 Rollet J M November 1997 New Light on Elgar s Enigma Elgar Society Journal 10 3 Padgett Robert 10 April 2016 Evidence for Ein feste Burg as the Covert Theme to Elgar s Enigma Variations Estrin Daniel 1 February 2017 Breaking Elgar s Enigma New Republic Belanger Zackery 23 October 2022 Edward Elgar s Enigma and Like to the Damask Rose Medium Retrieved 23 October 2022 Turner 2007 pp 111 116 reviewed in The Elgar Society Journal March 1999 McClelland Clive 2007 Shadows of the evening new light on Elgar s dark saying The Musical Times 148 1901 43 48 doi 10 2307 25434495 JSTOR 25434495 Gough Martin April 2013 Variations on a Canonical Theme Elgar and the Enigmatic Tradition Elgar Society Journal 18 1 The most plausible theory so far is by Hans Westgeest He demonstrates that the theme has the same contours as the melody from the second movement of Beethoven s Sonata Pathetique The link can indeed be demonstrated and the connection with the anecdote of Augustus Jaeger gives the link credibility transl Prof Dr Francis Maes University Ghent Program note Concertgebouw Brugge BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra cond Martyn Brabbins 3 June 2018 See Westgeest 2007 The book has been reviewed in the Elgar Society Journal vol 15 no 5 July 2008 pp 37 39 and no 6 November 2008 p 64 Hans Westgeest Biografie Hanswestgeest nl Retrieved 7 September 2012 What is the Enigma Saturday Review 30 May 1953 The arguments which J F Wohlwill gave to sustain his Pathetique solution are very vague and seem to be inspired just by what Elgar had written in the programme notes for the pianola rolls 1929 see Westgeest 2007 pp 48 49 Powell 1947 p 111 Portnoy Marshall A 1985 The Answer to Elgar s Enigma The Musical Quarterly Oxford University Press 71 2 205 210 doi 10 1093 mq LXXI 2 205 JSTOR 948136 subscription required van Houten Theodore 30 December 1975 de Volkskrant a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help full citation needed van Houten Theodore 16 January 1976 The Theme Never Appears Cultureel Supplement JRC Handelsblad van Houten Theodore January 1976 The Enigma A Solution from Holland Elgar Society Newsletter van Houten Theodore May 1976 You of all people The Music Review 37 2 131 142 van Houten Theodore 2008 The enigma I will not explain Mens amp Melodie 63 4 14 17 Pickett Stephen November 2004 Elgar s Enigma a decryption Elgar Society Journal 13 6 Walters Frank Christine Walters March 2010 Some Memories of Elgar and a note on the Variations Elgar Society Journal 16 4 Young composer solves Elgar s Enigma and it s pretty convincing by Maddy Shaw Roberts Classic FM 1 May 2019 Eric Blom s suggestion See Reed 1939 p 52 For a few bars it fits in counterpoint with Chopin s G minor Nocturne Op 37 No 1 E B Laversuch Robert 1976 Elgar Society Newsletter 22 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Berlins Marcel 20 August 1977 Enigma of Elgar s debt to a fellow composer Comparisons show that much admired theme may not be original The Times No 60 087 London pp 1 2 Pop Goes the Enigma letter in Music and Musicians XXVI 1977 pp 4 5 Skouenberg Ulrik 1984 Music Review 43 161 168 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Ross Charles September 1994 A Key to the Enigma Elgar Society Journal 8 6 Kingdon Ben May 1979 The Enigma A Hidden Dark Saying Elgar Society Journal 1 2 Edgecombe Rodney November 1997 A Source for Elgar s Enigma Elgar Society Journal 10 3 Parrott 1971 pp 46 49 Alice Elgar s diary 12 February 1899 E to St Joseph s Green Edmund November 2004 Elgar s Enigma a Shakespearian solution Elgar Society Journal 13 6 Moodie Andrew November 2004 Elgar s Enigma the solution Elgar Society Journal 13 6 Santa Charles Richard Matthew Santa Spring 2010 Solving Elgar s Enigma Current Musicology 89 Moore Jerrold Northrop February 1959 Music Review 38 44 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help incomplete short citation Kennedy 1987 p 85 Ling John July 2008 The Prehistory of Elgar s Enigma Elgar Society Journal 15 5 Bird Steve 12 January 2019 Police inspector claims he has solved the mystery behind Elgar s Enigma Variations The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Moore 1984 p 634 Has a Cleveland policeman cracked the secret of Elgar s Enigma Variations The Guardian 3 May 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Lanchbery J Enigma Variations in Royal Opera House programme 1984 Bibliography EditAtkins Wulstan 1984 The Elgar Atkins Friendship Newton Abbot David amp Charles Buckley Robert John 1905 Sir Edward Elgar London New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Burley Rosa Carruthers Frank C 1972 Edward Elgar The Record of a Friendship London Barrie and Jenkins ISBN 9780214654107 Edwards F G 1900 Edward Elgar The Musical Times 41 Reprinted in Redwood 1982 pp 35 49 Elgar Edward 1946 My Friends Pictured Within The subjects of the Enigma Variations as portrayed in contemporary photographs and Elgar s manuscript London Novello Kennedy Michael 1987 Portrait of Elgar Third ed Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 284017 7 McVeagh Diana 2007 Elgar the Music Maker Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 295 9 Monk Raymond ed 1993 Edward Elgar Music and Literature Aldershot Scolar Press Moore Jerrold Northrop 1984 Edward Elgar A Creative Life Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 315447 1 Parrott Ian 1971 Master Musicians Elgar London J M Dent amp Sons Powell Mrs Richard 1947 Edward Elgar Memories of a Variation 2nd ed London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Redwood Christopher ed 1982 An Elgar Companion Ashbourne Reed W H 1939 Elgar London J M Dent and Sons Rushton Julian 1999 Elgar Enigma Variations Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63637 7 Turner Patrick 2007 Elgar s Enigma Variations A Centenary Celebration second ed London Thames Publishing Westgeest Hans 2007 Elgar s Enigma Variations The Solution Leidschendam Voorburg Corbulo Press ISBN 978 90 79291 01 4 hardcover ISBN 978 90 79291 03 8 paperback Young Percy M ed 1965 Letters to Nimrod London Dobson Books Further reading EditAdams Byron Spring 2000 The Dark Saying of the Enigma Homoeroticism and the Elgarian Paradox 19th Century Music 23 3 218 235 doi 10 2307 746879 JSTOR 746879 Nice David 1996 Edward Elgar An Essential Guide to His Life and Works London Pavilion ISBN 1 85793 977 8 External links EditEnigma Variations CDs Piano adaptation of Enigma Variations in MIDI file 104KB The theme and its 14 variations are located at ca 00 00 00 55 02 05 02 55 04 20 04 50 06 25 07 30 08 28 09 50 12 22 14 55 15 53 17 38 19 13 in this 24 min track Enigma Variations Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Julia Trevelyan Oman Archive University of Bristol Theatre Collection University of Bristol John Pickard Variations on an Original Theme Enigma 1898 9 from BBC Radio 3 Discovering Music Enigma Variations The Enigma I Will Not Explain on BBC Radio 4 Video on YouTube Leonard Slatkin introduced Elgar s Enigma Variations from BBC Proms 1995 includes original ending Elgar Society Journal archive Enigma variations Op 36 on MusopenVariation IX Edit Complete variation on YouTube performed by the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Simon Rattle in 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enigma Variations amp oldid 1168249271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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