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Façade (entertainment)

Façade is a series of poems by Edith Sitwell, best known as part of Façade – An Entertainment in which the poems are recited over an instrumental accompaniment by William Walton. The poems and the music exist in several versions.

Edith Sitwell in 1912, by Roger Fry

Sitwell began to publish some of the Façade poems in 1918, in the literary magazine Wheels. In 1922 many of them were given an orchestral accompaniment by Walton, Sitwell's protégé. The "entertainment" was first performed in public on 12 June 1923 at the Aeolian Hall in London, and achieved both fame and notoriety for its unconventional form. Walton arranged two suites of his music for full orchestra. When Frederick Ashton made a ballet of Façade in 1931, Sitwell did not wish her poems to be part of it, and the orchestral arrangements were used.

After Sitwell's death, Walton published supplementary versions of Façade for speaker and small ensemble using numbers dropped between the premiere and the publication of the full score in 1951.

Versions edit

Façade exists in several strongly contrasted versions, principally:

  • Edith Sitwell's Façade and Other Poems, 1920–1935 – the published versions of those of the poems chosen by the author for her 1950 volume of collected verse.
  • The Sitwell-Walton Façade (1951) – the first, and definitive published version of the full score of the entertainment
  • Façade Revived (1977) – a set of eight poems and settings not included in the 1951 version, published by Walton to mark his 75th birthday
  • Façade II (1979) – a revised version of Façade Revived, with some numbers dropped and others added
  • Façade – the complete version, 1922–1928 – a 42-number CD set compiled and performed by Pamela Hunter (1993) restoring all the poems that Walton set, and nine that he did not set.
  • Walton's orchestral Façade Suites (1926 and 1938)

A table showing the various permutations can be seen here.

Sitwell's published Façade poems edit

It is sometimes said that the Façade verses are nonsense poetry, in the tradition of Edward Lear.[1] But despite the experiments with sound and rhythm, there is meaning in Sitwell's poems.[1] The literary scholar Jack Lindsay wrote, "The associations are often glancing and rapid in the extreme, but the total effect comes from a highly organized basis of sense."[2] Other writers have detected personal references in the Façade poems. Christopher Palmer lists many references to Sitwell's unhappy childhood, from the kind Mariner Man (her father's valet who entertained her with seafaring stories) to the implacable Mrs Behemoth (her mother).[1]

The Façade poems published by Sitwell in her 1950 collection, Façade and other Poems, 1920–1935 are:

  • The Drum
  • Clowns' Houses
  • Said King Pompey
  • The Bat
  • Lullaby for Jumbo
  • Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone
  • Madame Mouse trots
  • Four in the Morning
  • Black Mrs Behemoth
  • The Wind's Bastinado
  • En Famille
  • Country Dance
  • Mariner Man
  • The Octogenarian
  • Bells of Grey Crystal
  • When Cold December
  • Came the Great Popinjay
  • Fox Trot
  • Polka
  • Mazurka
  • Jodelling Song
  • Scotch Rhapsody
  • Waltz
  • Popular Song
  • By the Lake
  • The Avenue
  • Water Party
  • The Satyr in the Periwig
  • Dark Song
  • "I do like to be beside the Seaside"
  • Hornpipe
  • Something lies beyond the Scene
  • When Sir Beelzebub

The Sitwell-Walton Façade – An Entertainment edit

The "entertainment" Façade, in which Sitwell's poems are recited over an instrumental accompaniment by Walton, was first given privately in the Sitwell family's London house on 24 January 1922. The first public performance was given at the Aeolian Hall, London, on 12 June 1923. On both occasions, the author recited the verse and the composer conducted the ensemble.[3]

 
The Sitwells and William Walton: left to right Osbert, Edith, Sacheverell, Walton, and, with the Façade megaphone, Neil Porter of the Old Vic.

Walton made changes to the instrumentation for the entertainment between its premiere and the publication of the first printed score nearly thirty years later,[3] but in both 1922–23 and 1951 he scored for six players. The published score specifies flute (doubling piccolo), clarinet (doubling bass clarinet), alto saxophone, trumpet, percussion, and cello.[4] Walton quotes a range of earlier composers in his score, from Rossini (the William Tell overture appears in the Swiss Jodelling Song) to George Grossmith (whose comic song, "See me dance the polka", is present throughout Walton's Polka).[5]

In the Sitwell-Walton Façade there are three poems, "Through Gilded Trellises," "A Man from a far Country" (from Sitwell's The Sleeping Beauty), and "Tarantella" (never formally published by Sitwell), that do not feature in her published edition of Façade. As the performing version frequently recited in public and recorded for the gramophone by Sitwell included the Tarantella, it may be assumed that she did not require the musical version to adhere strictly to the text of the published poems.

The public premiere of the entertainment was a succès de scandale.[6] The performance consisted of Sitwell's verses, which she recited through a megaphone protruding through a decorated screen, while Walton conducted an ensemble of six players in his accompanying music.[6] The press was generally condemnatory. One contemporary headline read: "Drivel That They Paid to Hear".[1] The Daily Express loathed the work, but admitted that it was naggingly memorable.[7] The Manchester Guardian wrote of "relentless cacophony".[8] The Observer condemned the verses and dismissed Walton's music as "harmless".[9] In The Illustrated London News, Edward J. Dent was much more appreciative: "The audience was at first inclined to treat the whole thing as an absurd joke, but there is always a surprisingly serious element in Miss Sitwell's poetry and Mr Walton's music ... which soon induced the audience to listen with breathless attention."[10] In The Sunday Times, Ernest Newman said of Walton, "as a musical joker he is a jewel of the first water".[11] Among the audience were Evelyn Waugh, Virginia Woolf and Noël Coward. The last was so outraged by the avant-garde nature of Sitwell's verses and the staging, that he marched out ostentatiously during the performance.[12] The players did not like the work: the clarinettist asked the composer, "Mr Walton, has a clarinet player ever done you an injury?"[6] Nevertheless, the work soon became accepted, and within a decade Walton's music was used for the popular Façade ballet, choreographed by Frederick Ashton.[13]

Walton revised the music continually between its first performance and the first publication of the full score in 1951. That definitive version of the Sitwell-Walton Façade consists of:

  • Fanfare (Instrumental)
  • Hornpipe
  • En Famille
  • Mariner Man
  • Long Steel Grass (Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone)
  • Through Gilded Trellises [from The Sleeping Beauty]
  • Tango-Pasodoble (I do like to be beside the Seaside)
  • Lullaby for Jumbo
  • Black Mrs Behemoth
  • Tarantella
  • A Man from a far Country [from The Sleeping Beauty]
  • By the Lake
  • Country Dance
  • Polka
  • Four in the Morning
  • Something lies beyond the Scene
  • Waltz
  • Swiss Jodelling Song
  • Scotch Rhapsody
  • Popular Song
  • Fox Trot (Old Sir Faulk)
  • When Sir Beelzebub.

Walton's later additions edit

In the 1970s, Walton released some further numbers, under the title Façade Revived, later revising, dropping and adding numbers, as Façade II.

Façade Revived comprises:

  • Daphne
  • Came the Great Popinjay
  • The Last Gallop
  • The Octogenarian
  • March (Ratatatan)
  • The White Owl
  • Aubade – Jane, Jane
  • Said King Pompey

The work was premiered at the Plaisterers' Hall, London on 25 March 1977, with Richard Baker as reciter and the English Bach Festival Ensemble conducted by Charles Mackerras.[14]

Façade II comprises:

  • Came the Great Popinjay
  • Aubade – Jane, Jane
  • March (Ratatatan)
  • Madam Mouse Trots
  • The Octogenarian
  • Gardener Janus Catches a Naiad
  • Water Party
  • Said King Pompey

This version was premiered at the Aldeburgh Festival on 19 June 1979, with Sir Peter Pears as reciter and an ensemble conducted by Steuart Bedford.[15]

Complete 1922–1928 version edit

When the most comprehensive edition of the Sitwell-Walton versions was released in 1993 (on a CD featuring the voice of the Façade specialist Pamela Hunter with the Melologos ensemble) the number of poems had risen to 42. Pamela Hunter recites all these poems on the 1993 CD, including the nine (indicated by an asterisk, below) for which there are no extant musical accompaniments.

  • Madame Mouse trots
  • The Octogenarian
  • Aubade – Jane, Jane
  • The Wind's Bastinado*
  • Said King Pompey
  • Lullaby for Jumbo
  • Small Talk I
  • Small Talk II*
  • Rose Castles
  • Hornpipe
  • Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone (Long Steel Grass)
  • When Sir Beelzebub.
  • Switchback*
  • Bank Holiday I*
  • Bank Holiday II*
  • Springing Jack*
  • En Famille
  • Mariner Man
  • Came the Great Popinjay
  • Ass-Face*
  • The Last Gallop
  • The White Owl
  • Gardener Janus
  • Mazurka – God Pluto is a Kindly Man*
  • Trams*
  • Scotch Rhapsody
  • Fox Trot
  • Four in the Morning
  • Popular Song
  • By the Lake
  • Black Mrs Behemoth
  • Waltz
  • Jodelling Song
  • Polka
  • Daphne
  • A Man from a far Country
  • Country Dance
  • March
  • Through Gilded Trellises
  • "I do like to be beside the Seaside" (Tango-Pasodoble)
  • Tarantella
  • Something lies beyond the Scene

After this recording was made in 1993, evidence of additional numbers that were included in the June 1923 performance of Façade came to light. As noted by Stewart Craggs,[16] a copy of the programme for this performance emerged which indicated that 28 poems by Sitwell were set by Walton, including four that were previously unknown, having been lost and forgotten in the intervening years: Clown Argheb's Song, Dark Song, Gone Dry and Serenade. A detailed chronology of the various versions of Façade has been given by Stephen Lloyd, who notes that Serenade may have been a recited poem or a purely instrumental piece.[17]

Three Songs edit

Walton set three selections from Façade as art-songs for soprano and piano (1932),[18] to be sung with full voice rather than spoken rhythmically. These are:

  • Daphne
  • Through Gilded Trellises
  • Old Sir Faulk

Façade Suites edit

The first of Walton's two Façade suites for full orchestra was published in 1926. Walton conducted the first performance. The suite consists of:

  • Polka
  • Waltz
  • Swiss Jodelling Song
  • Tango-Pasodoble
  • Tarantella Sevillana[19]

The second suite was premiered in 1938, with John Barbirolli conducting the New York Philharmonic. It consists of:

  • Fanfare
  • Scotch Rhapsody
  • Country Dance
  • Noche Espagnole
  • Popular Song
  • Old Sir Faulk – Foxtrot[19]

The orchestra for both comprises 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, cor anglais, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, trombone, tuba, timpani, 3 percussionists (side drum, cymbals, xylophone, tambourine, bass drum, triangle, glockenspiel, castanets, rattle), and strings. Constant Lambert made an arrangement of both suites for piano duet.[20]

A third suite, arranged by Christopher Palmer,[21] was published in 1992, consisting of:

  • Hornpipe
  • Daphne (Song)
  • March
  • Through Gilded Trellises
  • Water Party Waltz
  • The Wind's Tambourine

The orchestra comprises: 2 flutes (both doubling piccolo), 2 oboes (2nd doubling cor anglais), 2 clarinets (2nd doubling bass clarinet), alto saxophone, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, trombone, tuba, timpani, 4 percussionists (side drum, large ide drum, field drum, bass drum, bass drum with cymbal, drum kit, wood block, castanets, maracas, tambourine, triangle, cymbals, suspended cymbal, tam-tam, glockenspiel, xylophone), piano (doubling celesta), and strings

Façade ballets edit

Façade was first made into a ballet by Günter Hess for the German Chamber Dance Theatre in 1929. In 1931 Frederick Ashton created another ballet version. Both used the First Façade Suite. For Ashton's version the Scotch Rhapsody and Popular Song were added to the First Suite. Ashton later expanded the ballet to include the Country Dance, Noche Espagnole and the Foxtrot, Old Sir Faulk.[22]

In 1972, to mark Walton's seventieth birthday, Ashton created a new ballet using the score of the "entertainment". It was premiered at the Aldeburgh Festival, with Peter Pears as the reciter.[22]

Selected discography edit

Façade – An Entertainment

  • Sitwell-Walton version: Edith Sitwell, Peter Pears (reciters), English Opera Group Ensemble, Anthony Collins. Decca LXT2977 (1954)
  • Expanded Sitwell-Walton version: Pamela Hunter (reciter), Melologos Ensemble, Silveer van den Broeck. Discover DICD 920125 (1993)

Façade Suites

Three Songs from Façade

  • Kiri Te Kanawa, soprano, Richard Amner, accompanist, on the album A Portrait of Kiri Te Kanawa. CBS 74116 (1984)

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Palmer, Christopher (1990). Liner notes to Chandos CD CHAN 6689
  2. ^ Sitwell, introduction, p. 18
  3. ^ a b Kennedy, p. 304
  4. ^ Walton, passim
  5. ^ See Kennedy, p. 112: Rossini was Walton's favourite composer, and is quoted in later Walton pieces also.
  6. ^ a b c Kennedy, p. 33
  7. ^ "Poetry Through a Megaphone", The Daily Express, 13 June 1923, p. 7
  8. ^ "Futuristic Music and Poetry", The Manchester Guardian, 13 June 1923, p. 3
  9. ^ "Music of the Week", The Observer, 17 June 1923, p. 10
  10. ^ "The World of Music", The Illustrated London News, 23 June 1923, p. 1122
  11. ^ Kennedy, p. 31
  12. ^ Hoare, p. 120. Soon afterwards Coward wrote a revue sketch lampooning the Sitwells, which caused a feud between him and them that lasted for decades.
  13. ^ Kennedy, p. 62
  14. ^ "Façade Revived", The Times, 19 March 1977, p. 9
  15. ^ Kennedy, p. 305
  16. ^ Craggs, Editor's note on p. 58
  17. ^ Lloyd, Appendix 4
  18. ^ Three Songs published by Oxford University Press - British Library Catalogue: http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01004728766 retrieved 21/01/2018
  19. ^ a b Kennedy, p. 300
  20. ^ Somm CD 0614 (2020)
  21. ^ Façade Suite for Orchestra No. 3. Oxford University Press. 27 February 1992. ISBN 978-0-19-368155-2.
  22. ^ a b Kennedy, p. 291

References edit

  • Craggs, Stewart R., ed. (1999). William Walton: Music and Literature. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 1-85928-190-7.
  • Hoare, Philip (1995). Noël Coward. London: Sinclair Stevenson. ISBN 1-85619-265-2.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1989). Portrait of Walton. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816705-9.
  • Lloyd, Stephen (2001). William Walton: Muse of Fire. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-803-X.
  • Sitwell, Edith (1950). Façade and Other Poems, 1920–1935. London: Duckworth. OCLC 650091337.
  • Walton, William; Edith Sitwell (1951). Façade – An Entertainment – full score. Oxford: Oxford University Press. OCLC 503713.

External links edit

  • , lecture and concert by Chamber Domaine given on 6 November 2007 at Gresham College, including Façade (available for audio and video download).
  • Video – William Walton – Façade (an entertainment) (36:30).
  • Video - Façade - An Entertainment - Excerpts / Recitations of Edith Sitwell's Poems (11:40)

façade, entertainment, façade, series, poems, edith, sitwell, best, known, part, façade, entertainment, which, poems, recited, over, instrumental, accompaniment, william, walton, poems, music, exist, several, versions, edith, sitwell, 1912, roger, sitwell, beg. Facade is a series of poems by Edith Sitwell best known as part of Facade An Entertainment in which the poems are recited over an instrumental accompaniment by William Walton The poems and the music exist in several versions Edith Sitwell in 1912 by Roger Fry Sitwell began to publish some of the Facade poems in 1918 in the literary magazine Wheels In 1922 many of them were given an orchestral accompaniment by Walton Sitwell s protege The entertainment was first performed in public on 12 June 1923 at the Aeolian Hall in London and achieved both fame and notoriety for its unconventional form Walton arranged two suites of his music for full orchestra When Frederick Ashton made a ballet of Facade in 1931 Sitwell did not wish her poems to be part of it and the orchestral arrangements were used After Sitwell s death Walton published supplementary versions of Facade for speaker and small ensemble using numbers dropped between the premiere and the publication of the full score in 1951 Contents 1 Versions 2 Sitwell s published Facade poems 3 The Sitwell Walton Facade An Entertainment 4 Walton s later additions 5 Complete 1922 1928 version 6 Three Songs 7 Facade Suites 8 Facade ballets 9 Selected discography 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksVersions editFacade exists in several strongly contrasted versions principally Edith Sitwell s Facade and Other Poems 1920 1935 the published versions of those of the poems chosen by the author for her 1950 volume of collected verse The Sitwell Walton Facade 1951 the first and definitive published version of the full score of the entertainment Facade Revived 1977 a set of eight poems and settings not included in the 1951 version published by Walton to mark his 75th birthday Facade II 1979 a revised version of Facade Revived with some numbers dropped and others added Facade the complete version 1922 1928 a 42 number CD set compiled and performed by Pamela Hunter 1993 restoring all the poems that Walton set and nine that he did not set Walton s orchestral Facade Suites 1926 and 1938 A table showing the various permutations can be seen here Sitwell s published Facade poems editIt is sometimes said that the Facade verses are nonsense poetry in the tradition of Edward Lear 1 But despite the experiments with sound and rhythm there is meaning in Sitwell s poems 1 The literary scholar Jack Lindsay wrote The associations are often glancing and rapid in the extreme but the total effect comes from a highly organized basis of sense 2 Other writers have detected personal references in the Facade poems Christopher Palmer lists many references to Sitwell s unhappy childhood from the kind Mariner Man her father s valet who entertained her with seafaring stories to the implacable Mrs Behemoth her mother 1 The Facade poems published by Sitwell in her 1950 collection Facade and other Poems 1920 1935 are The Drum Clowns Houses Said King Pompey The Bat Lullaby for Jumbo Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone Madame Mouse trots Four in the Morning Black Mrs Behemoth The Wind s Bastinado En Famille Country Dance Mariner Man The Octogenarian Bells of Grey Crystal When Cold December Came the Great Popinjay Fox Trot Polka Mazurka Jodelling Song Scotch Rhapsody Waltz Popular Song By the Lake The Avenue Water Party The Satyr in the Periwig Dark Song I do like to be beside the Seaside Hornpipe Something lies beyond the Scene When Sir BeelzebubThe Sitwell Walton Facade An Entertainment editThe entertainment Facade in which Sitwell s poems are recited over an instrumental accompaniment by Walton was first given privately in the Sitwell family s London house on 24 January 1922 The first public performance was given at the Aeolian Hall London on 12 June 1923 On both occasions the author recited the verse and the composer conducted the ensemble 3 nbsp The Sitwells and William Walton left to right Osbert Edith Sacheverell Walton and with the Facade megaphone Neil Porter of the Old Vic Walton made changes to the instrumentation for the entertainment between its premiere and the publication of the first printed score nearly thirty years later 3 but in both 1922 23 and 1951 he scored for six players The published score specifies flute doubling piccolo clarinet doubling bass clarinet alto saxophone trumpet percussion and cello 4 Walton quotes a range of earlier composers in his score from Rossini the William Tell overture appears in the Swiss Jodelling Song to George Grossmith whose comic song See me dance the polka is present throughout Walton s Polka 5 In the Sitwell Walton Facade there are three poems Through Gilded Trellises A Man from a far Country from Sitwell s The Sleeping Beauty and Tarantella never formally published by Sitwell that do not feature in her published edition of Facade As the performing version frequently recited in public and recorded for the gramophone by Sitwell included the Tarantella it may be assumed that she did not require the musical version to adhere strictly to the text of the published poems The public premiere of the entertainment was a succes de scandale 6 The performance consisted of Sitwell s verses which she recited through a megaphone protruding through a decorated screen while Walton conducted an ensemble of six players in his accompanying music 6 The press was generally condemnatory One contemporary headline read Drivel That They Paid to Hear 1 The Daily Express loathed the work but admitted that it was naggingly memorable 7 The Manchester Guardian wrote of relentless cacophony 8 The Observer condemned the verses and dismissed Walton s music as harmless 9 In The Illustrated London News Edward J Dent was much more appreciative The audience was at first inclined to treat the whole thing as an absurd joke but there is always a surprisingly serious element in Miss Sitwell s poetry and Mr Walton s music which soon induced the audience to listen with breathless attention 10 In The Sunday Times Ernest Newman said of Walton as a musical joker he is a jewel of the first water 11 Among the audience were Evelyn Waugh Virginia Woolf and Noel Coward The last was so outraged by the avant garde nature of Sitwell s verses and the staging that he marched out ostentatiously during the performance 12 The players did not like the work the clarinettist asked the composer Mr Walton has a clarinet player ever done you an injury 6 Nevertheless the work soon became accepted and within a decade Walton s music was used for the popular Facade ballet choreographed by Frederick Ashton 13 Walton revised the music continually between its first performance and the first publication of the full score in 1951 That definitive version of the Sitwell Walton Facade consists of Fanfare Instrumental Hornpipe En Famille Mariner Man Long Steel Grass Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone Through Gilded Trellises from The Sleeping Beauty Tango Pasodoble I do like to be beside the Seaside Lullaby for Jumbo Black Mrs Behemoth Tarantella A Man from a far Country from The Sleeping Beauty By the Lake Country Dance Polka Four in the Morning Something lies beyond the Scene Waltz Swiss Jodelling Song Scotch Rhapsody Popular Song Fox Trot Old Sir Faulk When Sir Beelzebub Walton s later additions editIn the 1970s Walton released some further numbers under the title Facade Revived later revising dropping and adding numbers as Facade II Facade Revived comprises Daphne Came the Great Popinjay The Last Gallop The Octogenarian March Ratatatan The White Owl Aubade Jane Jane Said King Pompey The work was premiered at the Plaisterers Hall London on 25 March 1977 with Richard Baker as reciter and the English Bach Festival Ensemble conducted by Charles Mackerras 14 Facade II comprises Came the Great Popinjay Aubade Jane Jane March Ratatatan Madam Mouse Trots The Octogenarian Gardener Janus Catches a Naiad Water Party Said King Pompey This version was premiered at the Aldeburgh Festival on 19 June 1979 with Sir Peter Pears as reciter and an ensemble conducted by Steuart Bedford 15 Complete 1922 1928 version editWhen the most comprehensive edition of the Sitwell Walton versions was released in 1993 on a CD featuring the voice of the Facade specialist Pamela Hunter with the Melologos ensemble the number of poems had risen to 42 Pamela Hunter recites all these poems on the 1993 CD including the nine indicated by an asterisk below for which there are no extant musical accompaniments Madame Mouse trots The Octogenarian Aubade Jane Jane The Wind s Bastinado Said King Pompey Lullaby for Jumbo Small Talk I Small Talk II Rose Castles Hornpipe Trio for Two Cats and a Trombone Long Steel Grass When Sir Beelzebub Switchback Bank Holiday I Bank Holiday II Springing Jack En Famille Mariner Man Came the Great Popinjay Ass Face The Last Gallop The White Owl Gardener Janus Mazurka God Pluto is a Kindly Man Trams Scotch Rhapsody Fox Trot Four in the Morning Popular Song By the Lake Black Mrs Behemoth Waltz Jodelling Song Polka Daphne A Man from a far Country Country Dance March Through Gilded Trellises I do like to be beside the Seaside Tango Pasodoble Tarantella Something lies beyond the Scene After this recording was made in 1993 evidence of additional numbers that were included in the June 1923 performance of Facade came to light As noted by Stewart Craggs 16 a copy of the programme for this performance emerged which indicated that 28 poems by Sitwell were set by Walton including four that were previously unknown having been lost and forgotten in the intervening years Clown Argheb s Song Dark Song Gone Dry and Serenade A detailed chronology of the various versions of Facade has been given by Stephen Lloyd who notes that Serenade may have been a recited poem or a purely instrumental piece 17 Three Songs editWalton set three selections from Facade as art songs for soprano and piano 1932 18 to be sung with full voice rather than spoken rhythmically These are Daphne Through Gilded Trellises Old Sir FaulkFacade Suites editThe first of Walton s two Facade suites for full orchestra was published in 1926 Walton conducted the first performance The suite consists of Polka Waltz Swiss Jodelling Song Tango Pasodoble Tarantella Sevillana 19 The second suite was premiered in 1938 with John Barbirolli conducting the New York Philharmonic It consists of Fanfare Scotch Rhapsody Country Dance Noche Espagnole Popular Song Old Sir Faulk Foxtrot 19 The orchestra for both comprises 2 flutes piccolo 2 oboes cor anglais 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 4 horns 2 trumpets trombone tuba timpani 3 percussionists side drum cymbals xylophone tambourine bass drum triangle glockenspiel castanets rattle and strings Constant Lambert made an arrangement of both suites for piano duet 20 A third suite arranged by Christopher Palmer 21 was published in 1992 consisting of Hornpipe Daphne Song March Through Gilded Trellises Water Party Waltz The Wind s Tambourine The orchestra comprises 2 flutes both doubling piccolo 2 oboes 2nd doubling cor anglais 2 clarinets 2nd doubling bass clarinet alto saxophone 2 bassoons 2 horns 2 trumpets trombone tuba timpani 4 percussionists side drum large ide drum field drum bass drum bass drum with cymbal drum kit wood block castanets maracas tambourine triangle cymbals suspended cymbal tam tam glockenspiel xylophone piano doubling celesta and stringsFacade ballets editMain article Facade ballet Facade was first made into a ballet by Gunter Hess for the German Chamber Dance Theatre in 1929 In 1931 Frederick Ashton created another ballet version Both used the First Facade Suite For Ashton s version the Scotch Rhapsody and Popular Song were added to the First Suite Ashton later expanded the ballet to include the Country Dance Noche Espagnole and the Foxtrot Old Sir Faulk 22 In 1972 to mark Walton s seventieth birthday Ashton created a new ballet using the score of the entertainment It was premiered at the Aldeburgh Festival with Peter Pears as the reciter 22 Selected discography editMain article Facade discography Facade An Entertainment Sitwell Walton version Edith Sitwell Peter Pears reciters English Opera Group Ensemble Anthony Collins Decca LXT2977 1954 Expanded Sitwell Walton version Pamela Hunter reciter Melologos Ensemble Silveer van den Broeck Discover DICD 920125 1993 Facade Suites Orchestra of the Royal Opera House Covent Garden Anatole Fistoulari RCA SB2039 1959 Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Andrew Litton Decca 470 508 2DC4 2002 Andrew West and Ronald Woodley piano duet arr Lambert SOMM CD 0614 2020 Three Songs from Facade Kiri Te Kanawa soprano Richard Amner accompanist on the album A Portrait of Kiri Te Kanawa CBS 74116 1984 Notes edit a b c d Palmer Christopher 1990 Liner notes to Chandos CD CHAN 6689 Sitwell introduction p 18 a b Kennedy p 304 Walton passim See Kennedy p 112 Rossini was Walton s favourite composer and is quoted in later Walton pieces also a b c Kennedy p 33 Poetry Through a Megaphone The Daily Express 13 June 1923 p 7 Futuristic Music and Poetry The Manchester Guardian 13 June 1923 p 3 Music of the Week The Observer 17 June 1923 p 10 The World of Music The Illustrated London News 23 June 1923 p 1122 Kennedy p 31 Hoare p 120 Soon afterwards Coward wrote a revue sketch lampooning the Sitwells which caused a feud between him and them that lasted for decades Kennedy p 62 Facade Revived The Times 19 March 1977 p 9 Kennedy p 305 Craggs Editor s note on p 58 Lloyd Appendix 4 Three Songs published by Oxford University Press British Library Catalogue http explore bl uk BLVU1 LSCOP ALL BLL01004728766 retrieved 21 01 2018 a b Kennedy p 300 Somm CD 0614 2020 Facade Suite for Orchestra No 3 Oxford University Press 27 February 1992 ISBN 978 0 19 368155 2 a b Kennedy p 291References editCraggs Stewart R ed 1999 William Walton Music and Literature Aldershot Ashgate Publishing ISBN 1 85928 190 7 Hoare Philip 1995 Noel Coward London Sinclair Stevenson ISBN 1 85619 265 2 Kennedy Michael 1989 Portrait of Walton Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816705 9 Lloyd Stephen 2001 William Walton Muse of Fire Woodbridge The Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 803 X Sitwell Edith 1950 Facade and Other Poems 1920 1935 London Duckworth OCLC 650091337 Walton William Edith Sitwell 1951 Facade An Entertainment full score Oxford Oxford University Press OCLC 503713 External links edit The Jazz Age lecture and concert by Chamber Domaine given on 6 November 2007 at Gresham College including Facade available for audio and video download Video William Walton Facade an entertainment 36 30 Video Facade An Entertainment Excerpts Recitations of Edith Sitwell s Poems 11 40 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Facade entertainment amp oldid 1217545001 Facade Suites, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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