Elgar's op.36 (1899), 14 variations for orchestra dedicated to his ‘friends pictured within’; each variation portrays an individual, the last one the composer himself.
| Music Encyclopedia: Enigma Variations |
Elgar's op.36 (1899), 14 variations for orchestra dedicated to his ‘friends pictured within’; each variation portrays an individual, the last one the composer himself.
| Dictionary of Dance: Enigma Variations |
Ballet in one act with choreography by Ashton, music by Elgar, and design by Julia Trevelyan Oman. Premiered 25 Oct. 1968 by Royal Ballet, Covent Garden, London, with Rencher, Beriosova, and Doyle. Unlike F. Staff's abstract setting of 1940, Ashton's version follows the composer in creating a set of vividly delineated character studies based on Elgar and his friends. Though Oman's designs place the ballet very precisely in ‘Worcestershire, 1898’, it evokes qualities of pathos, tenderness, loyalty, and nostalgia, and an image of the artist's solitariness, which all possess universal resonance. The choreography is classically based but deeply interwoven with naturalistic gesture. It was filmed in 1969.
| Wikipedia: Enigma Variations |
Variations on an Original Theme for orchestra, Op. 36 ("Enigma"), commonly referred to as the Enigma Variations, is a set of a theme and its fourteen variations written for orchestra by Edward Elgar in 1898–1899. It is Elgar's best-known large-scale composition, for both the music itself and the enigmas behind it. Elgar dedicated the piece to "my friends pictured within", each variation being an affectionate portrayal of one of his circle of close acquaintances.
One account of the piece's genesis is that after a tiring day of teaching in 1898, Elgar was daydreaming at the piano. A melody he played caught the attention of his wife, who liked it and asked him to repeat it for her. So, to entertain his wife, he began to improvise variations on this melody, each one either a musical portrait of one of their friends, or in the musical style they might have used. Elgar eventually expanded and orchestrated these improvisations into the Enigma Variations.
The piece was first performed at St James's Hall, 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 revised the final variation, adding 100 new bars and an organ part; the new version, the one usually played today, was played at the Worcester Three Choirs Festival on 13 September 1899, with Elgar himself conducting.[1] It has been popular ever since. It 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.[2]
The work is scored for 2 flutes (one doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B flat, 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.
The work consists of the theme, followed by 14 variations. The variations spring from the theme's melodic, harmonic and (especially) 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 with either a nickname or initials, a clue to the identity 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, most of them contain a musical reference to a specific characteristic or event, such as Dorabella's stutter, Winifred Norbury's laugh, or the walk in the woods with Jaeger. The sections of the piece are as follows.
Among many, the following are noteworthy:
Determining which of Elgar's friends is represented in each variation is not the puzzle the title refers to. The identity of most of them we know (see above): Elgar himself provided brief notes on the subjects to accompany the five Duo-art pianola rolls of the Variations that the Aeolian Company brought out in 1929. However, there is also a theme hidden in the work, which is 'not played'. To solve this, we only have a few clues. In a programme note for the first performance Charles A. Barry rendered Elgar's own words:
Elgar wrote the following in a set of notes issued with the Aeolian Company pianola rolls published in 1929:
1. Some believe[weasel words] that the theme itself is a derivation of some well-known, hidden tune. Many have guessed[weasel words] at what this might be.
Some have proposed[weasel words] the tune of the British national anthem, "God Save the Queen" as the enigma theme's inspiration; others prefer "Auld Lang Syne" transposed to a minor key, which suits the subject of "old acquaintance". Some music scholars believe the theme may be based on part of Mozart's "Prague" Symphony, which was on the program at the "Enigma" Variations' premiere in 1899. Also proposed has been the traditional Renaissance theme La Folia, whose chords roughly fit the theme, although Elgar's use of accented seventh notes would have been a decidedly nineteenth-century adaptation.
A popular theory[citation needed] is that the theme is related to the "never, never, never" section of "Rule, Britannia!"; in particular, the phrase is clearly audible in the first five notes of the work, and there are several other possible hints in Elgar's own statements, in particular "So the principal Theme never appears, even as in some late dramas ... the chief character is never on stage." However, the word "never" can be related as well to the second line of Auld Lang Syne "And never brought to mind", which fits (though not musically) with a theory postulated by Eric Sams in 1970. It is usually assumed[weasel words] that the 'unheard theme' is a melody. But Elgar did not explicitly state that this was so. It is possible that the 'enigma' also represents a 'friend pictured within.' According to the Rule Brittania! theory (presented by the Anglo-Dutch musicologist and writer Theodore van Houten, in Music Review, May 1976) this hidden character is "Britannia ruling the waves." Moreover, Van Houten suggested that Variation XI represents another symbol for England: John Bull, with bulldog and all. Van Houten's "Rule Britannia" theory links the Enigma Variations with nationalism in European music around 1900. Elgar, then a solid conservative, wrote his patriotic cantata Caractacus (op. 35) just before the Enigma Variations (Op. 36). The "Rule Britannia" theory was accepted by the Honorary President of the
2. Others believe[weasel words] that the theme is a "countermelody to some other unheard tune"; in other words, it would fit when played simultaneously, but does not necessarily contain any of its characteristics other than the most general harmonic or structural outline. In Elgar's own words:
So did Robert Buckley in his Elgar biography of 1905:
A recent theory, proposed by Clive McClelland of the University of Leeds, suggests that the hidden theme is the hymn tune "Now the day is over". Unlike most theories, this deals with all 24 notes of the main theme; the lyrics too, McClelland thinks, fit in with Elgar's 'dark saying'.[9]
A recent solution came from Dutch writer Hans Westgeest.[10] He found a connection between the enigma and the Jaeger-Beethoven-story behind the Nimrod-variation, which Elgar told Dora Penny in 1904 (see var. IX above). The real theme of the Enigma Variations, which is present everywhere throughout the work in different shapes, is rather short: it consists of notes which form the rhythm of Edward Elgar’s own name, "short-short-long-long", and the reverse of it, "long-long-short-short" (and an endnote). The mysterious melody which is hidden in the Enigma Variations is the theme of the second movement of the Pathétique-sonata of Ludwig van Beethoven. This is the “principal Theme” which is “not played” itself, which is much “larger” and quite “well-known”[11]. Elgar composed his “Elgar-theme” as a countermelody to the beginning of this Beethoven-theme and it also comprises the very notes of it. As Westgeest states, the symbolism of this is evident: Elgar follows the example of Beethoven, as Jaeger told him to do. By doing so, the artist triumphs over depression and discouragement in the Finale, "E.D.U.".
Even Dora Penny could not solve the enigma, because she didn't see the connection with the Jaeger-Beethoven-story Elgar had told her in private. He was surprised: "I thought that you of all people would guess it."
3. There have been published many other solutions. A few examples:
1 Corinthians 13:12
A famous theory, postulated by Professor Ian Parrott, former vice-president of the Elgar Society, in his book on Elgar (Master Musicians, 1971) was that the "dark saying", and possibly the whole of the Enigma, was related to 1 Corinthians 13:12 which reads according to the Authorised Version of the Bible:
This verse is from St. Paul's essay on love. Elgar was a practising Roman Catholic and on 12 February 1899,[12] eight days before the completion of the Variations, Elgar attended Quinquagesima Mass at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in Malvern. This particular verse was read.
Perhaps then, the Enigmatic Theme that 'goes', but is not played "through and over the whole set" is the faith, hope and love of the friends who had been close to him during his years of obscurity and frequent depression, friends who for Elgar had reflected that great and central theme of Christian scripture - God's love.
Another type of solution is that the 'larger theme that "goes" but is not played' is a literary theme. In The Elgar Society Journal (November 2004, Vol.13,No.6) Edmund M. 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.
The Art of Fugue
In 1985, Marshall Portnoy in the Musical Quarterly (Oxford) suggested that the answer to the enigma was J S Bach's The Art of Fugue[13]. The Art of Fugue contains the B-A-C-H motif (in English notation, B-flat A C B-natural) which appears in the 14th fugue, which also seems to have been hinted at in the Enigma variations. This seems to have some grounds for the following reasons:
Objections to the Art of Fugue as the answer to the enigma:[citation needed]
Elgar himself quoted many of his own works, including Nimrod (Variation 9), 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.[14]
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.[15] Elgar himself 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. He used the word 'veiled'. It was obviously a female character (Brittania).
"Enigma Variations" is also a drama in the form of a dialogue - original title "Variations Énigmatiques" (1996) - written by the French dramatist Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt and widely performed. It is inspired to Elgar's music composition.
One of the earliest recordings dates from 1926, with the composer himself conducting the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra on the EMI label; it has been remastered, and the CD also includes Elgar conducting his own Violin Concerto in B minor with Yehudi Menuhin as the soloist. Sixty years later, Menuhin took the baton to conduct the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the Variations for Philips. Sir John Eliot Gardiner's 1998 recording with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra for Deutsche Grammophon was released in 2002.
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