Exploring Masterworks for Clarinet with Stuart King

Stuart King
Exploring Masterworks for Clarinet with Stuart King

My guide to understanding, learning and performing the seminal works for clarinet from a performer's perspective. I have over 25 years experience as a performer and teacher based in London, UK. A little bit of background history is essential. After that it's time to look at what the score shows us and my thoughts on what makes these pieces stand out from the pack. There's a bit of analysis and each podcast is followed with a more detailed look at the score on my youtube channel. For more details and links head over to my website www.stuart-king.com

  1. Exploring Arnold Bax's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    02/12/2021

    Exploring Arnold Bax's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    Born into a wealthy London family, Arnold Bax was able to follow his passions without constraint as a young man. This saw him travel across Europe in the years preceding the Great War absorbing music, ballet and culture from a world that was about to be ripped apart by war. His private income afforded him the luxury of not needing to work for money. This set him apart from most of his peers and may have resulted in a sense of not quite 'fitting in'. Nonetheless he was a prolific composer able to continue honing his craft through the First World War as a result of a heart condition that precluded him from National Service.  By the time Bax came to write his Clarinet Sonata in 1934, he was well-established as one of the foremost British establishment composers, noted for his Symphonic works. The early 1930s produced a rich seam of chamber-sized works and the influence of Frederick Thurston, the leading clarinettist of the day, cannot be underestimated. Bax had himself studied the clarinet whilst at the Royal Academy of Music, and early sketches for a clarinet sonata were found after his death. This early interest was re-ignited by Thurston's playing resulting in the Sonata being premiered by Thurston and Bax's lover Harriet Cohen in 1935. It quickly became one of his most popular small-scale works and marked a high-point in a career that was on the wane. After being made Master of the King's Music, Bax wrote little of consequence owing to the change in the direction of musical innovation and public taste.  It is without doubt a triumph! I hope you will enjoy exploring Bax's Clarinet Sonata with me.

    25 min
  2. Exploring John Ireland's Fantasy Sonata with Stuart King

    02/09/2021

    Exploring John Ireland's Fantasy Sonata with Stuart King

    There is something about the clarinet that composers discover or perhaps rediscover when they are in their twilight years. Mozart, Brahms, Poulenc, Howells and this episode's master, John Ireland all wrote their final and arguably best chamber works for the clarinet.  It is hard to imagine that at the start of the 20th century the clarinet was still a relative newcomer to the world of classical chamber music. Frederick Thurston, the finest clarinettist of his generation, first learned the instrument at the start of the new century. His talents soon earned him a place at the prestigious Royal College of London where he was fortunate to take his first steps in the music profession in the afterglow of Brahms' incredible outpouring of chamber works for the instrument. Still Thurston complained that the repertoire for clarinet was dull and uninspiring. These two energies merged between the wars and acted as a catalyst for young British composers to write for Thurston's exquisite mastery of the clarinet buoyed by the lyrical and dramatic possibilities of the instrument as evidenced in the four titanic works Brahms penned in the last three years of his life. John Ireland was a quiet, deep-thinking man, who had experienced his fair share of life's woes before adulthood. He wrote two early chamber works involving the clarinet; a sextet and a trio but it wasn't until shortly before his retirement that Ireland returned to the clarinet inspired by the artistry of Frederick Thurston. Ireland wrote to Thurston upon completing the Fantasy Sonata: If you find you really like the work, I shall be happy to dedicate it to you, as it was your playing which led me to write for your instrument. And I have heard some good clarinet playing – Mühlfeld in my early days made a sensation here, and in his time Charlie Draper was remarkable. So I am in a position to appreciate your playing and what it means to music. And so John Ireland created a ravishing, passionate evocation of the sea and wartime in this Fantasy Sonata. I hope you will enjoy exploring it with me.

    20 min
  3. Exploring Francis Poulenc's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    01/29/2021

    Exploring Francis Poulenc's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    Urbane, witty, tragic, spiky and lyrical! Just a few words that give a flavour of the artistry of Francis Poulenc. Singled out as part of a gaggle of artistic friends that hung out in a bookshop on la rive gauche in the 1920s, Les Six, was a master of mélodies whether in Art Song or instrumentally. The death of parents pushed him towards a series of father figure composers and musicians; Ricardo Viñes, Erik Satie, Georges Auric and Igor Stravinsky.  Scarcely 19 when he wrote his first published works, that included the quirky Sonata for two clarinets with it's innovative use of bitonality and unusual scoring of one clarinet in B flat and one in A. This work dates from the same time as Stravinsky's Three Pieces for solo clarinet that I explored in my last podcast. Whether each composer was aware of the other's work at this precise time is not known, but is no less interesting for that.  Like so many other distinguished composers, Poulenc returned to the clarinet at the end of his life. Mozart, Brahms, Schumann all wrote pieces in the last years of their composing life. Poulenc embarked upon a series of Sonatas for wind instruments of which the Clarinet Sonata is the penultimate one. It is full of searingly beautiful melodies; pain, anguish, sorrow and vitality that were all features of this fascinating composers oeuvres.  Join me as I take a dip in the pool of Francis Poulenc's Sonata for Clarinet.

    17 min
  4. Exploring Herbert Howells' Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    01/29/2021

    Exploring Herbert Howells' Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

    Herbert Howells was composing at a time of tremendous upheaval and turmoil in Europe. Born in Gloucestershire he found his musical education through the church, learning organ and gaining a place as a chorister. Following training at the Royal College of Music, Howells was known primarily as a teacher, chorus master and adjudicator. He held down two major jobs simultaneously, which allowed little time for compositon. We are blessed however with the Clarinet Sonata that dates from 1946-1951. Written for the eminent clarinettist Frederick Thurston, Howells penned this Sonata in the wake of a shattering rejection of his Oboe Sonata by its dedicatee Leon Goossens. Howells successfully brushed off this blow to his morale and continued to hone his craft producing one of the most sublime works for the genre. To my mind this Sonata is the next best work after Brahms seminal pair of Sonatas written in his twilight years. Even though Howells went on to live for thirty more years after the Sonata's composition, this was his last major chamber composition adding his name to the list of composers that turned to the clarinet to share their final ideas with the world. The Sonata is an extraordinary feat of composition using a modal tonality. Far from being 'folky' or backward looking, Howells modernises modality with the chromaticism of late-Romantic sensibility. This unique voice comments on the futility and loss of the 20th Century's history to date, infused with his own personal tragedy and near brush with death. For all the frustration and melancholy that Howells expresses there is always a deeper core of hope and optimism, resignation, tranquility and ultimately peace.

    31 min

About

My guide to understanding, learning and performing the seminal works for clarinet from a performer's perspective. I have over 25 years experience as a performer and teacher based in London, UK. A little bit of background history is essential. After that it's time to look at what the score shows us and my thoughts on what makes these pieces stand out from the pack. There's a bit of analysis and each podcast is followed with a more detailed look at the score on my youtube channel. For more details and links head over to my website www.stuart-king.com

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