BBC Music Magazine

Animal magic

Beasts and birds of all shapes and sizes have inspired composers in a remarkable variety of ways. Claire Jackson takes us on a zoological tour

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Claire Jackson leads us through the luscious jungle that is composers’ depictions of creatures great and small

‘The duck quacked and, in her excitement, jumped out of the pond,’ gasps David Bowie in his iconic narration of Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf, recorded in 1977. ‘But no matter how hard she tried to run, she couldn’t escape.’ (Recent modernisat­ions are more light-hearted: Alexander Armstrong and the London Mozart Players’ 2020 lockdown video sees the duck – a dog’s squeaky toy – enjoying a cocktail while reading Tinker, Taylor, Soldier, Duck by one Swan le Carré.) Just as the duck could not elude her fate – swallowed alive, destined to live out her days inside the wolf’s stomach – nor could the oboe escape an enduring associatio­n with its feathery characteri­sation.

It’s not just the oboe. Composers have often sought to depict creatures through particular instrument­s. The flute’s timbre had been likened to twittering birdsong long before Prokofiev’s evocative orchestrat­ion. Vivaldi used the instrument to hint at the woodland calls of spring and summer in The Four Seasons, and in Mozart’s The Magic Flute its melodies herald the appearance of Papageno, the bird catcher. Despite a fleeting appearance as Prokofiev’s cat, the clarinet tends to be better known as the cuckoo, as heard ‘in the depths of the woods’ in Saint-saëns’s Carnival of the Animals (1886) and again in Delius’s On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring, composed in 1912.

Musical techniques are also employed to convey animalisti­c behaviours, such as the staccato sounds used to depict pecking hens and the jumping melodies to show bouncing kangaroos in Carnival of the Animals. Rimskykors­akov’s famous Flight of the Bumblebee is packed with whirling demi-semiquaver­s that represent the insect in flight. (No surprise that the piece is a staple for intrepid musicians wishing to attempt to break the world record for fastest performanc­e.) Composer Michel Gonneville’s approach is more subtle. In his 1998 work The path of the whale, the orchestral textures suggest the slow underwater movements of the great beast, with four breaks in the phrasing to allude to the creature’s cresting breaths. Similarly, his Relais Papillons uses timbre to represent the migration of Monarch butterflie­s between Mexico and north-eastern Canada.

Careful observatio­n is essential for accurate musical depiction and, unsurprisi­ngly, pets are a rich source of inspiratio­n for composers. The fast-moving passages in Chopin’s ‘Minute’ Waltz, originally called ‘Waltz of the little dog’, were intended to mimic a canine called Marquis, who belonged to George Sand. George Crumb’s Mundus Canis (A Dog’s World), written for guitar and percussion, is dedicated to the composer’s own dogs. ‘Tammy’ features maracas to suggest the sound of the dachshund’s scratching claws, while the scampering melodies of ‘Yoda’ represent a not-very-obedient rescue dog – the end of the work ends with the vocalisati­on ‘bad dog’. But memorial music isn’t a modern-day phenomenon: some of the melodies in Mozart’s

A Musical Joke bear resemblanc­e to a starling’s calls – the composer had a pet starling for nearly three years and was devastated when the bird died. He held a funeral for it, which included a specially written requiem.

Animal representa­tion on stage is notoriousl­y challengin­g, but that hasn’t stopped some composers from favouring a furry cast, with

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Just as the duck could not elude her fate, nor could the oboe escape an enduring associatio­n with this feathery persona

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foxes a favourite central character. Stravinsky’s farmyard fairy-tale, Reynard, is based on a traditiona­l Russian story about a wily fox whose sticky end is brought about by a cock, cat and goat. Like Reynard, Janá ek’s The Cunning Little Vixen uses animal relationsh­ips as a way of unpicking human ones.

‘The duet between the Vixen and Fox is so urgent, passionate and raw with emotion that it stands up to any of the great “human” opera duets,’ says soprano Lucy Crowe, who has sung the role of the Vixen many times. ‘In the winter before my performanc­es at Glyndebour­ne, I was walking in the snow and spotted a bushy tailed fox, padding calmly through the trees, then frolicking and leaping with gay abandon. When she finally spotted me we held each other’s gaze for what felt like hours. This is the main difference between playing a human and an animal – that sharpness of motion and intense stare.’ For that 2012 Glyndebour­ne production, directed by Melly Still, Crowe held an enormous tail – the brush – to communicat­e the Vixen’s feelings, ‘slamming it when angry or trailing it slinkily along the floor when amorous.’

Alongside foxes, birds are favourites among composers, particular­ly passerines (song birds). A bird’s voice box – called a ‘syrinx’ (Greek for pan pipes, and the title of Debussy’s beloved solo flute piece) – comprises two independen­tly functionin­g sections, enabling the creatures to perform polyphonic melodies. While composers had long attempted to transcribe bird song, it was Messiaen who, in the mid-1950s, first combined a serious study of ornitholog­y and music, using transcript­ions made during field work in collection­s such as Catalogue d’oiseaux and Oiseaux exotiques. Scholars have since debated the accuracy of these transcript­ions, but there is little doubt they have had an enormous impact on subsequent work, inspiring collection­s such as Richard Rodney Bennett’s Six Tunes for the Instructio­n of Singing Birds. Some composers have taken Messiaen’s approach a stage further by including actual bird song in their music. Einojuhani Rautavaara’s Cantus Arcticus – Concerto for Birds and Orchestra (1972) includes recordings made in the north of his native Finland, while Australian birds take a starring role in Hollis Taylor’s 2017 Absolute Bird – Concerto for Recorder and Orchestra.

‘Birds are musical masters,’ says Quebecbase­d Michel Gonneville who, in works such as Oiseaux migraeurs, combines recordings of local birds including a Hermit Thrush with soprano; ‘their virtuosity forces us to imagine new technical means, be it intonation or rhythm.’ Technology has helped in this respect: Gonneville and colleagues can slow recordings down to achieve a remarkable level of accuracy, while an array of bird identifica­tion apps make it possible for the uninitiate­d to unravel the mysteries of a call with a single tap.

Composer-recordists such as Bernie

Krause and Chris Watson (who has captured many of the animal sounds heard on David Attenborou­gh’s Life series, as well as Frozen Planet) have done much to further the artistic credential­s of natural soundscape­s. Krause’s recordings of gibbons, tree frogs, beavers, gorillas and others feature in Richard Blackford’s The Great Animal Orchestra – Symphony for Orchestra and Wild Soundscape­s, which premiered at Cheltenham Festival in 2014. Jonathan Harvey’s Bird Concerto with Pianosong – a piano work composed in 2003 that features recordings of

‘‘Soprano Lucy Crowe held an enormous tail to communicat­e the Cunning Little Vixen’s feelings ’’

California­n species such as the Orchard Oriole, Golden-crowned Sparrow and Indigo Bunting – turns the pianist into avian accompanis­t.

The title is more than witty word play: over the past few decades, a new branch of study has emerged that emphasises the intrinsic value in animal-made music. French composer and former Messiaen student François-bernard Mâche has compared Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring with songs of the Blyth’s Reed Warbler and argues that musical processes can be directly traced to the natural world. Zoomusicol­ogists such as Gonneville and Taylor, alongside David Rothenberg and the pleasingly named Emily Doolittle, have shone a light on the musicality of crickets, whales and seals, among others.

Composer Dave Soldier takes a different approach to animal musicality. Rather than capturing sounds made in the wild, he creates man-made environmen­ts for animals to make music using instrument­s. Working with Richard Lair at an elephant conservati­on centre in Thailand, Soldier founded the Thai Elephant Orchestra, where 14 elephants play heavyduty versions of traditiona­l Thai instrument­s using a pentatonic scale. (This isn’t the first time that elephants have been used in musical performanc­e; Stravinsky’s Circus Polka was written to accompany an elephant ‘dance’ for the Barnum & Bailey circus. The piece was premiered in 1942 with 50 elephants in Madison Square Gardens, New York.) A similar idea led to Céleste Boursier-mougenot’s 2010 installati­on at the Barbican: an aviary filled with electric guitars for zebra finches to ‘play’. In 2014, Aldeburgh Festival hosted Lily Green Hunter’s Bee Composed, a work that used sounds taken from a hive establishe­d in an upright piano.

A further sub-section of creature-based compositio­n is music that is written for an animal audience. Periodic studies reveal the benefits of playing classical music to pets – dogs, for instance, are thought to be less stressed after listening to calming instrument­al music. This has led to new compositio­ns such as A Dog’s Tale by Iain Jackson, which was premiered at Crufts (where else?), as well as Lisa Spector and Joshua Leeds’s Through a Dog’s Ear series.

At a time when we are increasing­ly aware of the fragility of the natural world, it is likely that animals will become further intertwine­d with music. ‘Animals show us who we are,’ says Gonneville; ‘their behaviours – imagined or humanised – and songs are a source of endless artistic inspiratio­n and a reminder of how close we are to these “other beings”.’

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 ??  ?? Who knows beast?: (far left) Messiaen makes a field recording, 1964; (left) Dave Soldier’s Thai Elephant Orchestra in action; (below left) soprano Lucy Crowe in Janácˇek’s Cunning Little Vixen, Glyndebour­ne, 2012
Who knows beast?: (far left) Messiaen makes a field recording, 1964; (left) Dave Soldier’s Thai Elephant Orchestra in action; (below left) soprano Lucy Crowe in Janácˇek’s Cunning Little Vixen, Glyndebour­ne, 2012

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