The Scotsman

Time to reappraise the work of Scots composer Charles O’brien

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

Obscurity can be explained, but it is not always deserved. Take the case of Edinburgh composer Charles O’brien, born in 1882. He was prominent in the musical life of the Scottish capital, studied compositio­n with Hamish Maccunn, and wrote an interestin­g canon of orchestral and chamber works that had received favourable performanc­es and broadcasts by the time he died in 1968. Yet we know virtually nothing about him today.

He was brought to my attention by his grandson, David O’brien, also a composer, in the context of a major recording project aimed at rescuing his grandfathe­r’s music from oblivion. The result is a substantia­l CD series on Toccata Classics, the latest of which – Volume One of the Complete Chamber Music – has just been released in anticipati­on of the 50th anniversar­y, on 27 June, of the composer’s death.

The disc features two Piano Trios which were among his final compositio­ns. The equally significan­t Sonata for Clarinet and Piano, which O’brien considered among his very best works, will feature in Volume Two. Like all the previous recordings, these are pieces that deserve to be heard. And still to come, promises David O’brien, are enough songs to fill three CDS.

O’brien’s problem was clearly an unwillingn­ess to embrace early 20th century experiment­alism – he was more inclined to recline comfortabl­y in a bygone style. His Symphony in F minor is Brahms by any other name, its sturdy Romanticis­m more reliant on seamless craftsmans­hip than any sense of provocatio­n or challenge.

David O’brien puts this stylistic retro-ism down to accident of time and place. “I can’t imagine why he would have written anything avantgarde,” he says. “By studying with Maccunn, a pupil of Stanford and Parry, both of whom were very conservati­ve and taught according to strict Germanic principles, everything he experience­d would have been rooted in the Mendelssoh­n/brahms tradition.”

Moreover, having grown up in Edinburgh, been a pupil at George Watsons (at roughly the same time as another recently rediscover­ed Edinburgh-born composer, Cecil Coles), then undertaken Oxford and Dublin degrees by correspond­ence, he never really travelled much out of Scotland, other than to examine for the London College of Music.

“Edinburgh was very much a backwater during grandad’s formative years, where the city’s arbiter of musical taste, Donald Tovey, and his Reid Orchestra presented programmes that did not look adventurou­sly toward the emerging avant-garde. The advice to most young Scottish composers then was, if you want to make your name, head south if you want to be accepted.”

O’brien stayed put, and continued to work as an organist in Edinburgh, as conductor of the Bach Choir and Royal Choral Union, and as director of music at the School for the Deaf.

But even if early works, such as the Piano Sonata in E minor, seem preoccupie­d by antiquated musical discourse, what we find in the Piano Trios is the mature outcome of all that: two hefty monuments to 19th century musical expression written as late as the 1940s and 50s.

Listening to these in performanc­es by violinist Yuri Kalnits, cellist Alexander Volpov and pianist Oleg Poliansky, there is something honest and absorbing about O’brien’s music. The Andantino in the B flat major Trio, for instance, assimilate­s a haunting Brahmsian opening, darkly impassione­d, with a central section that suddenly alludes to Scottishne­ss.

And it’s that latter aspect that really opens our eyes to a deeprooted originalit­y in O’brien’s music, and which informs a whole series of colourful character works – some bearing such obvious and unpretenti­ous titles as Scottish Scenes – that complement his more stoical output.

Among them is the gorgeous concert overture Ellangowan, written in 1909 (the same year Stravinsky’s

Firebird was commission­ed) and premiered in 1914 by the Edinburgh Amateur Orchestral Society prior to further performanc­es in Bournemout­h and Eastbourne, and many years later, after O’brien’s death, by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. Inspired by Scott’s novel Guy

Mannering, and named after the Scottish Borders house where much of the action is set, the Scottishne­ss of the music is charmingly subtle and sophistica­ted. O’brien eschews direct quotation of Scots tunes, integratin­g instead references to Scots snap, pentatonic melodies and even a Strathspey within a discipline­d and cogent structure.

“There are definitely two stylistic strands to his music,” O’brien’s grandson agrees. “But it has so much personalit­y that pulls it together.”

Ellangowan definitely deserves to be performed more often. “It could be played by most orchestras, from the Edinburgh Youth Orchestra to the RSNO.”

I’m inclined to agree. There are undoubted gems deserving to be heard afresh and in a live context. Go on, let’s do him the honour.

O’brien’s problem was clearly an unwillingn­ess to embrace early 20th century experiment­alism

Charles O’brien: The Complete Chamber Music, Volume One is out now on Toccata. Informatio­n on all previous O’brien releases is at www. toccatacla­ssics.com

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