BBC Music Magazine

Andrew Green

Broadcaste­r and writer

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‘The concert life of Crystal Palace was a crucial foundation for Britain’s musical renaissanc­e. The chance to get closer to its key figure, the venue’s energetic music director August Manns, was irresistib­le.’

Adrab, drizzly late-november afternoon in Sydenham, south east London. Seagulls trudge around the spreading puddles where once the stupendous Crystal Palace proudly stood… and died, in a heart-stopping, heart-breaking conflagrat­ion in November 1936. Even with the elegant stone staircases and balustrade­s still tracing the site’s outline – and even with the Victorian floor plan to hand – it’s hard to raise the ghost of Crystal Palace’s legendary musical hero. Over here, says the plan, is the area where August Manns drove on his musicians with unflagging energy, across more than 12,000 concerts. Twelve thousand! A dizzying stat indeed that describes Manns’s marathon stretch as the venue’s music director from 1855-1901.

Manns it was who enticed and educated a new public for classical music, his inf luence spreading across the UK. His concerts were a formative inf luence on the young Elgar, who day-tripped by train from his Worcester home to attend the maestro’s Crystal Palace ‘Saturday Concerts’, departing at the crack of dawn and returning late.

Manns offered familiar classical favourites, but also repertoire adventure of many kinds.

His championin­g of emerging native talent led one commentato­r to dub him ‘the father of

English music’, seeing in him the catalyst for a new era in which British composers (and not forgetting performers) could hold their own internatio­nally. AJ Fuller-maitland’s 1902 English Music in the Nineteenth Century said of this ‘English Musical Renaissanc­e’ that ‘as far as its source can be ascribed to any one spot, that honour must be ascribed to the Crystal Palace at Sydenham’. And thus to August Manns.

Well over a century later, Manns authority Michael Musgrave affirms Fuller-maitland’s judgment. ‘Everyone wanted to play and be performed at the Crystal Palace,’ he says. ‘Manns was known as a very sensitive conductor, and supportive of young composers and new developmen­ts in music. Nowadays we take the “repertory” of British music for granted, but Manns was a major figure in establishi­ng what we’ve now long taken over.’

And yet Manns – like his counterpar­t musical catalyst in Manchester, Charles Hallé – was no home-grown hero. Both were born in Germany – Manns in 1825, in Stolzenber­g, near Leipzig. His father was a glassblowe­r of limited means, but an avid music enthusiast. After a broad training in strings, woodwind and compositio­n, the young August spent the larger part of his early career as a Prussian army bandmaster. That background is perhaps what in 1854 drew him to Crystal Palace (the year it opened) where he was appointed to play the clarinet in what was a military-style band, while also conducting, arranging and copying parts. All for £3 a week.

The following year, Manns assumed full responsibi­lity for musical performanc­e at the invitation of the secretary of the Crystal Palace Company, George Grove (founder of the go-to Dictionary of Music and Musicians). Grove can hardly have imagined the revolution that would be wrought by this unknown immigrant. Manns was to write that in 1855 he ‘found neither orchestra, library, concert room nor musical audience [and] had to battle with strongly rooted prejudices against classical instrument­al music. It was really a matter of patience, prudence, perseveran­ce and pluck.’ Characteri­stics which paid off handsomely at the Crystal Palace.

Joseph Paxton’s monumental glass structure had been removed to Sydenham from its 1851 Great Exhibition site in Hyde Park and then modified for a variety of future uses. It was envisaged as an entertainm­ent/event space – and in the following decades was the setting for everything from fine art exhibition­s and Shakespear­e festivals to circus acts, cat and dog shows and automobile extravagan­zas. At the outset, provision for musical performanc­e was considered low priority. To Manns’s everlastin­g credit, classical music became a major element in defining Crystal Palace’s profile and reputation.

It was as well that Manns had perservera­nce. He refused to bow to Groves’s view that the venue’s mammoth acoustic ruled out string players. At first, his concerts featured separate repertoire for strings and wind, but Manns soon shaped two convention­al orchestras. Of central importance was the enclosure of a dedicated Concert Room within the Palace interior.

In no time, Manns was offering concerts six days a week. A basic of two concerts per day, Monday to Friday, were performed by the Crystal Palace Company’s Band. At the weekend came the showpiece ‘Saturday Concert’, given by the larger (and expanding) Crystal Palace Orchestra – a weekly magnet for keen music-lovers, not least those after serious-minded novelty. Special festivals and single-composer seasons varied the musical appeal. Nowhere else did a conductor have such close, daily contact with his musicians, who were offered a rare stable income.

At the heart of Manns’s strategy was a focus on familiar and less well-known (to British

‘‘ August Manns was dubbed by one commentato­r as ‘the father of English music’ ’’

audiences) core classical repertoire – first UK performanc­es were a significan­t feature here, including a string of symphonies by Schumann and Schubert (among them the ‘Unfinished’ Eighth and ‘Great C Major’ Ninth). Brahms’s music was largely establishe­d in this country via Manns’s concerts. Beyond this, especially on Saturdays, came new music from the likes of Saint-saëns, Dvo ák, Tchaikovsk­y and many other non-germanic composers. The performanc­es were enhanced by detailed programme notes – Groves led the way as their writer, but Manns and others also contribute­d.

What really catches the eye is the number of first performanc­es of works by British composers, the majority barely remembered (if at all) today… such as Ebenezer Prout, George Macfarren, Thomas Wingham, Henry Holmes and many more. Equally, both establishe­d and up-and-coming British singers and instrument­alists found a welcome at Crystal Palace. ‘There is scarcely one British musician prominent before the public today who does not owe his first hearing to August Manns,’ wrote a journalist looking back at the conductor’s reign.

Manns’s conducting seems to have been marked by a rhythmic vigour which in the right repertoire might set a performanc­e on fire, even if his beat could be erratic. That hectic weekly schedule of concerts meant preparatio­n was vital: those who examined his scores observed a mass of red and blue markings. A truly historic Handel recording is our sole opportunit­y to hear him in action, displaying the fruits of such diligence. Manns took musical responsibi­lity for the great Handel Triennial Festivals at Crystal Palace from 1885. In 1888, a passage from Israel in Egypt was captured (at distance) on an Edison phonograph – one of the very earliest surviving recordings of classical music. The technical quality is execrable, but through the appalling hiss and crackle we still get a vivid sense of a conductor fully in control, albeit at slow speeds necessitat­ed by the sheer size of the thousandss­trong choir and the fact that the performanc­e took place in the gargantuan acoustic of the main Crystal Palace transept. Tuning and balance are impressive and there’s a real body to the sound.

There can be no bigger tribute to Manns than the long list of great performers his concerts attracted: superstar violinists included Joachim, Wieniawski, Sarasate and Ysaÿe; among the pianists, Clara Schumann, Anton Rubinstein, Saint-saëns, Busoni and Liszt. One Liszt story speaks volumes. The Hungarian attended an afternoon concert of his music at Crystal Palace under Manns’s baton, before going on that evening to a dinner in his honour in London. Manns arrived late to this event, but to forestall a very public embarrassm­ent Liszt ostentatio­usly rose from his seat to greet him, reportedly with the words: ‘I must thank you again for this wonderful afternoon. I have often heard of the excellence of your orchestra, but I never thought it was anything like it is. And more than this, I never thought I had written such beautiful music.’

‘‘ There can be no bigger tribute to Manns than the long list of great performers his concerts attracted ’’

Alas, Crystal Palace’s prominence as a major orchestral venue couldn’t last. Concert halls in central London were on the up, with Queen’s Hall’s arrival in 1893 the crowning glory. Arguably they benefited from Manns’s work in building that new audience for classical music. Having to journey ten miles or so from central London down to Sydenham had always been a potential disincenti­ve for concertgoe­rs – hence the printing of train times in Crystal Palace programmes and the availabili­ty of cut-price combined rail/concert tickets.

The two Crystal Palace orchestras were disbanded in 1900. Gratifying­ly, Manns (who became a British citizen in 1894) was honoured with a knighthood in 1903. June the following year saw the 50th anniversar­y of the opening of Crystal Palace. Manns duly conducted a jubilee concert on a suitably massive ‘Handel Festival’ scale. A 10,000-strong audience gathered in the central transept to hear 3,000 performers blast out Mendelssoh­n’s Hymn of Praise and other favourites. At the close, the ageing maestro was presented with a wreath to recognise his own 50 years at the venue. In the evening, he and

Lady Manns were guests of honour at the jubilee banquet, after which fireworks (courtesy Messrs Brock) haloed the great glass edifice.

Manns continued to live nearby until his death in 1907 at the age of 81. The multitude attending his funeral included Hubert Parry and Charles Stanford, two central figures in promoting that ‘British Musical Renaissanc­e’, both as composers and teachers. Each owed much to Manns’s championin­g of their music.

The modest grandeur of Crystal Palace railway station remains as a memorial to the days when tens of thousands might pass through en route to the famous site. They used also to arrive here for Crystal Palace FC home games, played in the building’s shadow from 1905. Although the club is now based two miles south, it’s comforting to think that on match days a choir of thousands still chants in the name of Crystal Palace. No Handel… but at least they’re singing. that had already spread to the central transept. A combinatio­n of dry wooden floors and a strong wind saw the situation deteriorat­e rapidly, and by the time the fire brigade arrived at 8pm the whole building was ablaze. Four hundred and thirty-eight firefighte­rs in total were rallied to tackle the inferno, all to no avail. Appropriat­ely, a building that over its 85-year life had welcomed countless visitors to its concerts, shows and other events, provided a major spectacle in its final moments too. Around 100,000 people are estimated to have gathered on Sydenham Hill to watch the fire, whose terrifying glow is reported to have been visible across eight different counties.

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 ??  ?? Upper glass: (far left) the great August Manns; (below left) a Crystal Palace concert poster from 1889;
(left) a view from 1851 of Crystal Palace’s south side
Upper glass: (far left) the great August Manns; (below left) a Crystal Palace concert poster from 1889; (left) a view from 1851 of Crystal Palace’s south side
 ??  ?? Baroque horn: recording Israel in Egypt at the Handel Triennial Festival, 1888; (below) composer Ebenezer Prout
Baroque horn: recording Israel in Egypt at the Handel Triennial Festival, 1888; (below) composer Ebenezer Prout
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 ??  ?? Shattered dreams: firemen tackle the blaze; (below) a newspaper report; (bottom) Crystal Palace lies in ruins; manager Sir Henry Buckland
Shattered dreams: firemen tackle the blaze; (below) a newspaper report; (bottom) Crystal Palace lies in ruins; manager Sir Henry Buckland
 ??  ?? Set in stone: a Crystal Palace sphinx in the park today
Set in stone: a Crystal Palace sphinx in the park today
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