BBC Music Magazine

Rebecca Clarke

Equally accomplish­ed as a performer and composer, Clarke took many by surprise with her finest masterpiec­e, as Leah Broad explains

- ILLUSTRATI­ON: MATT HERRING

America’s musical press in 1919 was awash with rumours about a new work – Rebecca Clarke’s Viola Sonata. It had just tied for first place in the prestigiou­s Berkshire Festival Chamber Music Competitio­n, for which all entries had to be submitted anonymousl­y. The jurors had speculated that the Sonata had been written by Ravel. When Clarke was revealed as the composer, they were astonished. ‘You should have seen their faces when they saw it was by a woman,’ the Festival’s patron confided to Clarke. The Sonata was hailed in the press as a work of ‘greatest genius’, compared favourably to pieces by Debussy.

The Sonata has remained one of Clarke’s best-known works and is now a staple of the viola repertoire. It also spearheade­d the ‘rediscover­y’ of her music in the 1980s. Although famous in her day, by the time Clarke died in 1979 very few people knew she had ever been a composer at all. She was sometimes mentioned in the same breath as her husband, the pianist James Friskin. The difference between her standing at the end of her life and at the height of her career is staggering. Her entry in the 1980 Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians read, in its entirety, ‘See James Friskin’. But in 1927, her entry in the same dictionary had been extensive, listing all her major works including the Sonata, her Piano Trio (1921) and Cello Rhapsody (1923) and a substantia­l quantity of songs. Like so many women composers, Clarke’s music was slowly excised from the historical record and is only now reclaiming a place in concert halls.

Born in 1886 in Harrow, northwest of London, Clarke had a difficult childhood. She was extremely close with her mother, Agnes, but had a strained and complex relationsh­ip with her father, Joseph. In the memoir Clarke wrote in her eighties, she recalled that Joseph would beat all of his four children, ‘sometimes really painfully’. Needless to say, when Joseph instructed his daughter to take up an instrument, she did not take to it immediatel­y. Like many middle-class fathers of his generation, Joseph wanted to nurture family musicmakin­g, being an amateur cellist himself.

When they were old enough, his children were given violin lessons – Rebecca, being ‘only a girl’, was sent to her brother Hans’s violin lessons rather than being taught individual­ly. She hated playing the violin, and there were no indication­s that she would have any kind of musical career.

Despite this inauspicio­us start, as a teenager Clarke developed a real appreciati­on for the music her father forced her to play. In music, she found an escape from her family life. At 16, with her mother accompanyi­ng her at the piano, she auditioned for the Royal Academy of Music, securing herself a place as a violin student. After just two years, however, her father removed her from the Academy after her harmony teacher proposed to her. She later attended the Royal College of Music, where she was taught compositio­n by Charles Stanford. All her life she

When composing at her best, Clarke felt ‘flooded with a wonderful feeling of power’

viewed her studies at the College as ‘a happy time, an ecstatic time’, and under Stanford’s tutelage she developed a distinctiv­e compositio­nal voice. When she was composing at her best, Clarke felt ‘flooded with a wonderful feeling of potential power – a miracle that made anything seem possible’.

While at the RCM, Clarke transferre­d from violin to viola, and became a famous performer and internatio­nally recognised chamber musician on that instrument. In 1913 she became one of the first six women to be hired into a profession­al orchestra, the Queen’s Hall Orchestra, under the direction of Sir Henry Wood. In the early 1920s she toured through Asia, broadcast regularly on the fledgling BBC and later formed an all-woman piano quartet called

The English Ensemble, with whom she performed internatio­nally.

Being a performer was vital to Clarke’s success as a composer. As she herself observed, some players showed a ‘prejudice against women’s compositio­ns’, making it difficult for many women to get their works performed. Clarke, however, was able to play her own works with friends and colleagues – all performers of internatio­nal standing – who made up her regular chamber ensembles. She gave the New York and London premieres of the Viola Sonata herself; similarly, her Cello Rhapsody was premiered by her close friends pianist Dame Myra Hess and cellist May Mukle, who were also the instrument­alists for the premiere of Clarke’s Piano Trio, with Marjorie Hayward on violin.

Clarke wrote her early works in the 1910s and ’20s, when London was a melting pot of musical influences, full of conflictin­g ideas about what ‘modern’ music should sound like. Working alongside composers like Ravel (Clarke played at his London concerts during his 1928 visit) and Vaughan Williams (who was a

Reviewers considered Clarke one of the modernist group that included Ravel

close friend and conducted for a Palestrina Society that Clarke co-founded), Clarke’s music was similarly occupied with all the latest musical ideas. Her Trio, for example, opens with a fiery, violent blaze of dissonance that gives way to a menacing theme ground out on the cello – tension never drops for a single second.

Reviewers hailed her as a ‘frank disciple of modernity’, considerin­g Clarke one of the internatio­nal modernist group that included not only figures like Ravel, but also names that have since fallen into comparativ­e obscurity, like Ernest Bloch and Bernard van Dieren. Their music was as much part of Clarke’s musical world as Debussy and Stravinsky, alongside English composers such as Arnold Bax and Frank Bridge.

Clarke was also pioneering in her programmin­g, often pairing contempora­ry music with 17th-century works, in keeping with the modernist fascinatio­n with early music. Her contempora­ry Peter Warlock put together similar programmes that juxtaposed and complement­ed old and new, as would Michael Tippett and Benjamin Britten after her. This interest in early music shines through in Clarke’s work, most noticeably in her Passacagli­a on an Old English Tune (1941), built on a melody by Thomas Tallis. Folk music was another source of inspiratio­n, surfacing in her Three Old English Songs (1924) and Three Irish Country Songs (1926), both for violin and voice. So, too, was the Romantic repertoire that Clarke grew up performing; shades of Dvo ák can be heard in her concert work Dumka for violin, viola and piano, and Rachmanino­v in both the Passacagli­a and I’ll Bid My Heart Be Still (1944), written for James Friskin and based on a Scottish folk tune.

The single most enduring connection in Clarke’s music, though, is with the French school. It’s no surprise, in some sense, that judges assumed her anonymous work to be by Ravel. They share a similar approach to harmony, form and melody. And like Debussy before her, Clarke was captivated by the sound of the Indonesian gamelan when she heard it played at the 1900 World Fair in Paris. Her work is steeped in the Orientalis­t sound so beloved by turn-ofthe-century French modernists, saturating her viola works like Morpheus (1916), Midsummer Moon (1924) and, of course, the Sonata. Unusually among composers of her generation, Clarke travelled to the countries whose music inspired her – Indonesia was among the countries she visited on her 1922-1923 performanc­e tour, and her 1919 song ‘Down by the Salley Gardens’ was penned while in Hawaii, perhaps attempting to emulate the sound of the Chinese musicians she heard performing there.

It’s clear from all of Clarke’s music that she was a consummate performer; her works have a theatrical­ity that really relishes and showcases the physicalit­y of music-making. Nowhere is this more apparent than in her song ‘The Seal Man’ (1922), telling the story of a young woman who drowns in the ocean trying to follow her lover. Both piano and vocal part are unashamedl­y dramatic, the singer alternatin­g between sung and semi-spoken passages to differenti­ate between the individual characters in the song. And the piano part is virtuosic to the extent that it always threatens, like the sea, to overwhelm and overpower the vocalist. Singer and pianist have to be perfectly attuned to make this song work convincing­ly, creating an experience that can be truly electrifyi­ng in live performanc­e.

Clarke is now establishe­d as one of the most important ‘women composers’ of her generation – but as she sternly told a journalist, ‘I would sooner be regarded as a 16th-rate composer than be judged as if there were one kind of musical art for men and another for women’. Gender prejudice during Clarke’s own lifetime pushed her out of the limelight, but her outstandin­g works should surely guarantee her a position as one of the most important musicians of her generation: a modernist composer, internatio­nal performer and pioneer of viola compositio­n.

Excerpts from Rebecca Clarke’s memoir ‘I Had a Father Too, or The Mustard Spoon’ used by permission.

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