I am
now firmly plugged back into BBC Radio.
Like The Guardian, I can only do without it for the length of a short
summer holiday. No longer.
It
is odd to consider that the whole concept of ‘going on holiday’ has changed
utterly in my lifetime.
My
first foreign holiday at the age of 7, was with my mother and father and my
uncle and aunt. We went by bus, train,
train, boat, train, coach, train, train, coach, coach (taking well over a day)
to Tossa de Mar on the Costa Brava in Catalonia. I loved it.
I spent the majority of my time in the sea, trying out my new swimming
mask and losing one of my new flippers.
I ate my first squid.
And
I realise that as a well-behaved and utterly polite child with four grateful
adults, I must have been spoiled rotten!
Perhaps that holiday more than anything, ingrained in me a love of
sunshine that has lasted up to today – though ‘today’ is not the best advert
for Catalonia as it has been raining solidly for the last two days! That is, to be fair, unusual.
We
spent 15 days on holiday and during that time we didn’t have any British
newspapers, we didn’t phone home, we didn’t watch television – except for me to
see, with wonder, Bonanza in Spanish,
that I found endlessly funny! We were,
in effect, cut off from home – and thoroughly enjoyed it.
When
I was old enough to go on holiday by myself, then all my parents expected was
the odd postcard letting the know that I was still alive at that point in my
vacation. My only attempts to phone home
were total disasters that ended up in my feeding public phone boxes with money
for no link to Cardiff.
Three
weeks going down the Greek Islands from Athens to Crete and staying in what
could euphemistically be called ‘basic’ accommodation; five weeks travelling
across the United States; a couple of weeks in Italy – none of these had me
phoning home, nor reading a newspaper, nor listening to the BBC.
My
holiday effectively erected a cordon sanitaire around my previous life that was
only broken through when I came back to Heathrow, or Luton, or Paddington and
made the phone call home. While the ring
tone sounded I mentally wiped out all my family and waited, with a concern that
I had not (oddly) felt for the previous weeks of the holiday, for my mother or
father to answer. And then my first
question was inevitably how my other parent was!
My
next task was to catch up on the world news that sunbathing or scouring
galleries or swimming had allowed to pass me by. And, as I did so, each day would bring in the
post cards that I had posted weeks before!
Nowadays,
thanks to the mobile phone, kids are never beyond their parents. Pictures can be sent immediately. Keeping in touch costs nothing, no matter
where you are in the world. News is a
click away. Google Translate is there
for those tricky moments that used to be solved by a combination of mime and
use of any foreign words you might have known said in an accent appropriate to
the country in which you were stuck!
It
is deeply ironic that “getting away from it all” usually involves sharing with
everyone you know exactly where you are and exactly what you are doing moment
by moment!
Young
(and indeed the old) are all linked in to modes of instant communication that
will make the 3 week hiatus of my first backpacking Greek holiday as a
situation akin to travelling with maps that had areas marked “Here there be
dragons” on them. Communication is good,
but sometimes-enforced separation is good for the soul!
These
thoughts came to me when listening to my new Internet radio, a Sangean SIR-100
(that looks suspiciously, exactly
like a Roberts Stream 107 that it is replacing) and, having worked out how to
use the pre-sets enjoying the morning music programme on Radio 3. They played the second movement of Dvorak’s
New World Symphony with The Tune.
Beautiful. Hackneyed? Well, it is very well known and the sort of
thing that Classic FM plays at least twice a day – but I wondered when the last
time I had heard it was, and then, by progression on to the first time I heard
it.
Music
for me carries a personal history. I can
still remember the LP covers of the Music for Pleasure and Classics for
Pleasure
budget LP manufacturers when records could be bought for ten bob (10/-
or 50p) and I was getting to know the Classical Canon. Some music I recorded, Beethoven’s 1st
and 8th Symphonies on cassette in my (ground breaking at the time)
Philips portable cassette recorder.
Hearing the music takes me back to my bedroom in 32, Hatherleigh Road in
Cardiff where they were first recorded and listened to, amazed at what sort of
sound could be got out of such a small loudspeaker and even more amazed when
played through my Boots Stereo Record Player.
But the tape hiss and the slightly cramped sound still stays with me.
Mahler’s
4th is bottles; Nielsen’s Helios
Overture is corn fields; Beethoven’s 5th is a Constable
painting; Immortal Melodies is a large flower bloom; Sibelius’ 1st
is broken snow mounds; Britten is Aldeborough; the 1812 is that graphic cannon – and so I could go on, remembering the
cover art of my LP collection (now long gone in favour of CDs) but forever
imprinted on my mind, and having some sort of intangible effect on the way that
I heard the music and continue to hear it.
Place
is also important. The quickest way to
learn new music is to play it. As an
inept trombone playing member of Cardiff Youth Orchestras as well as a member
of a various Brass Groups and the School Orchestra I ‘learned’ a lot of music
by being there. I have to admit that in
most orchestral pieces the trombones are usually tacet (i.e. being silent) and much of our time is taken up with
counting bars (or asking the members of the orchestra in front who play more to
give us a nod when ‘figure E’ has been reached in the score) and then lurching
into action hoping that the embouchure was still good enough to get most of the
notes! But you did learn music and
appreciate the structure of orchestral sound.
For
trombone players the best pieces of music (or the most threatening) were when
We Had the Tune. The overture to
Tannhäuser is an excellent example where the trombones come into their all,
though the first time we played through this piece the awful realization that
we were the only ones playing in the orchestra brought us all to an abrupt
embarrassed silence! I still get a
little rush of combined panic and pleasure each time I hear the music!
All
music, no matter how hackneyed it might appear to be, is new and original to
somebody who has never heard it. I was
played the 4th movement of Beethoven’s 7th Symphony by my
piano teacher in the days when it was still thought that I might be able to do
more than the first few bars of Für Elise
on the damn thing. I was much taken by
the music and bought a cheap LP of the symphony and when I listened to it, I
was stunned by the second movement: simple repetitive and magical! I was not at all surprised to discover that
this movement was given an encore on its first performance! My listening to the symphony is always in
some ways bound up in my abortive attempt to master the piano, together with
the patience and feel of the piano in my music teachers dining room in a house
exactly like my own home but made so different by the decoration and the smell
and feel.
There
are also parts of well-known musical pieces that have associations. The BBC National Orchestra of Wales has given
me many and varied delights and I used to go to the concert series in St David’s
Hall when I lived in Cardiff where some of the performances were among the best
I have ever been to of the pieces played.
The orchestra that one hears today is a development from other
variations on a National Orchestra that have been tried in the past. I can remember as a school boy going to performances
in the Assembly Rooms of the City Hall, other performances in Broadcasting
House in Llandaff and yet others in the Coal Exchange in Mount Stuart Square.
One
early performance stands out. It was of
Beethoven’s 3rd The Eroica and the part that particularly stays with
me is the horn’s solo. The symphony was
taken at a lively pace until the entry of the horns when everything slowed down
for them to try and get the notes, then the music returned al tempo for the rest of the orchestra. I still can remember my exquisite
embarrassment for the horn section and my relief when such an exposed passage
was over. I still feel some of the
tension whenever I hear that particular section. Still.
Lest
this memory be the abiding one from this piece, I should mention a couple of
performances of the Turangalîla Symphony
by Olivier Messiaen that I heard in St David’s Hall. These were played spectacularly well and left
me literally open mouthed in astonishment and musing about how far the
orchestra had come in terms of sheer technical accomplishment.
And,
after all, I have an abiding debt to the orchestra from the time when I went to
a performance of The Firebird that I
had never heard before. I was sitting in
the middle of the audience and when the fff chord introducing a piece was
played the entire audience jerked back in their chairs. That sort of thing spoils you for every other
performance because not one of them, on record or live, has had the same
effect!
But,
as always, I live in hope!
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