9 - ‘English’ Interlude: The Partsong as Innovative Genre (1906–1908)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2021
Summary
TOWARDS ENGLISH ROOTS
The success of Delius's works in Germany, with such advocates as Haym, Buths, Schuricht, Cassirer, Hess and others, and Chop's enthusiastic advocacy in print, might have persuaded Delius to ignore the lively environment of London and England altogether. Yet, for all his reported sarcasm about English music, he hankered after recognition in the country of his birth and the critical acclaim of A Mass of Life in London in 1909, together with the championship of his music by Beecham, must have been a source of some satisfaction to the transplanted Yorkshireman. He was also known to his express his impatience with German society, especially the breed of tourist he met during his walking tours in Norway:
When we returned for supper, a whole caravan of germans had arrived: there are more Germans traveling than any other nation &, I can assure you, they are most objectionable – They have, nearly all, very bad manners – eat like swine & talk very loud: – Then they take entire possession of the sitting room & begin to play the piano & sing in chorus german Folksongs & student songs. They are all fat & ugly: – Not one pretty girl or fine woman. When one comes into the room, he struts in proudly & snorts around a little & then retires banging the door after him – or he comes in, turns over all the books on the table – knocks a chair over & then sits down at the piano. Both english & french have better manners, undoubtedly without exaggeration!
Delius's process of ‘anglicisation’ began two years earlier. As Carley has noted, ‘his music showed signs of being ready and sufficiently well-established to cross the Channel … [and] friends there were tilling the ground on his behalf ‘. London, therefore, began to take on an aura of optimism. ‘London is a wonderful place’, he wrote to Jelka, and he was invigorated by the atmosphere of the capital: ‘I lunch with Wood tomorrow & will write you the result. I have a wonderful appetite here & also sleep so well. The climate agrees wonderfully well with me. Mothers milk I suppose!’ After meeting Wood he encountered Balfour Gardiner: ‘I dined with Balfour Gardiner last night & they played Appalachia there (a few musicians were there) all were tremendously taken with it’.
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- The Music of Frederick DeliusStyle, Form and Ethos, pp. 275 - 290Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021