Points and Dances (Davies)

Points and Dances
from the opera Taverner
Suite by Peter Maxwell Davies
Score cover published by Boosey & Hawkes
Opus46
Year1970 (1970)
PeriodContemporary music
RelatedTaverner
Performed20 February 1971 (1971-02-20): London
Published1978
PublisherBoosey & Hawkes
Duration18 minutes
Movements2 parts – 16 movements
ScoringEnsemble

Points and Dances from the Opera "Taverner" or Points and Dances from "Taverner", Op. 46, is a suite for ensemble written by British composer Peter Maxwell Davies from his own opera Taverner. Subtitled "instrumental dances and keyboard pieces from the opera for instrumental ensemble", it was finished in 1970.

Composition

Points and Dances is one of the two compositions based on Taverner, an opera composed by Davies about John Taverner, one of the main English composers and organists of the 16th century. The other composition derived from the opera was the Second Fantasia on John Taverner's "In Nomine". Points and Dances was completed in 1970,[1] probably as Davies was re-composing the opera, which was partially lost in a fire in 1969. It was premiered a year before the opera, on February 20, 1971, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, by the Fires of London with Davies himself as the conductor.[2] It was then published by Boosey & Hawkes in 1972.[2]

Structure

The suite is divided into two parts and a total of eight dances. Each part has a different scoring and structure. A typical performance takes around 18 minutes.[3][4] The structure of part one consists of three movements. Part two, however, is divided into thirteen movements, that is, five dances and eight musical interludes played by the different keyboards.[4] The structure is as follows:

  • Act I
  1. Pavan. Very steady
  2. Galliard. Moderato — Recitativo freely, quite slow, espressivo — Moderato — Recitativo — Meno mosso
  3. March. Allegro moderato
  • Act II
  1. Intrada (Ensemble)
  2. Preambulum (Keyboard)[a]
  3. Pavan (Ensemble)
  4. Miserere (Keyboard)[b]
  5. Galliard (Ensemble)
  6. Te per Orbem Terrarum (Keyboard)[c]
  7. Dumpe (Ensemble)
  8. Eterne Rex Altissime (Keyboard)[d]
  9. Eterne Rex Alias (Keyboard)[e]
  10. Eterne Rerum Conditor (Keyboard)[f]
  11. Coranto (Ensemble)
  12. Mask in echo (Keyboard)
  13. Reprise (Ensemble)

The scoring for Act I and Act II are different: for Act I, the piece calls for an alto flute, a clarinet, a guitar, a harpsichord, a viola, and a cello; for Act II, a piccolo, a clarinet, a double bassoon, a trumpet, an alto trombone, a positive organ, a regal, and a pair of small tuned drums.[3][2][4]

Movements from Act I are meant to be played attacca. However, the music from the different movements in Act II emerges from the preceding movement each time and, as such, there is no proper movement separation. Both dances and keyboard interludes begin before the preceding movement has finished, often entering on beats other than the first in the bar. In the case of movement VI, the keyboard plays over most of the duration of the preceding movement.[4]

The piece is also formally divided into dances, played by the ensemble as a whole, and points, which are the interludes between the dances in Act II, played by the keyboardist at either the organ, the harpsichord, or the regal. The dances are formally based on —and bear the names of— renaissance dances from the 15th and 16th century, namely, a pavan, a galliard, a march, a dumpe, and a coranto. The points, however, are based on Christian hymns and Latin choruses referencing Taverner's compositions (e. g., Aeterne rerum conditor or Te per Orbem Terrarum).[5]

Recordings

As of 2022, there is only one recording of Points and Dances. It was made on December 17, 1971, at St John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Islington, with the Fires of London conducted by the composer. At the time, the Fires consisted of cellist Jennifer Ward Clarke, clarinetist Alan Hacker, contrabassoonist Kenneth Cooper, flutist Judith Pearce, guitarist Timothy Walker, keyboardist Stephen Pruslin, organist and regalist Misha Donat, percussionist James Walker, trombonist Roger Brenner, trumpetist Elgar Howarth, and violist Duncan Druce.[5] Originally released on LP in 1973 by Decca subsidiary Argo Records, it was reissued on compact disc by UCJ in 2003[6] and Decca on September 4, 2015.[7]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Latin: Preamble
  2. ^ Latin: Have mercy
  3. ^ Latin: Thee [...] throughout the world
  4. ^ Latin: Highest eternal king
  5. ^ Latin: Eternal king elsewhere
  6. ^ Latin: Eternal maker of all

References

  1. ^ "the Max Trust". www.themaxtrust.org. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Simeone, Nigel (2015). Liner notes of Decca 478 8354. Baarn: Decca Music Group Limited.
  3. ^ a b "Peter Maxwell Davies - Points and Dances from 'Taverner'". boosey.com. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d Davies, Peter Maxwell (1978). Points and dances: from the opera Taverner, for instrumental ensemble. London: Boosey & Hawkes. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  5. ^ a b Liner notes of Argo ZRG 712. Argo Records. 1973.
  6. ^ Liner notes of UCJ 473 721-2. London: UCJ. 2003.
  7. ^ Liner notes of Decca 478 8354. Decca Music Group Limited. 2015.