LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Albert Ketèlbey

Albert Ketèlbey
took us far away into an exotic
Persian Market and Chinese Temple
Garden, but always brought us
back again to good old England,
to places like Hampstead Heath on
a bank holiday, or a secret
monastery garden in the heart of
the Yorkshire countryside. To
older readers these specific
musical settings will be quite
familiar, for they are
compositions by Albert Ketèlbey
the light-music genius of
the early 20th century.
Before we explore
the background to his life,
suffice it to say that, in
musical terms at least, Ketèlbey
displayed all the qualities of
the showman. His special effects,
such as using bird-song
recordings as part of his
masterpiece In a Monastery
Garden, were remarkable and
highly-renowned, whilst his often
grand and lavish orchestral
gestures caused spines to tingle
in concert halls and theatres.
One fine example
of this is the march With Honour
Crowned, a swaggering, brassy
piece, full of thundering drums
and clashing symbols which ranks
with Elgars Pomp and
Circumstance marches. So why is
it never played at concerts?
Perhaps it is, to quote the
kill-joys who try to censor
wholesome music and art, too
"nationalistic" for
modern audiences, or perhaps it
isnt profound enough for
the poseurs of the avant-garde.
One things for sure, a
blast of Ketèlbeys martial
music is not for the
faint-hearted or weak-minded!
Yet, although a
fine march-composer, he was most
at home in music that combined
lyrical softness with all the
grand sweep and quality of
symphonic music.
He was an
accomplished pianist and
organist, as well being
proficient on oboe, cello,
clarinet and horn. And he often
had flashes of musical
inspiration as in 1915
when driving his open-topped car
through rural Yorkshire he came
upon a ruined monastery...and the
bird-song he heard there prompted
him to write his most famous
piece.
Mention the name
of a Ketèlbey composition to
your grandpa and he is likely to
whistle the tune back to you,
almost as if it were a ditty. Yet
in their true form, most of the
tunes were beautifully-crafted,
full-bodied pieces of music in
their own right.
On the one hand
Ketèlbey seems close to Elgar,
and on the other he seems to
inhabit the world of the popular
ballad. He is almost a later
version of Sir Arthur Sullivan, a
man whose witty Savoy operettas,
composed in conjunction with W.S.
Gilbert, sometimes obscured his
other more serious works.
Albert William
Ketèlbey was born on 4th August,
1875, in Bmingham, the son of an
engraver. From an early age he
showed remarkable musical gifts.
His mother and father were very
proud when at the age of 11 he
composed an ambitious piano
sonata which he performed at the
Worcester Town Hall to much
acclaim. And there was one
admirer whose praise was
particularly valid the
father of modern English music,
Sir Edward Elgar. This early
success encouraged Mr. and Mrs.
Ketèlbey to send their son to
compete for a scholarship at
Trinity College, London. Albert,
then only 13, duly won the
scholarship, his marks far
exceeding those of any other
candidate. After much study he
took his first musical post as
organist of St. Johns
Church, Wimbledon at 16!
Whilst there he
gained a thorough grounding in
musical form and it was to be an
apprenticeship that served him
well. Indeed, sometimes in his
more stately compositions you can
hear an almost hymn-tune quality
to the music, a legacy no doubt
of the important formative years.
At the age of 20 he got the
chance to conduct the orchestra
of a light opera company and soon
made his mark, impressing key
people. This young man, with his
background in the sombre world of
church organists and college
scholarships, showed a great
command of the genre, and two
years later he took over the
musical directorship of the
Vaudeville Theatre in the Strand.
At the fashionable heart of
London, in the glinting days of
the "Naughty Nineties",
young Albert became a celebrity.
Yet, despite his
growing stature in light
entertainment, Ketèlbey still
liked to keep his hand in as far
as the world of serious music was
concerned, and he composed a
quartet, an overture and a
concert piece for piano and
orchestra. There was a thirst for
new works at that time in the
late-Victorian period when
Ketèlbey was composing at the
onset of the great renaissance of
English music, which saw the
emergence of such giant figures
as Ralph Vaughan Williams and
Frederick Delius.
The atmosphere was
right for a budding new composer
and Ketèlbey saw all his main
compositions performed by the
London orchestras. For some
reason, however, these works have
today been largely forgotten,
relegated to the same backwaters
as Havergal Brians grand
opera The Tigers,
Hurlstones Alfred the
Great, and Ethel Smyths The
Wreckers.
Perhaps Ketèlbey
sensed the anonymity that would
come from being a "minor
league" English composer, or
perhaps he realised that it was
only in popular music that he
would achieve fame and fortune.
Whatever the reason, he soon
devoted himself to lighter
compositions, and thus to the
beautiful and ingenious
masterpieces on which his
reputation now rests.
His first success
was Phantom Melody (1912),
followed after the war with In a
Persian Market (1920),Sanctuary
of the Heart (1924), and Bells
Across the Meadow (1927).
Ketèlbeys music was taken
up by small orchestras on liners,
hotel and theatre ensembles,
pianists in hotel lounges and
palm courts, bandmasters, street
entertainers and singers. The
atmospheric quality also made him
an ideal composer for the silent
cinema, a medium for which he
produced a large number of
compositions. His output was
prolific and you might possibly
call him the first British film
composer, although early cinema
music was purely an accompaniment
to, rather than an integral part
of, the film.
Ketèlbeys
forté was painting moods and
musical scenes which would be
instantly recognisable to a wide
public. One such portrait was The
Clock and the Dresden Figures, a
miniature of enormous charm that
even contained an
authentic-sounding
"tick-tock" to amuse
the audience! With such obvious
musical characterisation, it is
little wonder that his talents
were employed by the fledgling
film industry. His intriguing
musical tricks were also to the
fore in the Bank Holiday movement
of theCockney Suite, recently
recorded complete for the first
time since the early days of 78
rpm records.
After the
Thirties, Ketèlbeys style
gradually went out of vogue. The
inter-war era of romance, that
had its roots in the
self-confidence of the Edwardian
age, was in decline, and people
began to find its musical
expression somewhat outdated. But
the composer had enjoyed an
Indian summer of great success
and was able to spend his later
years in comfortable retirement
on the peaceful Isle of Wight.
Ketèlbey remained
a very private person throughout
his life. As a youngish man he
had married Charlotte Curzon, but
their union was not blessed with
children, and when his wife died
after the Second World War, he
married a widow, Mrs. Mabel Maud
Pritchett. He was 73 at the time
and they lived happily together
in the Cowes area for the next 11
years, where he died on 26th
November 1959, aged 84.
Among those who
thrived on Ketèlbeys music
was the famous singing-whistler
Ronnie Ronalde, who scored a
great success with In a Monastery
Garden, which virtually became
his signature tune, and also
Bells Across the Meadow. Another
performer who sang many Ketèlbey
numbers was Peter Dawson, the
great Australian bass-baritone.
Although the name
Ketèlbey was guaranteed to sell
concert tickets, sheet music and
gramophone records, he
occasionally put on a disguise.
Compositions appeared by
"William Aston" as well
as someone called "Anton
Vodorinski" and an
adoring public, no doubt
impressed by this exotic European
name, duly came into being.
Little did they know! A foreign
name is often a key to success
with the fickle British public,
as Elgar correctly judged when he
gave his salon pieces French
names. In his younger days, Sir
Edward was desperate to get his
name established: "Id
try Greek if it would sell!"
he once remarked.
Ketèlbey, though,
went one better. He tried
Egyptian, Persian, Chinese, and
every other exotic flavour you
could think of, creating in the
process an Aladdins cave of
marvellous musical treasures. We
are lucky in these islands. We
have the glories and depth of
Vaughan Williams; the delicate
poetry of Delius; the
bitter-sweet sophistry of William
Walton, but we also have the
chirpy tunefulness of Eric Coates
and Haydn Wood, and the
kaleidoscopic colour, rich
melodies, and inventiveness of
Albert Ketèlbey.
When we think of
the great ages of English music,
let us not forget our immense
heritage of light orchestral
music. Ketèlbey may not be a
name that is now on
everyones lips, but his
scores, like many others in the
great English Light Music
tradition, are rapidly making a
well-deserved come-back.
ALBERT
KETÈLBEYS MAJOR WORKS
* In a Monastery
Garden * Bells Across the Meadow
* Wedgwood Blue * Chal Romano
(Gypsy Lad) * In a Persian Market
* In a Chinese Temple Garden * In
the Mystic Land of Egypt * With
the Romanian Gypsies * From a
Japanese Screen * In a Camp of
the Ancient Britons * Italian
Twilight * By the Blue Hawaiian
Waters * The Vision of Fuji-San *
Jungle Drums * Algerian Scene *
Sunbeams and Butterflies * In the
Moonlight * Dance of the Merry
Mascots * Musical Jigsaw * The
Clock and the Dresden Figures *
With Honour Crowned * Sanctuary
of the Heart * In a Lovers
Garden * Cockney Suite
Buckingham Palace, Lambeth Walk,
Palais de Danse, Cenotaph, Bank
Holiday, (Appy
Ampstead) * Broken Melody *
The Adventurers * Three Fanciful
Etchings * In a Fairy Realm * The
Wonder Worker * In Holiday Mood *
Phantom Melody
Ketèlbey also
composed many other songs,
orchestral and instrumental
pieces.
Reproduced by kind
permission of This England
magazine.
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