Constant Lambert

Constant Lambert
Constant Lambert by Christopher Wood.jpg
Portrait by Christopher Wood (1926)
Born
Leonard Constant Lambert

(1905-08-23)23 August 1905
Fulham, London
Died21 August 1951(1951-08-21) (aged 45)
London, England
NationalityBritish
EducationRoyal College of Music
Christ's Hospital
Known forComposer
conductor
author
Notable work
The Rio Grande
Summer's Last Will and Testament
Music Ho!

Leonard Constant Lambert (23 August 1905 – 21 August 1951) was a British composer, conductor, and author. He was the Founder Music Director of the Royal Ballet, and (alongside Ninette de Valois and Frederick Ashton) he was a major figure in the establishment of the English ballet as a significant artistic movement.[1] His ballet commitments, including extensive conducting work throughout his life, restricted his compositional activities. However one work, The Rio Grande, for chorus, orchestra and piano soloist, achieved widespread popularity in the 1920s, and is still regularly performed today. His other work includes a jazz influenced Piano Concerto (1931), major ballet scores such as Horoscope (1937) and a full-scale choral masque Summer's Last Will and Testament (1936) that some consider his masterpiece. Lambert had wide-ranging interests beyond music, as can be seen from his critical study Music Ho! (1934), which places music in the context of the other arts. His friends included John Maynard Keynes, Anthony Powell and the Sitwells.[2]

Early life

'The artist’s wife, Amy, and their son Constant' by George Washington Lambert

The son of Australian painter George Lambert and his wife Amy, and the younger brother of Maurice Lambert, Constant Lambert was educated at Christ's Hospital near Horsham in West Sussex. While still a boy he demonstrated formidable musical gifts, and wrote his first orchestral work at the age of 13. In September 1922 Lambert entered the Royal College of Music, where his teachers were Ralph Vaughan Williams, R. O. Morris and Sir George Dyson (composition), Malcolm Sargent (conducting) and Herbert Fryer (piano).[3] His contemporaries there included the pianist Angus Morrison, conductor Guy Warrack, Thomas Armstrong (a future head of the Royal Academy of Music), and the composers Gavin Gordon, Patrick Hadley and Gordon Jacob.[4]

Lambert aged about eleven in the uniform of Christ's Hospital, painting by his father George Lambert

In 1925 (at the age of 20) he received a high profile commission to write a ballet for Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes (Roméo et Juliette, 1926). For a few years he enjoyed celebrity, including participating in a recording of William Walton's Façade with Edith Sitwell.[5] Lambert's best-known composition is The Rio Grande (1927) for piano and alto soloists, chorus, and orchestra of brass, strings and percussion. It achieved success, and Lambert made two recordings of the piece as conductor (1930 and 1949). He had a great interest in African-American music, and once said that he would have ideally liked The Rio Grande to feature a black choir.[6] He held a very positive view of jazz rhythms and their incorporation in classical music saying once that ‘The chief interest of jazz rhythms lies in their application to the setting of words, and although jazz settings have by no means the flexibility or subtlety of the early seventeenth-century airs, for example, there is no denying their lightness and ingenuity … English words demand for their successful musical treatment an infinitely more varied and syncopated rhythm than is to be found in the nineteenth-century romantics, and the best jazz songs of today are, in fact, nearer in their methods to the late fifteenth-century composers than any music since.’[7]

Career

Lambert was appointed in 1931 as Conductor and Music Director of the Vic-Wells ballet (later The Royal Ballet),[1] but his career as a composer stagnated. His major choral work Summer's Last Will and Testament (after the play of the same name by Thomas Nashe), one of his most emotionally dark works, proved unfashionable in the mood following the death of King George V, but Alan Frank hailed it at the time as Lambert's "finest work".[8] Lambert himself considered he had failed as a composer, and completed only two major works in the remaining sixteen years of his life. Instead he concentrated on conducting, working closely with the Royal Ballet until his retirement in 1947. He continued to be featured as a Guest Conductor until shortly before his death in 1951.[1]

To the economist and ballet enthusiast John Maynard Keynes Lambert was perhaps the most brilliant man he had ever met; to de Valois he was the greatest ballet conductor and advisor his country had ever had; to the composer Denis ApIvor he was the most entertaining personality of the musical world; whilst to the dance critic Clement Crisp he was a musician of genius.[9]

The Second World War took its toll on his vitality and creativity. He was ruled unfit for active service in the armed forces; decades of hard drinking had impaired his health, which declined further with the development of diabetes that remained undiagnosed and untreated until very late in his life. Lambert's childhood experiences (which included a near-fatal bout of septicaemia) had given him a lifelong detestation and fear of the medical profession.

An expert on painting, sculpture, and literature as well as music,[10] Lambert differed from most of his fellow English composers of the time in his perception of the importance of jazz. He responded positively to the music of Duke Ellington. His embrace of music outside the 'serious' repertoire is illustrated by his book Music Ho! (1934),[11] subtitled "a study of music in decline", which remains one of the wittiest, if most highly opinionated, volumes of music criticism in the English language. Close friends of his included Michael Ayrton, Sacheverell Sitwell and Anthony Powell. He was the prototype of the character Hugh Moreland in Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time, particularly in the fifth volume, Casanova's Chinese Restaurant, in which Moreland is a central character.[12]

Lambert's father, while born in Russia and of American heritage, viewed himself as first and foremost an Australian. Constant was always conscious of his Australian connections, although he never visited that country. For the first performance of his Piano Concerto (1931), rather than select a British-born pianist, Lambert chose the Sydney-born, Brisbane-trained Arthur Benjamin to play the solo part. Despite his disapproval of homosexuality he formed a good working relationship with Benjamin's fellow Australian Robert Helpmann. Afterwards he entrusted yet another Australian musician, Gordon Watson, with the task of playing the virtuoso piano part at the première of his last ballet, Tiresias.[13]

As a conductor Lambert had an instinctive appreciation of Liszt, Chabrier, Émile Waldteufel and romantic Russian composers, most of whom were seldom heard in Britain before he championed them; he made fine recordings of some of their works. However, it was only from the late 1940s that the development of the BBC Third Programme and the Philharmonia Orchestra gave him the directorial opportunities with first-rank players which he craved. Before that he had long been relegated to the role of jobbing conductor, extracting vital performances from second-rate ensembles.

Personal life

Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London

Lambert's first marriage was to Florence Kaye;[14] their son was Kit Lambert, one of the managers of The Who. After divorcing Kaye, in 1947 Lambert married the artist Isabel Delmer; after his death, she married Alan Rawsthorne. Lambert's first wife Florence Kaye married Peter Hole; their daughter Anne later took the stage name Annie Lambert.

Lambert earlier had an on-and-off affair with the ballet dancer Margot Fonteyn. According to friends of Fonteyn, Lambert was the great love of her life and she despaired when she finally realised he would never marry her. Some aspects of this relationship were symbolised in his ballet Horoscope (1938).

Lambert died on 21 August 1951, two days short of his forty-sixth birthday, of pneumonia and undiagnosed diabetes complicated by acute alcoholism, and was buried in Brompton Cemetery, London. His son Kit was buried in the same grave in 1981.

Major works

Ballets

Choral and vocal

Orchestral

  • The Bird Actors Overture (1924)
  • Music for Orchestra (1927)
  • Aubade héroïque (1941)

Chamber

  • Piano Concerto (Concerto for piano, 2 trumpets, timpani and strings, 1924)
  • Concerto for Piano and 9 Instruments (1931)

Instrumental

  • Elegaic Blues (1927, orchestrated 1928)
  • Piano Sonata (1930)
  • Elegy, for piano (1938)
  • Trois Pièces Nègres pour les Touches Blanches [Three Black Pieces for the White Keys], piano duet (4 hands) (1949)

Film music

References

  1. ^ a b c "Constant Lambert biography". Royal Opera House. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  2. ^ Motion Andrew. The Lamberts. George, Constant and Kit (1996)
  3. ^ "Constant Lambert- Bio, Albums, Pictures – Naxos Classical Music". www.naxos.com. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  4. ^ Lloyd, Stephen. Constant Lambert: Beyond the Rio Grande (2015) p 32
  5. ^ Driver, Paul (September 1980). "Façade Revisited". Tempo. New Series. 133/134: 3–9.
  6. ^ Palmer, Christopher (April 1971). "Constant Lambert: A Postscript". Music & Letters. 52 (2): 173–176.
  7. ^ https://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dw.asp?dc=W3000_GBAJY9256501
  8. ^ Frank, Alan (November 1937). "The Music of Constant Lambert". The Musical Times. 78 (1137): 941–945. doi:10.2307/923287. JSTOR 923287.
  9. ^ Constant Lambert – Beyond The Rio Grande by Stephen Lloyd, introduction
  10. ^ Palmer, Christopher (April 1974). "Review of Constant Lambert by Richard Shead". Music & Letters. 55 (2): 241–242.
  11. ^ Lambert. Music Ho!. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  12. ^ Powell, Anthony: Memoirs, Vol 4, To Keep The Ball Rolling, 1976
  13. ^ Graeme Skinner, musicologist Archived 9 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Foss, Hubert (October 1951). "Constant Lambert, 23 August 1905–21 August 1951". The Musical Times. 92 (1304): 449–451.

Bibliography

  • Drescher, Derek (producer). Remembering Constant Lambert, BBC Radio 3 documentary, broadcast 23 August 1975.
  • Lloyd, Stephen. Constant Lambert: Beyond The Rio Grande. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1-84383-898-2.
  • McGrady, Richard. The Music of Constant Lambert. In Music & Letters Vol 51, No 3, July 1970
  • Motion, Andrew. The Lamberts: George, Constant & Kit. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1986. ISBN 0-374-18283-3.
  • Shead, Richard. Constant Lambert. London, 1972. ISBN 9780903620017.

External links


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