This article's
lead sectionmay be too short to adequately
summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to
provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(September 2022)
Sir Lennox Randal Francis BerkeleyCBE (12 May 1903 – 26 December 1989) was an English composer.
Biography
Berkeley was born on 12 May 1903 in
Oxford, England, the younger child and only son of Aline Carla (1863–1935), daughter of
Sir James Charles Harris, former British consul in Monaco, and
Royal Navy Captain Hastings George FitzHardinge Berkeley (1855–1934), the illegitimate and eldest son of George Lennox Rawdon Berkeley, the 7th
Earl of Berkeley (1827–1888).[1] He attended the
Dragon School in Oxford, going on to
Gresham's School, in
Holt, Norfolk and
St George's School in
Harpenden, Hertfordshire. He studied French at
Merton College, Oxford, graduating with a fourth class degree in 1926. While at university he coxed the college
rowing eight. He became an honorary fellow of Merton College in 1974.[1][2]
In 1936, he met
Benjamin Britten, also a former pupil of
Gresham's School, at the
ISCM Festival in
Barcelona. Berkeley fell in love with Britten, who appears to have been wary of entering a relationship, writing in his diary, "we have come to an agreement on that subject."[3][4] Nevertheless, the two composers shared a house for a year, living in the Old Mill at
Snape, Suffolk, which Britten had acquired in July 1937.[5] They subsequently enjoyed a long friendship and artistic association,
collaborating on a number of works; these included the suite of Catalan dances titled Mont Juic, and Variations on an Elizabethan Theme (the latter also with four other composers).
He worked for the
BBC during the
Second World War, where he met his future wife, Elizabeth Freda Bernstein (1923–2016) whom he married on 14 December 1946. Together they had three sons: their eldest son
Michael Berkeley, Baron Berkeley of Knighton, is also a composer, and their youngest son is the photographer
Nick Berkeley.[1][6][7][8]
He wrote several piano works for the pianist
Colin Horsley, who commissioned the
Horn Trio and some piano pieces, and gave the first performances and/or made the premier recordings of a number of his works, including his third Piano Concerto (1958).[9]
He was Professor of Composition in the
Royal Academy of Music from 1946 to 1968. His students included
Richard Rodney Bennett,
David Bedford,
Adam Pounds,
Richard Stoker, Clive Strutt,
John Tavener and
Brian Ferneyhough. Ferneyhough felt that he learned nothing from Berkeley because of the gap between their musical conceptions, remembering him as "a notably urbane and well-meaning presence" whose "Nadia Boulenger [sic] influenced gallic aesthetics were completely unable to deal with my compositional needs."[10]
1954 saw the premiere of his first opera, Nelson, at
Sadler's Wells. He was knighted in 1974 and from 1977 to 1983 was President of the
Cheltenham Festival.
He resided at 8 Warwick Avenue, London, from 1947 until his death in 1989. On 20 March 1990 a memorial service was held for him at
Westminster Cathedral, London.[1]
Berkeley's earlier music is broadly
tonal, influenced by the
neoclassical music of Stravinsky.[12] Berkeley's contact and friendship with composers such as Ravel and Poulenc and his studies in Paris with Boulanger lend his music a 'French' quality, demonstrated by its "emphasis on melody, the lucid textures and a conciseness of expression".[13] He maintained a negative view of
atonal music at least up until 1948, when he wrote:[14]
I have never been able to derive much satisfaction from atonal music. The absence of key makes
modulation an impossibility, and this, to my mind, causes monotony [...] I am not, of course, in favour of rigidly adhering to the old key-system, but some sort of tonal centre seems to me a necessity.
However, from the mid-1950s, Berkeley apparently felt a need to revise his style of composition, later telling the Canadian composer,
R. Murray Schafer that "it's natural for a composer to feel a need to enlarge his idiom."[15] He started including
tone rows and aspects of
serial technique in his compositions around the time of the Concertino, op. 49 (1955) and the opera Ruth (1955-6). His shift in opinion was demonstrated in an interview with
The Times in 1959:[16]
I'm not opposed to serial music; I've benefited from studying it, and I have sometimes found myself writing serial themes – although I don't elaborate on them according to strict serial principles, because I'm quite definitely a tonal composer. And there are some exceptions to the gospel of intellectualisation – I enjoyed listening to the record of Boulez's
Le marteau sans maître very much, because there the timbres of the music were attractive in themselves.
Three Pieces for Solo Viola, WoO (Dedicated to Stephan Deák, discovered 2004.)[20]
Piano
Three Pieces, Op. 2 (1935)
Piano Sonata in A major, Op. 20 (1941–5)
Six Preludes, Op. 23 (1945)
Three Mazurkas, Op. 31 No. 1 (1939–49)
Guitar
Quatre pièces pour la guitare (1928)
Sonatina, Op. 52, No. 1 (1957)
Theme and Variations, Op. 77 (1970)
Clarinet
Three Pieces for Clarinet, (1939)
Flute
Sonatina for Flute or Treble Recorder and Piano (1940)
Violin
Sonatina for Violin and Piano in A, Op. 17 (1942)
Theme and Variations (1950)
Film and radio
Film Scores:Sword of the Spirit, December 1942 Out of Chaos, January 1944, London Symphony orchestra Hotel Reserve, June 1944, BBC Northern orchestra/Muir Mathieson The First Gentleman, April 1948, Royal Philharmonic orchestra/Thomas Beecham, April 1948 Youth in Britain, April 1958 *Radio Scores: Westminster Abbey, 1941, Section of Northern BBC orchestra, London, BBC, 7 September 1941 Yesterday and Today, 1943, Wireless Singers/Father J. B. Mc Elligott, Evesham, BBC, 19 April 1942 A Glutton for life, 1946, ad hoc orchestra/Lennox Berkeley, London BBC, 21 November 1946 The wall of Troy, 1946, ad hoc orchestra/Lennox Berkeley, London BBC, 21 November 1946 The Seraphina, 1956, Sinfonia of London/Lennox Berkeley, London BBC, 4 October 1956 Look back to Lyttletoun, 1957, English opera group orchestra, Ambrosian singers/ Norman del Mar, London, BBC, 8 July 1957
^Levens, R.G.C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 149.
^Oliver, Michael (1996). Benjamin Britten. University of Michigan: Phaidon. p. 60.
ISBN9780714832777.
^Evans, John (2010). Journeying Boy: The Diaries of the Young Benjamin Britten 1928-1938. Faber and Faber. p. 366.
ISBN9780571274642.
^Evans, John (2010). Journeying Boy: The Diaries of the Young Benjamin Britten 1928–1938. Faber and Faber. p. 494.
ISBN9780571274642.
^Peter Dickinson The Music of Lennox Berkeley – Page 77 2003 "Colin Horsley remembered Berkeley's time at the BBC because he was reputed to have kept manuscript paper under his desk and was obviously longing to get more time to compose. Since it was there that he met his wife it is no wonder ..."
^Death notice, The Times, London, 25 February 2016, p.61
^Musical leader 1958 Page 21 "Lennox Berkeley launched his Third Piano Concerto with Colin Horsley, for whom the work was written, at the Royal Philharmonic Society's Festival Hall series recently"
^Dickinson, Peter (2003). The music of Lennox Berkeley (2nd ed.). Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. p. 161.
ISBN9780851159362.
^Dickinson, Peter (2012). Lennox Berkeley and friends : writings, letters and interviews. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 9.
ISBN9781843837855.
^Dickinson, ed. Peter (2012). Lennox Berkeley and friends : writings, letters and interviews. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 110.
ISBN9781843837855. {{
cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (
help)
^Introduction and Allegro for Solo Violin. . 21 April 2018.
OCLC498148650.
^Review Sextet May 2008, quote: Berkeley wrote his three movement Sextet for Clarinet, Horn and String Quartet, Op. 47 in 1954 for the
Melos Ensemble.