The Symphonic Organ
Saturday 29 August, 7.30pm–c9.00pm
Gioachino Rossini, arr. Jonathan Scott
The Thieving Magpie – overture 12’
Pietro Mascagni, arr. Jonathan Scott
Cavalleria rusticana – Intermezzo 4’
Paul Dukas, arr. Jonathan Scott
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice 11’
Camille Saint‐Saëns, arr. Jonathan Scott
Symphony No. 3 in C minor, ‘Organ’ 37’
Jonathan Scott organ
This concert is broadcast live by 麻豆社 Radio 3. You can listen to any of the 2020 Proms concerts on 麻豆社 Sounds or watch on 麻豆社 iPlayer until Monday 12 October.
Welcome to tonight’s Prom
Organ recitals have become a popular feature of the Proms in recent years, with performers ranging from the charismatic American Cameron Carpenter to leading lights of the French composer-performer tradition, such as Olivier Latry and Thierry Escaich.
Tonight’s recital sees organ fireworks of a different kind, in the hands (and feet!) of Jonathan Scott, Associate Artist at Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall, where his recitals draw in the crowds.
Scott’s longtime fascination with representing the scale and colour-range of the orchestral repertoire on the ‘king of instruments’ has led to him making over 400 transcriptions – of which we hear four tonight.
The selection opens with the overture to Rossini’s The Thieving Magpie, its famous snare drum exchanged for bellowing pedals. After the serene, reflective Intermezzo from Mascagni’s opera Cavalleria rusticana comes Dukas’s mischievous Sorcerer’s Apprentice. The concert’s climax is the ‘Organ’ Symphony by Saint-Saëns, commissioned by London’s Philharmonic Society and first performed at St James’s Hall, Piccadilly, a couple of miles from the Royal Albert Hall.
Welcome to tonight’s Prom
Organ recitals have become a popular feature of the Proms in recent years, with performers ranging from the charismatic American Cameron Carpenter to leading lights of the French composer-performer tradition, such as Olivier Latry and Thierry Escaich.
Tonight’s recital sees organ fireworks of a different kind, in the hands (and feet!) of Jonathan Scott, Associate Artist at Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall, where his recitals draw in the crowds.
Scott’s longtime fascination with representing the scale and colour-range of the orchestral repertoire on the ‘king of instruments’ has led to him making over 400 transcriptions – of which we hear four tonight.
The selection opens with the overture to Rossini’s The Thieving Magpie, its famous snare drum exchanged for bellowing pedals. After the serene, reflective Intermezzo from Mascagni’s opera Cavalleria rusticana comes Dukas’s mischievous Sorcerer’s Apprentice. The concert’s climax is the ‘Organ’ Symphony by Saint-Saëns, commissioned by London’s Philharmonic Society and first performed at St James’s Hall, Piccadilly, a couple of miles from the Royal Albert Hall.
Great Organ-isers: The Art of Transcription
‘I often joke that I made this transcription of Saint-Saëns’s ‘Organ’ Symphony in case the orchestra couldn’t make it to the hall for the concert … It looks like that moment has arrived!’
Jonathan Scott
Organists have been capturing the imagination of audiences outside churches and cathedrals since the 19th century. Mendelssohn helped initiate a popular civic concert tradition at Birmingham Town Hall that continues to this day through a succession of long-serving civic organists from G. D. Cunningham and Sir George Thalben-Ball to Thomas Trotter, the current incumbent. As organist-in-residence at St George’s Hall, Liverpool, W. T. Best (1826–97) thrilled audiences with original compositions and arrangements of all kinds of music; appointed to the Royal Albert Hall, he inaugurated the Great Organ in 1871. The Anglo-American virtuoso Edwin H. Lemare (1865–1934) – in his time the highest-paid organist in the world – was famous for bringing important orchestral works from Europe to mid-sized American towns that lacked their own symphony orchestra: his transcriptions of Elgar, and particularly Wagner, are still performed by today’s finest players.
One might think that the advent of unlimited recorded music, and the trend away from symphonic organs towards neo-Classical instruments in the post-war period, might have seen off the orchestral transcription. But far from it – there is great enjoyment to be had from appreciating the skill with which today’s performers distil orchestral works both familiar and unfamiliar, and realise them with only two hands and two feet at their disposal. Jonathan Scott joins their ranks as a prolific exponent of this venerable tradition.
‘I’ve always transcribed for the organ,’ says Scott, ‘from simple arrangements for weddings and funerals to choral accompaniments and, as for this Prom, concert pieces from the great orchestral and operatic repertoire. So far I’ve completed around 400 transcriptions, which I perform in concert alongside the standard organ repertoire.
‘Edwin Lemare published over 200 transcriptions and I spent many years playing a huge amount of these in concert. The ingenious ideas, and solutions to problems contained in them, can all be found in my own transcriptions, such as how to play on multiple keyboards, how to recreate pizzicato, percussive effects and the manipulation of the registrations to create orchestral sonorities.’
For Scott, the organ of the Royal Albert Hall is the ultimate example of the British concert organ: ‘Any organist who has ever played it is in awe, not only of the sheer power and dynamic range of the instrument, but the staggering range of sounds and colours available.’ Its orchestral allusions are clear from the stop list, with an entire division named ‘Orchestral’ – it contains imitative stops named Flute, Oboe, Bassoon, French Horn, Trumpet, Cor Anglais, Clarinet, Tuba and Trombone, as well as a fully independent imitative String division of nearly 800 pipes. The organ also contains real percussion in the form of a carillon, tubular bells and a bass drum, all of which will make an appearance in tonight’s Prom.
‘This concert is essentially the manipulation of 9,997 pipes, 147 stops, four keyboards, a full pedalboard, dozens of thumb and toe pistons to aid stop changes, and three expression pedals – all with two hands and two feet. The aim with all of this is the creation of amazing music in the ultimate sonic experience.’
Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868) arr. Jonathan Scott (born 1978)
The Thieving Magpie (1817) – overture
First performed in May 1817 at La Scala, Milan, The Thieving Magpie (La gazza ladra) is the opera that gave rise to the legend of Rossini being locked in a room the day before the first performance in order to force him to compose the overture. The story goes that Rossini then threw each sheet out of the window for collection by his copyists, who then wrote out the full orchestral parts. Ironically, as a staple of the concert hall, this hastily composed overture – instantly recognisable from its snare-drum introduction and stately theme tune – has, in popularity terms, entirely eclipsed the opera for which it was written.
Pietro Mascagni (1863–1945) arr. Jonathan Scott
Cavalleria rusticana (1889) –
Intermezzo
The quiet, hymn-like intensity and lyrical charm of the famous Intermezzo stands in stark contrast to the torrid events of Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana (‘Rustic Chivalry’), one of the first operas in the verismo style, which aimed for realism over artifice. The Intermezzo unfolds while the inhabitants of a Sicilian village attend the Easter service in church. The music injects a sense of religious devotion and the deceptively innocent serenity of country living into a scenario in which violence is about to be unleashed in a revenge killing, by a cuckolded husband, of a feckless seducer …
Paul Dukas (1865–1935) arr Jonathan Scott
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
(1897)
In 1897 the French composer Paul Dukas marked the centenary of Johann Wolfgang Goethe’s ballad Der Zauberlehrling (‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’) by turning it into a symphonic poem of the same name. The piece achieved widespread popularity in the concert hall before receiving a worldwide boost among non-classical audiences when Mickey Mouse assumed the role of the lead character in the 1940 Walt Disney animation, Fantasia. Like Richard Strauss’s Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, Dukas’s vividly scored tone-poem closely follows the story of a young apprentice wizard who invokes a flawed spell to relieve his household chores – after conjuring up a broom to carry pails of water, the broom proves unstoppable; chopping it in two doubles the problem, and soon an entire army of brooms causes a flood only stemmed by the timely return of the Sorcerer to break the spell.
Camille Saint-Saëns (1835–1921) arr. Jonathan Scott
Symphony No. 3
in C minor, ‘Organ’
(1886)
1 Adagio – Allegro moderato –
2 Poco adagio
3 Allegro moderato – Presto –
4 Maestoso – Allegro – Più allegro – Molto allegro
The 1880s formed something of a career peak for the French musical prodigy Camille Saint-Saëns. Into his final symphony, No. 3 in C minor, it was as if the organist, composer and symphonist had poured all the elements of his career to date into what would become known as the ‘Organ’ Symphony – although only two of its four sections involve the organ.
‘I gave everything to it I was able to give,’ Saint-Saëns declared. ‘What I have here accomplished, I will never achieve again.’ Its plainsong-derived themes are transformed and woven into the fabric of the piece in the manner of Franz Liszt, who is memorialised as the work’s dedicatee.
Jonathan Scott’s remarkable arrangement achieves the difficult task, on the organ, of replicating the filigree textures of the symphony’s many virtuoso passages originally given to the orchestral piano, not least in the section after the explosion of organ sound which is the grand finale.
Introduction and programme notes © Graeme Kay Graeme Kay is a former editor of ‘Classical Music’, ‘Opera Now’ and ‘麻豆社 Music’ magazines. He contributes a personal column, news and features to ‘Choir & Organ’ magazine and is a digital platforms producer for 麻豆社 Radios 3 and 4.
Biography
Jonathan Scott organ
Jonathan Scott enjoys a highly varied international performing career on a diverse range of keyboard instruments, with a repertoire spanning over 500 years of music.
Born in Manchester, he studied piano and organ at Chetham’s School of Music before attending the Royal Northern College of Music, where he has been on the keyboard staff since 2001. He continued his studies in the USA and the Netherlands, won the Worshipful Company of Musicians W. T. Best Scholarship and Gold Medal, and is a Freeman of the City of London.
As Associate Artist of the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, he gives a popular lunchtime recital series; in addition to his career as pianist and organist, he is a specialist in music for the French harmonium.
This season he has given solo and concerto appearances across the UK as well as in Belgium, France, Germany, Hungary, Latvia, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland and Taiwan.
In 2017 he gave the world premiere of Sir Karl Jenkins’s organ concerto 6000 Pipes! to mark Hull’s position as UK City of Culture, subsequently touring with the work, including a performance at the Royal Albert Hall with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by the composer.
Jonathan Scott also has a busy international concert schedule with his pianist brother, Tom Scott, performing as the Scott Brothers Duo. Their online videos have received over 25 million views and their regular online concerts during the coronavirus pandemic reached a worldwide audience of over 350,000.