Diversions for Piano Left Hand and Orchestra, Op. 21, is a concertante music composition by Benjamin Britten.
History
Britten wrote the work for the Viennese-born pianistPaul Wittgenstein, who lost his right arm in World War I. Britten met Wittgenstein in New York in July 1940 and sketched the piece in August at Owl's Head, Maine. Although Wittgenstein complained about the orchestration, Britten initially declined to make any changes[1] but later agreed to a few small alterations. Forever after, he felt bitter about them, and after 1950 he revised the score "to create an official version that would stop Paul playing it by rendering his version obsolete."[2] Wittgenstein retained the performing rights for a good number of years, which kept other pianists from performing the work.[3]
Wittgenstein played the premiere of Diversions with the Philadelphia Orchestra under the baton of Eugene Ormandy on 16 January 1942. The Philadelphia reviewers commented more on Wittgenstein and his work as a one-armed pianist than on the composition itself. The Philadelphia Record did describe the score as "ingeniously written", while Musical America commented on the presence of both "pleasurable and dull moments" in the work.[4]
Wittgenstein gave the British premiere of the revised work in October 1950, with the (then) Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra under Trevor Harvey. Britten then made further revisions and in 1954 made his own first recording, conducting the London Symphony Orchestra with soloist Julius Katchen.[5]
Music
The piece is in the form of a theme and 11 variations:
Theme
Variation I, Recitative
Variation II, Romance
Variation III, March
Variation IV, Rubato
Variation V, Chorale
Variation VI, Nocturne
Variation VII, Badinerie
Variation VIII, Ritmico
Variation IXa, Toccata I
Variation IXb, Toccata II
Variation X, Adagio
Variation XI, Tarantella.
Britten utilised music that he wrote for a production of J. B. Priestley's Johnson over Jordan as source material for the work.[6] Lyn Henderson has noted the influence of Prokofiev-like rhythms in Variation IXa.[7] Christopher Mark has discussed Britten's use of the circle of fifths in various works, including the Diversions.[8]
^Mitchell, Donald; Reed, Philip, eds. (1991). Letters from a Life: Selected Letters and Diaries of Benjamin Britten, Vol 2, 1939–45. London: Faber and Faber. pp. 956–57. ISBN0-571-16058-1.
^Waugh, Alexander (2009). The House of Wittgenstein, New York: Doubleday, pp. 279, 292
^Thackeray, Ruth (1978). "Music in London: Orchestral". The Musical Times. 119 (1629). The Musical Times, Vol. 119, No. 1629: 975–977. doi:10.2307/960161. JSTOR960161.
^Robinson, Suzanne (1997). "'An English Composer Sees America': Benjamin Britten and the North American Press, 1939–42". American Music. 15 (3). American Music, Vol. 15, No. 3: 321–351. doi:10.2307/3052328. JSTOR3052328.
^Henderson, Lyn (January 1987). "His Influence on Britten: The Vital Prokofiev". The Musical Times. 128 (1727): 24–25. doi:10.2307/1004703. JSTOR1004703.
^Mark, Christopher (1994). "Britten and the Circle of Fifths". Journal of the Royal Musical Association. 119 (2): 268–297. doi:10.1093/jrma/119.2.268. JSTOR766522.
Mitchell, Donald; Reed, Philip, eds. (1991). Letters from a Life: Selected Letters and Diaries of Benjamin Britten, Vol 2, 1939–45. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN0-571-16058-1.