Portsmouth Point
Overture
for orchestra
General Information – Instrumentation – Manuscript – Publication – Arrangements – Recordings – Program Note
Composition:
Begun early 1925, at the Sitwells' home in London. Work continued in Spain that
spring. Completed by 9 November. Revised prior to publication of the full score
in 1928.
First Performances:
Tuesday, 22 June 1926. Tonhalle, Zürich. Tonhalle Orchestra, Volkmar Andreae conductor.
Duration:
About 6 minutes
Tempo:
Robusto [210 m.]
Dedication:
"To Siegfried Sassoon". This dedication is absent in the critical
edition.
Craggs Catalogue Number:
C17
2 flutes (second doubling second piccolo), piccolo, 2 oboes, English horns, 3 clarinets in B-flat (third doubling bass clarinet in B-flat), 3 bassoons (third doubling contrabassoon) – 4 horns in F, 3 trumpets in C, 3 trombones, tuba – timpani, 3 or 4 percussion (side drum, castanets, xylophone, cymbals, bass drum, suspended cymbal, triangle, tam-tam, tambourine – strings
Frederick
R. Koch Collection. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale
University. Manuscript FRKF 588.
FRKF 588a. Autograph full score in pencil, including performance markings
probably by Volkmar Andreae. An earlier version than published. 37 pages.
FRKF 588b. Manuscript full score of Constant Lambert's arrangement for reduced
orchestra (see below), in black ink, including performance
markings probably by Sir Eugene Goossens. 45 pages.
Oxford University Press. Full score, 1928. Study score, 1928, corrected mid-1960s, ISBN 0-19-368340-7.
Oxford University Press. Edited by David Lloyd-Jones. William Walton Edition, 2002, Volume 14, "Overtures". 019 3683148. Score and parts are available on hire.
Arranged for piano duet, by the
composer, 1925.
Publication: Oxford University
Press, 1927 (discontinued).
Arranged for reduced orchestra,
by Constant Lambert, 1932.
First Performance: June or July 1932. Camargo Ballet Society, Constant
Lambert conductor.
Instrumentation: Flute, piccolo, oboe, 2 clarinets, bassoon – 2 horns,
2 trumpets, trombone – timpani, 1 or 2 percussion – strings.
Publication: Oxford University
Press. Score and parts are available on hire.
| Orchestra | Conductor | Year | Compact Disc | Timing |
| BBC Symphony Orchestra | Sir Adrian Boult | 1936 | VAI Audio 1067-2 | 5'14" |
| London Philharmonic Orchestra | Sir William Walton | 1971 | Lyrita SRCD.223 | 6'18" |
| London Symphony Orchestra | André Previn | 1973 | EMI Classics 5 73372 2 EMI Classics 7 64723 2 |
5'28" |
| London Philharmonic | Leonard Slatkin | 1987 | Virgin Classics 5 61146 2 | 5'23" |
| London Philharmonic | Bryden Thomson | 1991 | Chandos CHAN 8968 | 5'57" |
| London Philharmonic [arr. Lambert] | Jan Latham-Koenig | 1991 | Chandos CHAN 9148 | 6'12" |
| Northwest Mahler Festival Orchestra | Geoffrey Simon | 2002 | NW Mahler Festival 5 | 5'45" |
Lustful carousing amid mercantile ships, a tavern, and a lender's bank... a drunken, peg-leg street fiddler narrowly avoids trodding on a mongrel hound... dockworkers go about their business... a peeping tom imbibes merrily... an older couple quarrels in the foreground, the robust female clearly winning... sailors and prostitutes cavort freely.... Thomas Rowlandson (1756–1827) etched this bright, bawdy scene of the Point district in England's foremost seafaring town, Portsmouth, ca. 1811. Over a century later, a young composer rode atop a double-decker bus in London, and the opening strands of an overture came to him. Portsmouth Point would become William Walton's big break. [Click here for Rowlandson's etching, courtesy of "The Republic of Pemberley"]
Walton was born to a musical family in the industrial Lancashire town of Oldham. At age ten, he became a chorister at Oxford's Christ Church Cathedral, and by 1916 he was an undergraduate. The shy youngster surrounded himself with the masterworks of contemporary music, much to the detriment of his academic studies. Upon leaving Oxford in 1920 without a degree, Walton took lodging in London with his fellow student, the poet Sacheverell Sitwell, as an "adopted, or elected, brother."
The three Sitwells, all poets, were
well-known as artistic eccentrics, and they introduced Walton to the bright
vigor of the Roaring '20s. This friendship yielded the ground-breaking
"entertainment" Façade, for
chamber ensemble with recitation of Edith Sitwell's nonsense poetry, first
performed at a private soirée in January 1922. Subsequent public performances
created a minor scandal, bringing Walton's name to a wider public. An early string
quartet ("full of undigested Bartók and Schoenberg", said the
composer) was premiered at Salzburg, and Walton composed foxtrots for the Savoy
orchestra. In the spring of 1925, he joined the Sitwells on a trip to Spain,
working on his new concert overture: Portsmouth Point.
The Sitwells had a Rowlandson etching in their Chelsea home, and Walton had already composed a "pedagogic overture" on the playful Dr. Syntax series, so it was natural that Rowlandson should serve as inspiration once again. However, Walton's Portsmouth Point is as accurate a depiction of 1920s London as of nineteenth-century Portsmouth. Frequent meter changes create an animated liveliness. The deliberately asymmetrical tunes, continually segmented and dislocated by syncopation, maintain a confused bustle. A sailor's hornpipe makes a brief appearance, followed by a lopsided Catalan sardana. Instruments dart in and out like customers at a tavern, and Walton's brassy orchestration complements the crowd's spirited merriment. Stravinsky (fully digested) infuses the raucous, jazzy scherzo with extended harmonies; Petrouchka's carnival could be just around the corner.
Upon its 1926 Zürich premiere, Portsmouth
Point skyrocketed Walton's international popularity—the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra even included it in their 1929 touring repertoire. Within ten years,
the Viola Concerto, the cantata Belshazzar's
Feast, and the First Symphony would
confirm Walton's position as the leading British composer of his generation.
— Gary D. Cannon
This note first appeared, in a slightly shortened form, in the program of the Northwest Mahler Festival, July 2002. © Gary D. Cannon.