Commentary
Even today, twenty-five years after his death, it may be too early to achieve an objective assessment of the quality of Britten's works. This is because of the intense partisanship which surrounded it during his lifetime. When Britten's early works began to appear, musical criticism in England was deeply reactionary.
As the first British composer to turn his back on traditional 'englishisms' and embrace a continental culture fully, Britten met considerable hostility from those who found his music slick and 'clever' in a derogatory sense. There was also a good deal of envy and resentment at the fortunate support and publicity his music quickly attracted from publishers and record companies.
Perhaps the truth will be seen to lie somewhere in the middle. The present contributor considers Britten an uneven composer who possessed a unique and strong musical identity and personality, and who produced some works of enduring quality, such as Peter Grimes, Billy Budd and Death in Venice, but who also, it must be admitted, had several fallow periods where he seemed to repeat a few well-worn devices. It must be remembered that Britten worked very quickly, often against punishing deadlines, and the techniques he evolved in writing illustrative music for the cinema in the 1930s served him for the rest of his life, not always with the most satisfying results.
Works
- Music for the famous GPO documentary film Night Mail (1936) with words by W. H. Auden
- Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge (1937)
- Ceremony of Carols (USA, 1942)
- Serenade (USA, 1943)
- Peter Grimes (USA, 1945), an opera based on a poem about a Suffolk fisherman, George Crabbe's The Borough
- The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (1946)
- The Rape of Lucretia (1946)
- Albert Herring (1947), after Guy de Maupassant's story "Le Rossier de Mme. Huisson"
- Billy Budd (1951), after Herman Melville's novella)
- Gloriana (1953) for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom
- Turn of the Screw (1954), an opera based on the story by Henry James
- Noye's Fludde (1958)
- A Midsummer Night's Dream (1960), after Shakespeare
- War Requiem (1961) - a major bestseller, regarded as his masterpiece, although its great emotional intensity was too much for some critics.
- Curlew River (1964)
- The Burning Fiery Furnace (1966)
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