Showing posts with label history of broadcasting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history of broadcasting. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Why Mary Whitehouse Was Right

All cultures need their mythologies, and all mythologies their villains: an old truth, but one as true of Progressive Modern Britain as of any other society, any other civilisation.  Today, as in any other age, a whole cast of antagonists are kept ready to be invoked against any criticism or challenge, avatars of the forces of backwardness to be loathed and jeered.  Most are nameless caricatures: the beak-nosed mother superior, the grim-jawed sergeant-major, the hawk-eyed headmaster, and so on.  But one character does have a name, a name immediately recognisable to many of the elders of our culture, and viscerally hated by them.  To utter the dread syllables ‘Mary Whitehouse’, if one dares, is to summon an unmistakeable image into the progressivist mind: a reviled great-aunt, perhaps even a witch, lips pursed with disapproval, eyes blinking indignantly behind horn-rimmed glasses, preening her blue-rinse hair and sallying forth against all the fun and games of the Swinging Sixties.  This too is a caricature, and one quite as shallow as any of the others, but one equally necessary to the progressive cosmology.  Somebody had to be found to play that role, and Mrs. Whitehouse fit the bill.  And it was imperative to the Great Myth that she and all she stood for had to be defeated: vanquished emphatically, and seen to be vanquished.

Mary Whitehouse (1910–2001).
Picture from Mediawatch U. K.,
successor of the N.V.A.L.A.)
But the real Mary Whitehouse, who died twenty years ago yesterday (November 23rd), was no mere caricature.  She was an astute and brave woman, probably one of the most courageous British women of the twentieth century.  She knew what she was about, and her firm principles and faith led her clear-sightedly to choose a path that was often hard and lonely but which she knew to be right and just.  Today the campaign she fought may seem entirely lost — all around us reigns the ‘disbelief, doubt and dirt’ that she opposed — but the justice of her position has been vindicated by the passing years: vindicated, and one day will be seen to be vindicated.

Mass media is today so ubiquitous that we scarcely ever think about its fundamental mechanisms.  What is actually happening when we turn on the TV, when we allow a broadcaster’s signal into our homes?  A tacit trust is established between those transmitting and those receiving.  Viewers and listeners lend the broadcaster their ears and eyes, trusting it for a time to provide better company than they can muster amongst themselves.  If an Englishman’s home is his castle, then the BBC — promising to ‘inform, educate and entertain’, as it has since its foundation in 1922 — is being invited over the drawbridge to serve as seer, sage and minstrel.  This is, long though we have forgotten it, a solemn trust indeed.  It is the trust of hospitality, the mutual courtesy of guest and host.

In its early decades under the chairmanship of Lord John Reith (1889–1971), and above all during the Second World War, the BBC generally understood and fulfilled this duty.  When in peacetime the Television Service was resumed, similarly high standards were maintained for over a decade.  However, as the fore-tremors of the social revolution of the 1960s gathered strength, certain elements within the BBC, pushing first a little bit, and then further and further, discovered that the Corporation’s unwritten contract with its viewers could in fact be stretched, and stretched, and ultimately breached, with no consequence to itself.  After all, a householder could not really round on the television set in the corner and tell it, as one could an impertinent guest, “I will not have that under my roof!”  It all went one way.  Moreover, television, once installed in a home, could not really be got rid of — not least because in those days, far more than now, it was experienced communally: both on the scale of the household, with families typically tuning in together, and of the nation, since the whole country shared the same two or three channels.  Thus the BBC discovered that it could say whatever it liked in front of the masters and mistresses of millions of houses at just the moment when it was cementing itself into place as the chief channel of national conversation.  

Accordingly the BBC, or at least revolutionary elements within it, laid intangible siege to millions of houses, against all those little castles flying the flag of Old Britain — gentle traditional Britain underlain by the Christian faith — precisely in order to undermine its decency, its restraint and its quiet respectability, the more easily to usher in the great liberalisation of social customs and moral standards that has now transformed our society.  By no means was this necessarily the work of some dark complot or conspiracy: it is enough to understand it simply as the predictable consequence of the gaining of access by a concentration of people with a certain political and moral outlook to the technological means by which to make that outlook mainstream — means which also happened to constitute the most powerful form of propaganda ever devised.  The siege against the ordinary British household continues unabated to this day, but so successful has it been that in most places we scarcely notice, let alone discuss or debate, what the BBC and other broadcasters have persuaded us to tolerate.

Mary Whitehouse touched a nerve from the very start, then, because she was really the first ordinary viewer to stand up for herself, the first to call the BBC to account for this abuse of trust.  But it is worth pointing out that her concern arose initially not from her own viewing, but from the effects she had observed particular programmes to have had on young people, specifically the girls in her care as a secondary schoolmistress in Madeley in Shropshire.  In her 1967 memoir ‘Cleaning-Up TV’ she recounts how conversations with her fourth-form pupils (i.e. aged fifteen or sixteen) had revealed upset and confusion arising from televised dramas or panel discussions.  One among several examples was a drama including close-up shots of ‘the screams and agony’ of a woman in labour, which understandably caused them anxiety about the idea of marriage and motherhood.  ‘In one fell swoop,’ Whitehouse said, ‘all that I had been telling them about how wonderful and challenging an experience it was to give birth to a child had been wiped out.’ (Cleaning-Up TV, p. 15.)  Though confident that her pupils would recover in time, she still thought it a needless setback and an intrusion at a sensitive time in their lives.  She considered that the new trends in television were making them feel less free, less happy, less hopeful about the future — that then, as now, the Progressive Revolution favoured the ease of adults over the welfare of the young.  

This concern for young people is one of the most important things to understand about Mary Whitehouse.  It was perhaps her main motivation.  Far from blaming the young for the new social trends, she made it quite clear that it was her own generation that was principally at fault:
Sometimes if I am feeling tired or dispirited I think back to those youngsters [in Shropshire].  In their heart of hearts they want to regain so many of the things we older people have discarded in our attempts to keep ‘with it’.  They say they will bring up their children differently: they will have walks together in the country, they will be thrifty, they will discipline their children, they will teach them to say their prayers.  Will they when the time comes? […]  I don’t know the answer but I do know there was something genuine and wistful about they way they spoke and I believe that this is the real spirit of youth before it is sullied, and pressurised by the wrong values of the society that we have built around them.  
Mary Whitehouse, Cleaning-Up TV (London: Blandford Press, 1967), p. 14.

And again, in a later chapter:

When as sometimes happens I am shouted down or laughed at by students it helps to remember that those really responsible for the present permissive trend in our society are my own generation. […]  In our anxiety not to be thought square […] we have, by and large, created a candy-floss society in which the young can find little of hard substance on which to cut teeth of conviction.  The passion for the so-called ‘Open’ approach to everything, which discards all established values, has betrayed our young people into the hands of manipulators who exploit their immaturity and aimlessness for their own ends. (p. 39)

From her perspective, the Permissive Revolution was not so much being driven from below, by a spontaneous uprising of Baby Boomers, as being orchestrated by the cultural elites from above.  

Sir Hugh Carleton Greene, photographed by
Godfrey Argent, 25 April 1968. 
National Portrait Gallery, Photographs Collection
NPG x16892, ref. mw119795.
Reproduced under Creative Commons licence 3.0.
In the summer of 1963, Whitehouse travelled to London to take her concerns directly to the BBC and the Independent Television Authority, the fore-runner of ITV.  At the BBC she was, she said, received ‘courteously and sympathetically’ by the Director-General’s Chief Assistant, Harman Grisewood, who seemed to her ‘deeply and genuinely concerned’.  ‘How “up from the country” I was,’ she was later to say.  For the person she did not meet on that occasion was Grisewood’s superior, the extraordinary figure of Sir Hugh Carleton Greene (1910–1987), who served as the BBC’s Director-General during the crucial years 1960–1969 (and who incidentally was also the brother of the novelist Graham Greene.)  When Mary Whitehouse spoke of her own generation’s responsibility for the Permissive Revolution it was probably him that she had most in mind.  Both were born in the same year — a remarkable fact pointed out by Louise Perry — and yet whereas Whitehouse sought to defend the values and faith of Old Britain, Greene was at the forefront of the push for the New Morality.  His ambition, he said, was to —
[…] open the windows and dissipate the ivory tower stuffiness which still clung to some parts of the BBC […]  I wanted to encourage enterprise and the taking of risks.  I wanted to make the BBC a place where talent of all sorts, however unconventional, was recognised and nurtured. 
Sir Hugh Carleton Greene, ‘The Third Floor Front’, quoted in Robin Carmody, ‘Sir Hugh Carleton Greene’, web article published by the Transdiffusion Organisation, retrieved 23 November 2021 from https://www.transdiffusion.org/2002/01/01/hugh.
These words, set down in 1969, could have been written last week: this is fluent Newspeak from a near-Edwardian.  Almost in itself it explains the broadcasting of the gritty ‘kitchen-sink dramas’ which were so to dismay Whitehouse in late 1963, along with the ‘satire boom’ of 1964.  And there is much to ponder in the fact that Greene had come to hold that position at all.  BBC Directors-General do not come from nowhere: other people, somewhere, had thought him the man for the job.

The kitchen-sink dramas — with their unflinching portrayal of social issues and in many cases uncritical depictions of extra-marital relations and even abortion — were followed, in 1964, by the news that the Government was willing to renew the BBC’s Charter for a further twelve years.  The Corporation had set its course, and with Charter in hand its way seemed clear.  So Mrs. Whitehouse, together with her ‘old friend’ Norah Buckland, wife of the Rector of Longton in Stoke-on-Trent, decided to organise a petition, calling on the BBC for a ‘radical change of policy’ and programmes ‘which build character instead of destroying it, which encourage and sustain faith in God and bring Him back to the heart of our family and national life’ (p. 24).  Ringing up the news desk of a local newspaper in order to spread word of the campaign was to have momentous consequences.  ‘Before the day was out a reporter had found his way to my home and in response to his questioning we had agreed that we would be holding a public meeting, and what was more that we would hold it in the Birmingham Town Hall’ (p. 24).

This impulsive decision caused Whitehouse and Buckland no little nervousness in the months that followed.  But they need not have worried, at least not so far as attendance was concerned.  The petition took off like wildfire, and thousands of people were soon putting their names to it: men and women alike, of all different ages, in all kinds of occupations and living in all parts of the country.  (There is a particular pang in reading of a ‘significant trend’ of letters ‘from men who had positions of great responsibility during the war and who are now dismayed and amazed at the decline in the spirit of our people’.)  By the day of the meeting, the 5th May, 1964, 120,000 signatures had been collected — these were brought together and placed on the platform in the Town Hall — and a number of public figures had added their voices to the cause.

It was at this meeting in Birmingham that one of the main battle-fronts of the 1960s was at last drawn up in plain sight.  Several factors combined to catapult the occasion into the national news, and thereby the national consciousness.  The first was an unexpected last-minute request from the BBC to televise the meeting, a request to which Whitehouse agreed — only to find, shortly after proceedings began, that the audience had been infiltrated:
Dotted about the hall, closely in touch with one another through pre-arranged signals and immediately next to the television cameras was a group of bearded toughs who had come to break up the meeting and steal the limelight in the press and television.  At a given signal one of them rushed across the stage to try and grab the microphone and questions were thrown at him from his colleagues in the hall […]  This interruption was not just a case of a few hoodlums acting the fool.  It was an organised affair.  My colleagues who were making a tape-recording of the meeting for our own use observed that BBC staff with microphones were stationed at frequent intervals around the hall in spite of their promise not to do so.  (Cleaning-Up TV, p. 36.)
Things did not all go the troublemakers’ way, however, as this enjoyable paragraph records:
A group of young Catholics, incensed by the publicity being given to this tiny group who had no support from the body of the meeting, made the camera men furious by turning the spotlight off the interrupters!  A row of nuns joined in the slow handclap which rose from the body of the hall (to drown the shouting of the interrupters) and the thick soles of their shoes made a great contribution to the beating of feet on the floor.  (p. 36).
The result was, of course, a sensation, and one on the strength of which the Clean-Up TV Campaign swelled into a national movement.  Mary Whitehouse found herself cast as its figurehead — and thus as her opponents’ arch-nemesis.


What was the response of the BBC to all this?  Negligible.  It refused to meet with members of the campaign, even as the number of signatures reached nearly half a million.  There was not the slightest moderation of its programming.  Its only direct response would have been better not made at all: to mock Whitehouse very obviously and with astonishing cruelty in the satire programme Swizzlewick, even alluding to a quite unrelated incident involving her husband (a road accident which had caused him a nervous breakdown, whereby he had come round a bend in his car and run over a suicidal man lying down in the road).  But perhaps it is the reaction of Hugh Greene himself, as the campaign gathered strength and numbers, that is most remarkable and most telling.  Quite simply, he was open in his hatred of Mrs. Whitehouse and all she stood for.  According to Mary Kenny, Whitehouse ‘was banned from entering Broadcasting House; indeed her name could not even be mentioned on the air without prior reference to senior management.’  He had an obscene Medusa-like portrait of her hung in his office.  She had been allocated her irrevocable place in the Progressive Mythology.

From all this behaviour — of the Town Hall troublemakers, of the BBC satirists and of the Director-General — one sees a pattern emerging.  One sees that Mary Whitehouse was not, as is almost invariably implied, an over-sensitive and hysterical maiden-auntish figure, forever clutching her pearls and grasping her smelling-salts.  No, she was quite in possession of her faculties.  It was her opponents, the progressive revolutionaries, who time and again revealed themselves to be lacking in reason and scornful of fair argument.  Some commentators in our own time, such as the comedian Andrew Doyle, have likened the aggressive activists of our own time to Mrs. Whitehouse, the accusation being that both she and they seek to suppress freedom of speech.  But this is terribly unfair to her.  It must be stated emphatically: she was fundamentally in favour of the free exchange of ideas.  ‘Properly handled[,] every subject is admissible,’ she said in Cleaning-Up TV (p. 151).  Although she certainly had decided views of her own on many matters, she was willing and well-equipped to defend them against rational objection in the public forum — on television, on radio, in print and in university debating societies — and needed no convincing of the media’s important role in facilitating genuine debate.

Embed from Getty Images
Mary Whitehouse (L) with the singer Judy Mackenzie at the Festival of Light Rally in London's Trafalgar Square, 25th September, 1971

Furthermore, Mary Whitehouse’s methods were entirely civilised: petitions, public meetings, newsletter campaigns and telephone calls, with occasional recourse to the law as available to all British subjects.  Again it was the ugly stratagems of her opponents that sound only too familiar to us today: the disruption of gatherings, the shouting down of speakers, the assault on reputation by personal accusation and slander.  They objected not to her manner or language but to the very expression of her ideas, and moved not to defeat her in argument but to intimidate her into silence, a tactic that we have seen from the progressive sides of umpteen social and moral debates ever since.  Mary Whitehouse, for decades the recipient of hate-mail and death-threats, and the object to this day of highly vindictive and peculiarly and savagely personal mockery and satire, was no pioneer of our modern ‘cancel culture’: really, she was its first target.  Then, as now, a vocal and aggressive minority pursued its cause to the bitter end, showing no mercy in battle and giving no quarter in victory.  The strength of this movement was considerable then, and culturally speaking is almost total now — but it is one and the same radical progressivism.

Embed from Getty Images
Receiving the O.B.E., 9th December, 1980

Mary Whitehouse’s understanding of freedom of speech was a nuanced and considered one.  She did not oppose the expression of any particular idea in itself, but she was against improper manners of expression.  In other words, she believed that there are right and wrong times and places, as well as tones and attitudes, for the discussion of sensitive or controversial matters.  ‘Family viewing time’ in particular she considered sacrosanct: to keep certain subjects for after the watershed was not a suppression of speech, but a channelling of it, a disciplining, for the sake of the peace of mind of younger viewers.  But she was not against the tackling of serious issues, as is evident from this candid and courageous paragraph: 
What about a play […] about women who are determined to see through a pregnancy whatever the difficulties.  I am not talking through my hat, as I gave birth, when our first child was seventeen months old, to twin boys following a very difficult pregnancy.  It was suggested that my babies should be medically aborted since X-rays showed that they were likely to be delicate.  I declined the offer.  The babies did not live, but I have never regretted the decision we made.  They remain part of our family and I am grateful for what they gave to me of courage and maturity.  Countless women are making the same kind of decision all the time.  This seems to me wonderful dramatic material as well as true reality.  If only such ideas were acceptable.  But they are not.  (Cleaning-Up TV, p. 168.)
Her views did align with those of today’s radical progressivists in one respect — and to this extent they too are quite right.  She understood that words matter.  In a television interview of 1973 with the writer Jill Tweedie, the conversation turned to the subject of swearing.  “What can be actually damaging, actually harmful to children, about words?” Jill Tweedie asks.  “Words are the means by which we express ourselves, by which to a great extent our culture is judged,” Whitehouse replies, “We have to help the young to grow through the rebellious crudities of adolescence and find more subtle, more beautiful, more tender ways of expressing what they feel.”  “But is there any harm,” Tweedie insists, “any active harm in certain words?”  “Yes, certainly,” says Whitehouse, “because it’s the degradation of your culture; it’s the degradation of the whole quality of the way you communicate with one another and the way you live.  I think it [swearing] is a very harmful thing.”  Not least as a Christian believer, a member of a religion of the Word, she understood that speech is not trivial.  Words are actions in so far as they influence other people’s thoughts and feelings and character, and to this extent at the very least they really do change reality.  Freedom of speech notwithstanding, we have a duty to mind what we say and how.

Jill Tweedie interviews Mary Whitehouse on Thames TV, 20 February 1973

Mary Whitehouse understood another distinction that seems never to be made in our present fraught debate over freedom of speech: the difference between necessary offence and gratuitous offence.  The former is something that we risk giving in any discussion of a controversial matter, and that parties in a debate must set aside, or rise above, for the sake of the common pursuit of truth.  The latter, however, is offence caused for its own sake, for the sheer thrill of causing outrage or upset.  And it is this second kind of offence that the BBC, from the Sixties onwards, has too often given to its family audiences.

The BBC has not appeared in a favourable light in this article, but it should not be forgotten that Mary Whitehouse, after the initial opening salvo of her manifesto, was always careful to ‘give appreciation to the many people working in the BBC whose programmes were first class in every respect’ (p. 20).  Such appreciation is as important now as it was then.  But in spite of these individually excellent programmes, and the BBC’s still-matchless ability to rise to great occasions when it knows the world is watching, it seems beyond doubt that of the two schools of broadcasting, John Reith’s and Hugh Greene’s, it is the latter that has prevailed when it comes to everyday programming.  (Just consider how jarringly the brash idents elbow aside the end of the Queen’s Christmas address every year).  Figures such as Robin Aitken have argued that, since almost all of the people in charge of BBC programming share a particular world-view, this world-view inevitably influences the flavour of its output, and thereby undermines its claims to impartiality.  In the past five years especially, there has been a growing and increasingly overt politicisation of much BBC output, and we seem to be back in late 1963, when, as Mary Whitehouse put it, ‘it looked exactly as if our much-respected BBC had launched into a trial of strength with its viewers and was determined to answer criticism by producing programmes even more likely to affront the good taste of the country.’ (Cleaning-Up TV, p. 20).

In our own time, which is proving to be a kind of second 1960s, Mary Whitehouse has much to teach us.  The battle-lines may have shifted since her time, but the combatants and stakes are much the same: aggressive radical secular progressivism versus such fortresses as are left of Christian and traditionally-minded Britain.  Mary Whitehouse was from the beginning ecumenical in her approach, and saw that Christian churches (to which we may now add many of our cousins in other religions) had to stand together for the sake of the common good.   This is perhaps why, broad-church Anglican though she was, she rather remarkably ended her book by quoting at length from Pope Paul VI — to the point of giving him the last word.  

We urgently need her sort of courage today: the courage, when scoffed or cackled at, when condescended to or dismissed out of hand, or when sworn at or slandered, not to back down; the courage to stand our ground even when the ground itself seems to be giving way under our feet.  Her only weakness, in so far as the weakness was hers, was a tactical one: many of her methods would have worked far more effectively had Britain still been the fair-minded country she believed it to be, and only failed because not enough people stood with her.  We need the strength of faith with which she defied ridicule and scorn for the sake of a kingdom not of this world.  ‘But for her,’ Malcolm Muggeridge wrote, ‘the total demolition of all Christian decencies and values in this country would have taken place virtually without a word of public protest.’ [1]

Mary Whitehouse, film director Michael Winner and a studio audience debate violence in film and television.  Hosted by Sarah Kennedy and broadcast on Thames TV on the 10th September, 1985.

And so, with one gentleman in a Thames TV studio who, having supported her arguments in a TV debate in 1985, praised her solitary courage in defiance of a largely hostile audience, I say, ‘Three Cheers to Mrs. Whitehouse’.  May her soul rest in peace.

[1] Sandra Salmans, ‘British Woman Carries On Crusade Against Sex and Violence in the Media’, Sarasota Herald-Tribune (NY Times News Service), 7 April 1977, p. 53.

Saturday, December 30, 2017

Vows and Vocations


At three o’clock — or sometimes shortly thereafter, now that live broadcasts can be rewound — we allow the television to interrupt our merry-making on Christmas Day.  The Christmas pudding having been doused in brandy and set fire to and sung over and most assiduously devoured, we are usually just in time for one of the more unfrenetic and comforting broadcasts left on the main channels: the Queen’s Christmas message.  I find it invigoratingly traditional in spirit, and there is a rare feeling of national togetherness as the Queen invites us to look back on the year.  Gloriously heedless of the BBC’s dull secularist ethos, H.M. always makes unforceful but unambiguous (and therefore courageous) mention of her Christian faith. This year’s message was the fiftieth the Queen has made by television, so it is a well-established tradition in its own right.

But even fifty years of Christmas broadcasts struggle to shine against the seven decades of the Queen’s marriage to the Duke of Edinburgh.  There beside the Queen as she delivered her message, next to the portraits of her great-grandchildren George and Charlotte, are two photographs of Elizabeth and Prince Philip.  One was taken on their wedding day in 1947, and the other in November this year to mark their Platinum Anniversary.  Seventy years separate the pictures, but one reciprocal vow is common to both.


This is marriage, the real thing, and this particular marriage is special because it belongs to us in much the same way as the Queen herself belongs to us.  It is one of the last lit beacons in bleak Britain, whose marital statistics show that a third of all marriages are sooner or later put asunder, and that more and more couples move in under the same roof without entering into marriage at all.  More than three million families have been begun without the security of wedlock.  It is some decades since the State showed any understanding of its proper responsibility in this field, which is to create all the right conditions for stable family life, especially for the sake of its oldest and youngest citizens, without meddling in it.  What has happened instead is that marriage has been undermined so that, from a simply practical point of view, people can hardly be blamed for choosing to set up home in co-habitation.  The social and financial benefits that marriage once brought do not now make economic sense, and to many people the law appears to set a trap, being still just tenacious enough to protract and sour any parting, yet not firm enough to banish the very idea from people’s minds, encouraging building rather than dismantling.  By Britain’s national anticulture, by spectres of the imagination and by the reality of people’s own experiences, many have come to fear the unsunderable vows.  Yet couples who are ready to found a household should surely wish for just such a bond.  Marriage helps couples, before they ever enter into it, by serving as a test or proof: if they do not feel they trust each other enough to marry, then they cannot know whether they trust each other to start and sustain a family.  On the other hand, if their mutual trust does indeed go far enough that children seem a real possibility, then why delay in giving form to the natural truth?  Marriage is for life because children join their parents for life.  The great vow is there to protect first husband and wife, and then their children, against human weakness and the evils of the world outside.

But we have also forgotten not only the practicality and common sense of marriage, but its transcendent, spiritual dimension.  This is another casualty of the dictatorship of relativism — Benedict XVI’s phrase — the tyranny of indifference that surrounds us, unctuously bidding us do as we please but offering no railings of guidance, and certainly no healing, if our desires lead us into wrongdoing and suffering.  The idea of marriage as a calling to high friendship, as a sacrificial mission that elevates the dignity of man and woman, has vanished, and along with it a sense of motherhood and fatherhood as vocations, to be honoured far above mere career or material prosperity or political engagement.  So people no longer know what to hope for, nor what to build, are therefore afraid of commitment, and so settle for too little from themselves and others.

Yet the Church insists not only on its spiritual dimension but on recognising it as a sacrament, that is, an encounter with the explicit presence of God.  Marriage is, indeed, a minor miracle.  I don’t mean this in a facetious way.  It is one of the great paradoxes of life, this unexpected, triumphant treaty of accord by which men and women, in their rival camps with their baffling, amusing, mysterious, undefinable differences, can find not merely reconciliation, nor even simply fleeting pleasure, but actually their highest earthly adventure by pairing up with a member of the other team (the rival team!), and sealing with them an all-transfiguring, world-creating pact, each a match for the other, and each the other’s match.

The impossible union is not only a wonder, but a plausible reality.  A bride will cost a man his life, but, mirabile dictu, it can come to pass that even such a wayward creature as a man will vow to pay, and keep his vow.  The hard-won reward is generous: he finds himself the beneficiary of a vow of equal magnitude, and he finds himself in a unique position to give the gift of self.  Moreover, the happiness and security this brings him overflows into any children the marriage produces, children who encounter no pit of dread in asking two of the most important questions in growing up: ‘Who am I?’ and ‘Whom can I trust?’, though many young people do encounter such a chasm.  And the Queen, who in her life has had to make some fearsome vows before God, to her bridegroom and to her realm, is one of our greatest living examples in this regard.  Her own family has not been untouched by the turmoil of marriage in late twentieth-century Britain, but she and her husband have kept their faith and their vows, and quietly encouraged the rest of us to do the same.

In marriage is found, and from marriage comes, the ‘home’ of which the Queen spoke in her Christmas message.  I think it would be a good challenge for the Church and all people of good will to make this a year of promoting marriage, simply the idea, in our tired culture.  The Coalition for Marriage is already doing an excellent job in keeping an eye on the state of things, informing public opinion and encouraging the Government to do the right thing.  But marriage ought to be an urgent topic of conversation.  It needs to be allowed to set alight the imaginations of young people (I write as one) who are hungry for a mission, and the message needs to be proclaimed that marriage is a good thing from alpha to omega and at every scale: national, local and in the innermostnesses of the soul.  It ought to be given a place near the heart of the New Evangelisation; to solve the marriage crisis would be to ease many of the other social, moral and spiritual problems that afflict us.  Along with the other sacraments of mission (Holy Orders and Confirmation), it is the antidote to the dictatorship of relativism’s shrugs of indifference, and the soundest, least wasteful vessel into which to pour, with generosity and joy, the fruit of one’s sacrifices.

Meanwhile… Merry Christmas!  Keep feasting!


(Malcolm Archer’s setting of the Linden Tree Carol)

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Ruth Gipps: listed listening

This article was originally posted on the 16th October, 2016, but is regularly updated as new recordings emerge.  Many thanks to several readers who have submitted new information.  More is always welcomed!

Ruth Gipps (1921–1999) is a composer whose work, it is fair to say, is severely under-recorded, under-broadcast and not nearly well-known enough.  I have written a bit about her remarkable character and her ardent and spirited music here and here.  Since then I have been scouring the Internet for readily-available recordings of her music, regardless of sound quality.  Beggars can’t be choosers!  The result is the initial attempt at a discography below, which includes commercial and non-commercial recordings.  If any readers know of any more, of have any corrections, please leave a comment!

For anybody who hasn’t come across her music before, I would personally recommend the good humour (and good recording quality) of the Horn Concerto, the lyricism of the third symphony (the second and third movements are especially accessible) and the piano concerto.  The second movement of her fourth symphony is a moonlit grove of wonders.  In her fifth symphony’s first movement, a particularly lovely melody is passed around the chocolatey windsThe energetic third movement of the same symphony gives a good impression of the spikiness and energy of her character: this, after all, was the person who once said, ‘I regard all so-called 12-tone music, so-called serial music, so-called electronic music and so-called avant-garde music as utter rubbish and indeed a deliberate conning of the public’…!

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The Fairy Shoemaker, 1929, for solo piano.
Première recording by Duncan Honeybourne first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 8 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sxzh> and released on disc in 2021 by Prima Facie records.

Op. 2: Kensington Gardens Suite for Oboe and Piano (1938)
Rendition by Stephanie Carlson (oboe) and Stephen Sulich (piano) during a Lecture Recital at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, 16th September, 2017: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBvQYELiaqA&t=2060s>


Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 3b: Sea-Shore Suite for Oboe and Piano (1939)
Rendition by Stephanie Carlson (oboe) and Stephen Sulich (piano) during a Lecture Recital at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, 16th September, 2017: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBvQYELiaqA&t=1580s>


Katherine Needleman’s renditions of oboe solo and piano accompaniment combined into one recording: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LR4EqUzWYBo> , and with accompanying images by Jeff Bieber <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GA3eAvOromo>

Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) byJuliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Opus 3d: Honey-Coloured Cow for Bassoon and Piano (1938)
Performed during a concert given by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers, 9 June 2021.  Performed by Lowri Richards (bassoon) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano).  The recording can be heard here: <www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDB9uG7Cao0&t=1308> (21'45")

Op. 5: Sonata No.1 for Oboe and Piano in G minor (1939)
Performed by Catherine Pluygers (oboe) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano) during a concert organised by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers and broadcast on YouTube on 31st March, 2021 (<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guJ4NlgsicI&t=21s>), the music having been recorded at Craxton Studios (London) on the 22nd March.

I. Allegro moderato — Presto — Tempo I — Presto [0'21"]
II. Adagio — Poco agitato — Tempo I [5'35"]
III. Finale (Tempo di Bolero) [7'49"]

Op. 5b: The Kelpie of Corrievreckan for clarinet and piano.
The première recording by Peter Cigleris (clarinet) and Duncan Honeybourne (piano) was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 8 March 2021 (<https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sxzh>) and released commercially on the SOMM label in September 2021: <https://somm-recordings.com/recording/dedication-the-clarinet-chamber-music-of-ruth-gipps/>.

Op. 8: Knight in Armour (1942)
One recording on the Chandos label (CHAN 20078): the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Rumon Gamba.

Op. 9: Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra (1940)
One recording released by Champs Hill Records (CHRCD160) in July 2020: Robert Plane (soloist) and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Martyn Brabbins.

Op. 10: Trio for Oboe, Clarinet and Piano (1940)
A performance by unnamed students at the Conservatorio Superior de Música de Vigo in January 2020.  Recording uploaded to YouTube by Raúl Rodríguez González: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8EV76o454kQ>

Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 12b: The Piper of Dreams for oboe solo (1942)  
Performed by Elizabeth Fleissner during a recital at the University of North Texas (Voertman Recital Hall): <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97kgY1pJowQ>

Performed by Katherine Needleman, 4 April 2020 (Lockdown Solo Oboe Concert <https://youtu.be/rzezOHJ2UQs?t=679>

Performed by Gunhild Rebnord, video uploaded 15 July 2020 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5mTqJ8FmUA>

Various entries by young oboists for the Virtual Oboe Competition, July 2020, posted on YouTube.

Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 12c: Seaweed Song for English Horn and Piano
Rendition by Stephanie Carlson (English horn) and Stephen Sulich (piano) during a Lecture Recital at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, 16th September, 2017: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBvQYELiaqA&t=4575s>

Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 15: Jane Grey, Fantasy for Viola and String Orchestra (1940)
Performed by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Teresa Riveiro Böhm, and broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s Afternoon Concert, 16th November 2020: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000pgb9>

Op. 16: Quintet for oboe, clarinet, violin, viola and cello (1941)
Première recording by Gareth Hulse, Peter Cigleris, John Mills, Lydia Lowndes-Northcott and Bozidar Vukotic first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 8 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sxzh>.  Commercial release on the SOMM label in September 2021: <https://somm-recordings.com/recording/dedication-the-clarinet-chamber-music-of-ruth-gipps/>.

Op. 7: Brocade, Piano Quartet (1941)
Première recording at Colorado Public Radio, February 20, 2024, by the Boulder Piano Quartet:
Igor Pikaysen (violin), Matthew Dane (viola), Thomas Heinrich (cello), David Korevaar (piano)

Op. 20: Concerto for Oboe (1941)
Katherine Needleman plays a duet with herself, playing the solo part against her own recording of the piano reduction: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kWq_8TDgAg>

Version with piano reduction played by Steven Stamer (oboe) and Cacie Willhoft (piano):<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ro0Dmprza0E>

One commercial recording on the Chandos label (Gipps: Orchestral Works, Volume 2, CHAN 20161, 2022): Juliana Koch (oboe) and the Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Rumon Gamba.

Katherine Needleman was also the soloist in the American première, which at the time of writing is available to watch on YouTube: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbvlz6CIiJc>.  Valentina Peggi conducts the Richmond Symphony Orchestra.

Op. 21: Flax and Charlock (movt. IV, for cor anglais solo) (1941)
Played by Elizabeth Fleissner of the Imparius Quartet at a recital at the Greater Denton Arts Council  (Texas, U.S.A.), 29 November 2018: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocm4eVJWkdw>

Op. 22: Symphony No. 1 in F minor  (1942)
Recorded for broadcast by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Rumon Gamba in September 2023; broadcast as BBC Radio 3’s Afternoon Concert on 22 February 2024 (<https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001w8hn>; from 1:00:23)

Then, in 2024, recorded by the same forces for Chandos’ third album of Gipps’ orchestral works: CHAN 20284.

Op. 23: Rhapsody in E flat for Clarinet Quintet (1942)
A rendition by  Imparius Quintet of Texas, U.S.A. (<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nszopHxzVBk>)


And another by the Chamber Players of Greenwich (Connecticut, U.S.A.) in a concert given on the 4th October, 2020: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lp_X_BU0hac>

A third recording, this time by Peter Cigleris and the Tippett Quartet, was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 9 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sxbk>, and released commercially on the SOMM label  in September 2021: <https://somm-recordings.com/recording/dedication-the-clarinet-chamber-music-of-ruth-gipps/>.

Op. 25: Death on the Pale Horse, tone poem for orchestra (1943)
One commercial recording on the Chandos label (Gipps: Orchestral Works, Volume 2, CHAN 20161, 2022): the Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Rumon Gamba.

Op. 27a: Rhapsody for Violin and Piano (1943)
One recording (2022) by Patrick Wastnage (violin) and Patricia Dunn (piano): Guild GMCD7827.

Op. 27b: Scherzo: The Three Billy Goats Gruff for Oboe, Horn, and Bassoon, 1943
Rendition by Emily Britton et al. of the The University of Evansville in Indiana: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtCVoMVvpsU>

A rendition without spoken narration was given during a concert organised by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers on Wednesday, 9th June, 2021 at Craxton Studios, London. (Catherine Pluygers, oboe; Lowri Richards, bassoon; Henryk Sienkiewicz, horn): <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDB9uG7Cao0&t=1700>

Commercially recorded by Three Worlds Records for their 2022 disc ‘Winds of Change’: Gordon Hunt (oboe), Meyrick Alexander (bassoon), Ben Goldscheider (horn).

Op. 28: Chanticleer overture for orchestra (1944)
One recording on the Chandos label (Gipps: Orchestral Works, Volume 2, CHAN 20161, 2022): the Philharmonic Orchestra under Rumon Gamba.

Op. 30: Symphony No. 2 in one movement (1945)
Two commercial recordings.  The first is by the Munich Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Douglas Bostock, a disc (Classico CLASSCD 274) released in 1999, not now available, but included on a compilation of British symphonies on Classico 23316.  (Update 19th May 2020: reissued under the Musical Concepts label: MC3105)

The second (Chandos CHAN 20078) is with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales under Rumon Gamba, and was released in September 2018.

One recording on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FSm_DUbb_0) of the United States première performance of this symphony, given by the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra under Adam Stern on Saturday 31st March 2018:


Op. 33: Song for Orchestra (1948)
One recording on the Chandos label (CHAN 20078): the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Rumon Gamba.

Op. 34: Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in G minor (1948)
Three recordings: the first from a BBC radio broadcast on the 24th May, 1972, with the BBC Northern Symphony Orchestra and the pianist Eileen Broster, conducted by the composer;


the second released in 2014 on Cameo Classics (CC9046CD), with the Malta Philharmonic conducted by Michael Laus, and the pianist Angela Brownridge (more information, for example,  here: http://www.prestoclassical.co.uk/r/Cameo%2BClassics/CC9046CD):

 Allegro moderato [0'00" or sample here]
II — Andante [13'11" or sample here]
III  Vivace [19'14" or sample here].

and the third, released in September 2019 on the SOMM label (SOMMCD 273), with the Liverpool Philharmonic conducted by Charles Peebles, and Murray McLachlan as soloist. (More information here: https://somm-recordings.com/recording/piano-concertos-by-dora-bright-and-ruth-gipps/).  This record also includes Op. 70, ‘Ambervalia’.

A version for two pianos was uploaded to YouTube in May 2022: Alicja Kojder plays the solo part; an unknown pianist plays the piano reduction.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDAafQJpc0k

Op. 39: Cringlemire Garden, impression for string orchestra (1952)
Recorded by Sudwestdeutsches Kammerorchester Pforzheim under Douglas Bostock, CPO 555457-2.

Recorded in 2024 by the BBC Philharmonic under Rumon Gamba; Chandos CHAN 20284.

Op. 41: Coronation Procession for orchestra (1953)
Recorded in 2024 by the BBC Philharmonic under Rumon Gamba; Chandos CHAN 20284.

Op. 42: Sonata for Violin and Piano (1954)
One recording (2022) by Patrick Wastnage (violin) and Patricia Dunn (piano): Guild GMCD7827

Op. 45: Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (1955)
A recording of the fourth movement by Peter Cigleris (clarinet) and Duncan Honeybourne (piano) was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 10 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sz5x>.   Commercial release of the whole work on the SOMM label in September 2021: <https://somm-recordings.com/recording/dedication-the-clarinet-chamber-music-of-ruth-gipps/>.

Op. 48 Evocation for Violin and Piano (1956)
One recording (2022) by Patrick Wastnage (violin) and Patricia Dunn (piano): Guild GMCD7827

Op. 51: Prelude for Bass Clarinet Solo (1958)
Rendition by Mark O’Brien of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (of which Gipps was once a member), uploaded on the day of, and in celebration of, Gipps’ centenary on the 20th February, 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctCb4_uebWg>.

Recorded by Peter Cigleris for the SOMM label, released in September 2021: <https://somm-recordings.com/recording/dedication-the-clarinet-chamber-music-of-ruth-gipps/>.

Op. 52: An Easter Carol (1958)
A première recording by the BBC Singers and Stephen Farr (piano), conducted by Sofi Jeannin, was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 10 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sz5x>.

Op. 53: Seascape for wind orchestra (1958)
Recorded by the Erie County Chamber Winds, conducted by Rick Fleming, available on Spotify.com: <https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6Cqxxc7OibNbrQG7R5yd3h?si=QzE9LRUVQ0KwA8dxAADAQg>

Recordings of six performances are available on YouTube:

The Neoteric Chamber Winds of St Paul, Minnesota, 15 August 2017 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzyZd4hGCaE>

Brittan Braddock conducts an unnamed wind band, possibly at the Colorado University Boulder College of Music <https://vimeo.com/255281010>

A performance by the ROCO ensemble of Houston, Texas, U.S.A. on the 17 November 2018: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9eATByvD-E>


Laura Reyes conducts the CCM (Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music) Chamber Winds in a video uploaded to YouTube on the 11th February 2020: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueXToMJy8Ek>.

A performance by the Wind Ensemble of the Royal College of Music in London, 22 October 2020 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNJrpj4RBuU&t=1539s>

And a recording by the James Madison University Wind Symphony (Harrisonburg, Virginia, United States), 3rd March 2021. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BL8xFZusNMw>

A recording by musicians of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Jonathan Bloxham was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 10 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sz5x>.

Commercially recorded by members of the London Chamber Orchestra for their 2022 disc ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records)

Op. 54: A Tarradiddle for Two Horns (1959)
Excerpts (?) performed by Antonia Chandler and Jack (surname unknown) of the Southbank Sinfonia (January 2021): <https://www.facebook.com/SouthbankSinfonia/videos/ruth-gipps-a-taradiddle-for-two-horns/346798782950485/>

Performed by Emily Britton and Tara Johnson for a lecture recital given at the virtual International Horn Symposium, 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lhEP6-B4Zw>

Recording on ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records, 2022), duettists Ben Goldscheider and Annemarie Federle.

Op. 55: Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis for mixed chorus and organ (1959)
One recording, likely to be the world première, sung by the City Chamber Choir of London, conducted by Stephen Jones.  Hannah Parry is the organist. Recorded in St Lawrence Jewry, City of London, in May 2019.  <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ojVNx7b0bMA>

A recording of both canticles sung by the choir of Gloucester Cathedral under Adrian Partington (2022?): 

2. Nunc Dimittis: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zd3B5IOEBQM>

Op. 56: Sonatina for Horn and Piano (1960)
Recorded by Addison Kotulski (horn) and Aubrey Marks-Johnson (piano):<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1M5wnQ95Wc>

Performed by Henryk Sienkiewicz (horn) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano) during an online concert organised by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers and broadcast on YouTube on 31st March, 2021 (<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guJ4NlgsicI>), the music having been recorded at Craxton Studios (London) on the 22nd March:

I. Moderato [24'40"]
II. Minuet (Andantino) [27'15"]
III. Variations on a Ground (Maestoso) [29'03"]

Performed at the Western Horn Festival (Illinois, United States) by Jena Gardner (horn) and Joanne Chang (piano) and uploaded to YouTube on the 13th April, 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRZzFZEEdl4>

Performed by Emily Britton (horn) and Yu-Han Kuan (piano) for a lecture recital given at the 2021 International Horn Symposium: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSiKt_oU_Es>

Commercially recorded by Ben Goldscheider (horn) and Huw Watkins (piano) for the 2022 disc ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records, 2022).

Op. 57: Symphony No. 3 (1965)
Three recordings, one commercial.  The first was made from a broadcast by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Ruth Gipps herself, on the 29th October 1969.  Available on YouTube at <www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZiLsTKu01Q>


 Moderato  Allegro moderato [0'00"]
II  Theme and Variations [12'50"] (see also Op. 57a)
III  Scherzo  Allegretto [23'12"]
IV  Andante  Allegro ritmico [29'15"]

The symphony received its first radio broadcast in fifty years at the BBC’s studios in Salford on the 4th December, 2019.  It was part of the Afternoon Concert on Radio 3 (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000bxgl) given by the BBC Philharmonic, and conducted by Rumon Gamba.  https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000bxgl

Rumon Gamba also conducted the Philharmonic Orchestra in the first commercial recording, released in 2022 on the Chandos label (Gipps: Orchestral Works, Volume 2, CHAN 20161, 2022).

Op. 57a: Theme and Variations for Piano (1965)
A piano transcription of the third movement of the Third Symphony (Op.57).  Available on Cameo Classics CC9046CD, played by Angela Brownridge; a sample can be heard here.

A second recording, by Duncan Honeybourne, was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 11 March 2021 <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sytk> and released  in 2021 by Prima Facie records on the disc ‘Opalescence’.

Op. 58: Concerto for Horn and Orchestra (1968)
A commercial recording (London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Nicholas Braithwaite; soloist David Pyatt) is available on Lyrita SRCD0316 (e.g. here).

 Con Moto  Tranquillo  Cadenza [here or sample here]
II  Scherzo: Allegretto [here or sample here]
III  Finale  Allegro ritmico  giocoso [here or sample here]

The concerto was also chosen by Annemarie Federle for her performance (with the BBC Philharmonic under Mark Wigglesworth) in the final of the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition, 2020-21.  It can be watched here <https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m000vsfj/bbc-young-musician-2020-final> or listened to here <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000vqjn>.

2022: a new recording by Ben Goldscheider (soloist) and the Philharmonia Orchestra under Lee Reynolds (Willow Hayne Records WHR068).

2024: recorded by the BBC Philharmonic under Rumon Gamba; Chandos CHAN 20284.

Op. 59: Leviathan for Contra-Bassoon and Chamber Orchestra (1969)
Two renditions available on YouTube: the first is at <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPQB6z2uKSA> (Contrabassoon  Danielle Hartley; piano  Marco Fatichenti).

The second is, according to the uploader,  a recording of a radio broadcast on 29 July, 1976 by the BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra under Vernon Handley, and with Val Kennedy as soloist: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPz4TmoEzlY>

Op. 60: Triton for Horn and Piano (1970)
One rendition uploaded to YouTube on the 30th November 2019.  Alicia Rafter (horn) and Dr. Hooi Yin Boey (piano): <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kONTNql8jgI>.

A second recording, from a concert given by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers on the 9 June 2021, can be heard here: <www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDB9uG7Cao0&t=1468> (24'25").  Performed by  Henryk Sienkiewicz (horn) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano)

A third performance by Emily Britton (horn) and Kristin Jones (piano) was given for a lecture recital during the virtual International Horn Symposium 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECU9sxAFGaE

Commercially recorded by Ben Goldscheider (horn) and Huw Watkins (piano) for the 2022 disc ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records, 2022).

Op. 61: Symphony No. 4 (1972)
Two recordings.  The first of a broadcast on the 3rd May, 1983, by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by John Pritchard; the second is a commercial recording with Rumon Gamba, and the BBC National Orchestra of Wales available on Chandos CHAN 20078.  There is more information about the symphony’s dedication to Sir Arthur Bliss at http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2005/Feb05/Gipps_Bliss.htm.


 Moderato  Allegro molto — Poco meno mosso [0'00"]
II  Adagio [10'35"]
III  Scherzo [17'27"]
IV  (Finale) Andante  Allegro molto [22'12"]

Op. 62: Gloria in excelsis for Unison Chorus and Organ (1977)
A première recording by the BBC Singers and Stephen Farr (organ), conducted by Sofi Jeannin, was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 10 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sz5x>.

Op. 63: Sonata for Cello and Piano (1978)
A première recording by Joseph Spooner (cello) and Duncan Honeybourne (piano) was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 11 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sytk>, and was released on disc in 2021 by Prima Facie records (‘Opalescence’).

Op. 64: Symphony No. 5 (1982)
One recording of a performance given in 1983 by the London Repertoire Orchestra, conducted by Ruth Gipps.  This symphony has never been broadcast or recorded commercially.  It was reviewed in the Catholic Herald on the 14th March 1986: the idea of a Missa Brevis for orchestra was considered ‘intriguing’, but the reviewer was otherwise rather unenthusiastic!


 Moderato Maestoso; Allegro Vivace [0'00"]
II  Andante [13'24"]
III  Scherzo: Allegro [17'52"]
IV  (Finale) Missa Brevis for Orchestra [26'42"]

Op. 65: Octet for Wind (1983)
A première recording by musicians of the National Orchestra of Wales and conducted by Jonathan Bloxham was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 11 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000sytk>.

Recording on ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records, 2022) with members of the London Chamber Orchestra.

Op. 66: Sonata No. 2 for Oboe and Piano (1985)
Rendition by Stephanie Carlson (oboe) and Stephen Sulich (piano) during a Lecture Recital at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, 16th September, 2017: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBvQYELiaqA&t=3360s>

Recorded by Catherine Pluygers (oboe) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano) at Craxton Studios, London, 22nd September 2023: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fFhyeM0wjA>

Commercial recording (2023) for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 67: The St. Francis Window for Alto Flute and Piano (1986)
Rendition by Andra Bohnet (alto flute) and Doreen Lee (piano); recorded at the Laidlaw Performing Arts Center, University of South Alabama, United States, 1 September, 2020: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWoYGaTBlT0>

Op. 68: Scherzo and Adagio for Unaccompanied Cello (1987)
One recording by Joseph Spooner was released in 2021 by Prima Facie records on the disc ‘Opalescence’.

Op. 70: Ambervalia for orchestra (1988)
Première recording released on the SOMM label, along with the Piano Concerto, on 6th September 2019.  (SOMMCD 273; https://somm-recordings.com/recording/piano-concertos-by-dora-bright-and-ruth-gipps/).  Charles Peebles conducts the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.

Recorded in 2024 by the BBC Philharmonic under Rumon Gamba; Chandos CHAN 20284.

Op. 71: Introduction and Carol: The Ox and the Ass for Double bass and Chamber Orchestra (1988)
Available on YouTube at <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAQFsvuMk64> (Contrabassoon  Paul Sharrock; piano  Diana Ambache)

A commercial recording by David Heyes (double bass) and Duncan Honeybourne (piano) was released in 2021 by Prima Facie records on the disc ‘Opalescence’.

Op. 72: Opalescence for piano (1989)
One recording by Angela Brownridge available on Cameo Classics CC9046CD; a sample can be heard here.

A second recording by Duncan Honeybourne was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 12 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000szy4> and released in 2021 by Prima Facie records on the disc ‘Opalescence’.  Honeybourne also gave a performance of the work during a lunchtime lecture recital at St. James’s Church, Piccadilly, on the 23 June 2021; the recorded Internet live stream can be watched here <www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDb1Wo6tvu0&t=1941> (32'31")

A performance was also given by Sasha Valeri Millwood during a concert organised by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers and broadcast on YouTube on 31st March, 2021 (19'26",<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guJ4NlgsicI&t=1166>), the music having been recorded at Craxton Studios (London) on the 22nd March.

Op. 73: Sinfonietta for 10 Winds and Percussion (1989)
Performed by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Teresa Riveiro Bohm, and broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s Afternoon Concert, 16th November 2020: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000pgb9>.  The recording received a second broadcast BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 12 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000szy4>.

A commercial recording by members of the London Chamber Orchestra was released on disc in 2022 (‘Winds of Change’, Three Worlds Records, 2022).

Two other recordings: the Erie County Chamber Winds conducted by Rick Fleming:



and the second is a recording of a performance by the Rondell Ensemble, conducted by Ruth Gipps herself: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LDrr0k9MJvg>


Op. 74: Threnody for English horn and Piano (1990)
Inscription: ‘I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills’.  Rendition by Stephanie Carlson (oboe) and Stephen Sulich (piano) during a Lecture Recital at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, 16th September, 2017: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBvQYELiaqA&t=5060s

Recorded commercially in 2023 for Chandos Records (CHAN 20290) by Juliana Koch (oboe), Julian Bliss (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano).

Op. 75: The Pony Cart for Flute, Horn and Piano (1990)
Performed by Simon Desorgher (flute), Henryk Sienkiewicz (horn) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano) during a concert organised by the Association for the Promotion of English Composers and broadcast on YouTube on 31st March, 2021 (64'44",<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guJ4NlgsicI&t=3884>), the music having been recorded at Craxton Studios (London) on the 22nd March.

Recorded by Leanne Hampton (flute), Emily Britton (horn) and Kristin Jones (piano) for a lecture recital given at the virtual International Horn Symposium 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01IGMm20TyI>

A commercial recording on ‘Winds of Change’ (Three Worlds Records, 2022) with members of the London Chamber Orchestra.

Op. 78: Pan and Apollo (1992)
A première recording by musicians of the National Orchestra of Wales was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘Composer of the Week’, 12 March 2021: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000szy4>.

A recording of a live performance at the Curtis Institute of Music, United States May 9th, 2023: Izaiah Cheeran (oboe), Ben Price (oboe), Oliver Talukder (English horn),  Subin Lee (harp): <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLxAbRqpTO0>

Op. 79: Lady of the Lambs for soprano and wind quintet (1992)
Recorded by Alanna Keenan (soprano), Leanne Hampton (flute), Elizabeth Robertson (oboe), Emily Cook (clarinet), Emily Britton (horn) and Eve Parsons (bassoon) for a lecture recital given at the virtual International Horn Symposium 2021: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHqugoZnXOk>

A commercial recording released on disc by Three Worlds Records (‘Winds of Change’, 2022) with Mary Bevan (soprano) and members of the London Chamber Orchestra.  Also performed on YouTube here: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MULTmK92iKI>

Op. 80: Sonata for Alto Trombone (or Horn) and Piano (1995)
A commercial recording for horn (played by Ben Goldscheider, and Huw Watkins playing the piano) was released in 2022 by Three Worlds Records on their disc ‘Winds of Change’.

Op. 81: Sonata for Double Bass and Piano (1986)
One recording by David Heyes (double bass) and Duncan Honeybourne (piano).  ‘Opalescence’, Prima Facie (2021).

WoO 2 (Werk ohne Opuszahl; Work Without Opus Number): Reverie for Bassoon and Piano
Recorded by John Wallace (bassoon) and Sasha Valeri Millwood (piano) at Craxton Studios, London, 22nd September 2023: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlPN17x83v8>

Update, 13 August 2018: some new recordings — including of the second and fourth symphonies! — have been added to this list.

Update, 13 September 2019: various recent updates hopefully reflect the Ruth Gipps revival.

February 2020: Further updates bear witness to a real international interest in Ruth Gipps!


March 2021: the list has been updated to reflect new renditions made in celebration of Gipps’ centenary.

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Sources

‘Ruth Gipps’ on Wikipedia: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Gipps>

Pamela Blevins: Ruth Gipps and Sir Arthur Bliss <http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2005/Feb05/Gipps_Bliss.htm>

David Wright: Ruth Gipps <http://www.wrightmusic.net/pdfs/ruth-gipps.pdf>

Jill Halstead, Ruth Gipps: Anti-Modernism, Nationalism And Difference in English Music (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006)

John France: The Land of Lost Content: Ruth Gipps, Symphony No. 3 <http://landofllostcontent.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/ruth-gipps-symphony-no3-introduction.html>

The website of the British Music Collection in Huddersfield <http://britishmusiccollection.org.uk/>