Simple Symphony · Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge
Prelude and Fugue
Festiva Strings Lucerne
Achim Fiedler, conductor
Die Festival Strings Lucerne spielen drei berühmte
Streichorchester-Werke von Benjamin Britten
nder its principle conductor Achim Fiedler, the Festival
Strings Lucerne already recorded a complete series of
standard works written for its orchestral forces.
Since its foundation in 1956, the works of Benjamin
Britten have been among the ensemble‘s core repertoire.
The Simple Symphony plays with its basic musical material
in masterly simplicity, proving Britten‘s complete
command of compositional handiwork. In the Variations
on a Theme of Frank Bridge, however, the poetic
idea cross-fades over the structural level, seeing as how
the work is a musical characterization of Frank Bridge,
Britten’s mentor.
Britten’s last work for string orchestra, Prelude and
Fugue, is the master’s greatest achievement. With contrapuntal
technique that uses up to 18 different voices,
this piece places the highest demands on the virtuosic
abilities of the musicians.
Achim Fiedler
Achim Fiedler, born in Stuttgart, first
studied

to play the violin with Saschko
Gawriloff in addition to studying chamber
music with the Amadeus Quartet at the
College
for Music in Cologne. After receiving
a violin scholarship for the London Guildhall
School he continued his education with
studies
in conducting with Franco Gallini
in Milan and Thomas Ungar in Stuttgart.
This period was followed by an invitation
to be Conducting Fellow in Tanglewood/
USA. Fiedler did a master class with Seiji
Ozawa there, soon after followed by assistant
conducting positions with Bernard Haitink
and Carlo Maria Giulini. Achim Fiedler was
supported by the German Music Council
from 1994 to 2001, received the Herbert
von Karajan Scholarship in 1997 and was
an award-winner in several international
conducting competitions (among them a 1st
prize in Cadaqués/Spain, in 1996).
Achim Fiedler conducts a number of
orchestras
such as the Sächsische Staatskapelle
Dresden, the Berlin Symphony
Orchestra, the Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
of the NDR Hanover, the Vienna Chamber
Orchestra, the Real Orquesta Sinfónica
de Sevilla, the Orquestra Simfónica de Barcelona
e Nacional de Catalunya and the
Orquesta Filarmónica de Gran Canaria.
Achim Fiedler has acted as artistic
director
of Festival Strings Lucerne since 1998.
Benjamin Britten: Works for String
Orchestra
English music seems to have a penchant
for the world of childhood and youth.
Dances and songs have long served as references
for composition, including throughout
the twentieth century, and even with his idea
to take up compositions from his own childhood,
Benjamin Britten’s Simple Symphony is
not without precursors. An example we can
mention that Edward Elgar’s suite The Wand
of Youth is based on the same sources of inspiration.
The unusual biographical consideration
however is that Britten did not begin
to rework the compositions of his youth in
his later years, but had already begun to do so
in his early twenties. And his examination of
his own youthful beginnings as a composer
is for this reason free of sentimental reminiscences;
it attests in a particularly pronounced
means the playful-constructive adaptation of
that which is present by the childhood imagination.
Each of us as a child learning to speak
experiences the limitless joy of combining
all the words we know in endless combinations
as we make them our own, suddenly
being able to create a world comprised of
our own signs. And it is exactly this youthful
joy of creation that is called to mind by the
ever amazing beginning of Simple Symphony
wherein Britten takes a simple cadence, commonplace
and unimaginative, which could
be a beginning or an end, and by repeating
it multiple times escalates it ad absurdum.
From this jovial reflection on the basic elements
of music and the creation of meaning,
the Simple Symphony achieves its perspective.
The power of the creative spirit in the quoted
childhood composition increasingly establishes
itself until the refined obliquity of the
last movement’s topic, whose chromatic

divergences
already betray a unique handwriting.
Every element provided with a musical
reference by the 1913-born composer in his
score falls between the years 1923–1926.
In 1934, when Simple Symphony was composed,
Britten had already left the Royal College
of Music and decided to make his living
as a composer. In the following years he
wrote music for a number of films, but also
composed important instrumental pieces.
Only after the year 1945 did Britten emerge
as an opera composer who would influence
the coming decades. The string orchestra
is to a certain extent close to school music,
and Simple Symphony was also composed as
a challenge for school orchestras, although its
full effect is only achievable in professional
performance. Entirely at home in this sphere
of a virtuoso string chamber orchestra are
the Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge
that Britten composed in a very brief period
of time for the Boyd Neel Orchestra, a society
established in 1932 comprised of about
20 strings that soon made a name for itself
throughout Europe and contracted a piece
from Britten for their invitation to the 1937
Salzburg Festival.
The Frank Bridge Variations is a piece in
which the entire personality of the composer
finds expression, with a tight fusion of harmonic
and thematic invention, a love of genre
models, which for an English composer of his
time revealed an unusual affinity to middle
European-
Viennese music by Mahler and Berg
(in the waltz and dirge). But here again the music
is drawn from the playful treatment of his
own biography. Britten took the theme from
Frank Bridge’s string quartet Idyll, the man who
had been the first to recognize the exceptional
talent of the composing boy and had become
his first teacher. In his dedicatory score, Britten
arranged the individual movements to reflect
the various facets of his first mentor’s character,
which is a detail omitted from the printed
score. This latent character portrait reveals itself
as a double-portrait in which Britten’s own personality
has found a place. This is increasingly
clear in the entirely new harmonization follow
ing the closing fugue and in the play of tones in
closing when Britten emphasizes his very own
D major, upon which the introductory movement
of Simple Symphony is based.
The impressively incorporated diversification
of the string movements into individual voices
in the Frank Bridge Variations is consequentially
expanded to 18 voices in Britten’s last
work for a string orchestra, Prelude and Fugue.
This highly creative piece was composed during
World War II and debuted on the 10th anniversary
of the Boyd Neel Orchestra in 1942.
Shortly after the Boyd Neel Orchestra
disbanded after some twenty years in 1954,
Festival Strings Lucerne was formed, whose
core repertoire contains the three works by
Benjamin Britten for string orchestra.
Martin Wilkening
Translation: Maurice Sprague