Walton
Sir William Walton was born in Oldham, Lancashire in 1902, the son of a choirmaster and a
singing-teacher. He became a chorister at
Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, and then an
undergraduate at the University. However,
he had little formal compositional tuition
at this or any other time, and though he
later received advice from Ernest Ansermet and
Eugene Goossens in conducting, he may be
considered essentially self-taught.
His first composition to attract attention
was a piano quartet written at the age
of sixteen. Two early ‘avant-garde’ pieces
have recently been rehabilitated to great
acclaim: the 1922 String Quartet and
1923 Toccata for Violin and Piano.
At Oxford he made the acquaintance of the
Sitwells who gave him friendship, moral and
financial support and in 1922 he collaborated
with Edith in devising the entertainment
Façade. Less than ten years later,
Osbert prepared the text of another
masterwork, Belshazzar’s Feast.
From 1922 to 1927 Walton began to spend
an increasing amount of time abroad, notably
in Switzerland and Italy. These were the
years of the Viola Concerto,
Belshazzar’s Feast, and the
First Symphony. In 1938 Jascha
Heifetz asked him for a violin concerto
and this was first performed by Heifetz in
December 1939. In 1941 he wrote the overture
Scapino for the 50th anniversary of
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
The war years were devoted mainly to
writing film and ballet scores. Films
included the memorable First of the Few
from which Walton extracted the ‘Spitfire’
Prelude and Fugue, and the ballets were
The Wise Virgins (1940) and
The Quest (1943), both for the Sadlers
Wells Ballet. In 1944 came the music for the
first of Laurence Olivier’s major Shakespearean
films, Henry V. Hamlet followed
in 1948 and Richard III in 1955. These
established Walton among the greatest composers
for the screen.
Walton’s main output had
resumed in 1947 with the appearance of a
fine String Quartet and he completed his
trilogy of string concertos in 1956 with the
masterly Cello Concerto which he wrote
for Piatigorsky. 1960 heard the first
performance of Symphony No.2 and 1969
saw The Bear, a one-act ‘extravaganza’ to
a Chekhov-based libretto by Paul Dehn, both
of which continue to be performed throughout
Europe. In 1977 there appeared eight extensively
re-worked and previously unpublished numbers
of Façade under the title
of Façade 2. Walton’s last ‘original’
work of note was the Prologo e Fantasia
written for Rostropovich in 1981-2.
In 1978 he was elected an honorary member
of the American Academy and Institute of Arts
and Letters. He was knighted in 1951 and in
1968 received the Order of Merit. He died
in Ischia in 1983 at the age of 80.
Oxford University Press is in the process of publishing a collected edition of Walton's
works. The first volume of the William
Walton Edition, presenting the definitive
version of the Symphony No.1, was
launched in 1998, and the sixth volume, Shorter Choral Works Without Orchestra, was launched at the 1999 Oldham Festival. Since then, volumes containing the complete music for Façade and Henry V have also appeared, as well as a new edition of the Viola Concerto.
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