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MALCOLM
ARNOLD AND THE THREE MUSKETEERS
In an exclusive for this website
Anthony Meredith talks us through the origins of the score
for David Nixon's new ballet, The Three Musketeers!
Thirty years ago a young Royal Ballet dancer/choreographer,
David Drew, tried to persuade Malcolm Arnold to write him
a score for The Three Musketeers. They spent a hilarious day
together by a piano in a London hotel, surrounded by any number
of bottles of champagne which Malcolm had thoughtfully provided
to enhance the creative process. Alas, shortly afterwards,
Malcolm had an emotional crisis which put him off work a long
time, and Robert Helpmann, who was supporting the project,
suddenly left Australian Ballet.
Three years ago, while researching Arnold’s
biography (co-written with Paul Harris), I asked David Drew
about The Three Musketeers, because one piece from his project
– Constance’s Sad Dance – survived intact.
It was clear, as David told the story, that he still nursed
a great affection for his Musketeers scenario. “It would
surely be easy enough,” I suggested, “to use other
music of Arnold’s? No composer can have been so Musketeerish?”
We listened to a passage from a symphony, which clearly had
been inspired by D’Artagnan riding off into the sunset
with Athos, Aramis and Porthos.
Two years ago, David Nixon, at the end of a
day-long conference somewhere in London, turned up at David
Drew’s Maida Vale flat with the kind of spring in his
step which suggested, erroneously, that the day was but young.
He was interested in the possibility of the Musketeers for
Northern. “I like music I can hum while working,”
he declared, and Arnold just happens to be the most hum-able
British composer since Elgar. After some delightful Maida
Vale meetings, in which the older of the two Davids would
from time to time dance ebulliently around his sitting-room
table in lively interpretations of what Porthos might do next,
we had an exciting story and some tuneful and dramatic music
to go with it. Enter John Pryce-Jones and John Longstaff to
have a listen. Yes, they nodded. It could work well musically.
By this time the younger of the two Davids had quietly and
very searchingly thought his way through the piece, scene
by exciting scene. Malcolm Arnold’s Musketeers were
finally on their way.
Anthony Meredith
The full story of the 1975 Musketeers deliberations
can be found in Malcolm Arnold: Rogue Genius by Anthony Meredith
and Paul Harris (Thames/Elkin 2004)
Buy
the book at Amazon.co.uk.
Image: Jonathan Byrne Ollivier in rehearsals
for The Three Musketeers
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