On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring
![]() On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring is a tone poem composed in 1912 by Frederick Delius. Together with Summer Night on the River it is one of Delius's Two Pieces for Small Orchestra. The two were first performed in Leipzig on 23 October 1913, conducted by Arthur Nikisch. On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring is the longer of the two pieces, with a typical playing time of between six and seven minutes. There have been numerous recordings of the piece, which Delius's champion Sir Thomas Beecham described as much the best known of the composer's works. Background and first performanceIn the first years of the 20th century, Frederick Delius was better known in Continental Europe than in his native Britain. He lived in France and had most of his musical success in Germany.[1][2] His compositions from this period include Songs of Sunset (1906–07), Brigg Fair (1907) and In a Summer Garden (1908).[3] He completed the first of his Two Pieces for Small Orchestra – Summer Night on the River – in 1911, and worked on the second, On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring during 1912.[4] The two works were first given in Leipzig by the Gewandhaus Orchestra conducted by Arthur Nikisch on 23 October 1913.[4] Although completed second, On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring is designated the first of the two, which were billed as "Stimmungsbilder" – "mood-pictures" – with the titles "Beim ersten Kuckucksruf im Frühling" and "Sommernacht am Flusse".[4] The first performance in Britain was presented by the Royal Philharmonic Society at a Queen's Hall concert on 20 January 1914, conducted by Willem Mengelberg.[5] Publication and arrangementsThe score is dedicated to the composer and musical benefactor Balfour Gardiner.[4] It was first published by Tischer & Jagenburg of Cologne in 1914. In 1930 the Oxford University Press published the score.[4] The full title of the piece in the published score is On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring (Introducing a Norwegian Folk Song).[4] The manuscript is lost, but a draft version survives, held by the Grainger Museum, Melbourne.[4] There have been numerous arrangements of the piece. Gerard Bunk arranged a version for solo piano in 1914, Peter Warlock made a version for piano duo in 1930, Eric Fenby arranged it for organ in 1934 and Rudolf Schmidt-Wunstorf made a version for two pianos in 1952. There are also versions for wind band (1969) and brass band (1976).[4] MusicThe playing time of the piece is typically between six and seven minutes, although a few recorded performances are quicker or slower than this.[n 1] The piece opens in C major in 6 Critical receptionSir Thomas Beecham, Delius's most prominent British champion,[9] called On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring "easily the best known of all our composer's output".[10] Beecham said of this piece and the companion Summer Night on the River: "In their respective ways they touch perfection, although I cannot agree with the judgment of one commentator that they display Frederick's powers of orchestration at their best. After all they are miniatures and written primarily for small groups of players".[10] Commentators have differed about whether the pastoral scene is an English one. In a 1973 study Lionel Carley wrote that the music gives "an instinctive feeling that, wherever the inspiration may be rooted, an essentially English natural setting is being evoked".[11] In 2004 Diana McVeagh wrote of the Delius miniatures, "These exquisite idylls, for all their composer's German descent and French domicile, spell 'England' for most listeners".[1] In 2018 Daniel Grimley suggested "the music's 'place' is really Norway/Germany as much as the English countryside".[12] Christopher Palmer followed Grainger in comparing Delius's and Grieg's treatment of the folk tune: The First Cuckoo is no modest essay in folk-song-like ingenuous freshness; on the contrary it is considerably sophisticated. The "Ola Valley" theme is interwoven with another (uncredited but noticeably redolent of the "Student’s Serenade" in [Grieg's] Moods, Op. 73) which appears at the beginning and in a short element of recapitulation and conditions the rhythmic substance and general atmosphere of the piece.[13]
Palmer comments that unlike Grieg, Delius treats the tune very freely, creating "a gently persistent liquefaction of harmony".[13] DiscographySome of the conductors listed above, notably Beecham, recorded several other versions of the piece, either in the studio or in live concert recordings.
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