Michael Talbot – Fugue Forum

Why I write fugues

As a teenager in the 1950s, if not earlier, I fancied myself as a composer. Since I was already keen on early music and as a pianist had studied one or two fugues, I composed one or two simple fugues for keyboard. I remember being engaged in writing one on a train journey while holidaying with my parents in Germany, much to the amazement of the ticket inspector. I have not kept these compositions and would not be proud of them today.

As a school, conservatoire and university student I learned more about the mechanisms of fugue. Later (from 1968), as a university teacher of music and musicology (the two tend to be taught and studied in association with one another in Britain). I had to teach about fugue and even, to a very few students, to give instruction in the writing of fugues. In my work as a musicologist studying in depth, for example, Albinoni and Vivaldi, I deepened my knowledge of the subject. But at this stage I composed no fugues, nor anything else worth mentioning.

The stimulus to begin writing fugues again, which very soon blossomed into an obsessive passion, was external. My good friend, the Italian recorder player and musical director (and many other thing besides) Federico Maria Sardelli, in latish 2005 sent me as a surprise a marvellous little fugue of his composition in Vivaldian style. I decided to respond in kind and discovered to my surprise that writing a fugue was for me both easy and satisfying. Like tennis players in a long rally sending the ball in both directions over the net (or – to choose perhaps rather too elevated a parallel – like Brahms and Joachim exchanging canons) our fugal dialogue continued, as it has right up to the present day. Later, we started to exchange compositions also in non-fugal forms – but that is another story, and some of its products can be viewed and heard in the main section of the flauto-dolce web site.

My interest in writing fugues, by the way, has also prompted me to work a little in the same area as a musicologist. My most recent book, entitled Vivaldi and Fugue, will be published in English by Olschki (Florence) in 2009, and I am currently toying with the idea of writing a Lexicon of Fugue.

There is little more to say, except that the more fugues I write (I have completed over 100 for keyboard alone), the greater the struggle becomes to express something new. But I do not think that I have reached an absolute saturation point just yet.

The style I employ in the fugues is eclectic: I do not set out merely to imitate a single composer of the past in any composition, even though strong traces of several of my favourite composers of the later baroque – Buxtehude, Purcell, J. S. Bach, Handel, Telemann, Vivaldi, D. Scarlatti, Leclair et al. – are evident, and the influence of Classical and Romantic composers is by no means absent. I do not hesitate to introduce any feature into a composition provided that it “works in context”, regardless of whether I can recall having seen or heard it before.

Finally, to make one thing absolutely clear: these compositions are not intended to “make a statement” about classical music of today. If I could write convincing fugues like those of Hindemith or Shostakovich or ones in an even more “modern” idiom, I would do so for preference. But I cannot, and so I write in a style that is familiar and attractive to me and which I find easy to handle. In the first instance, these pieces are for my private enjoyment, but I am glad to share them with anyone who can spare the time to listen to them, read them and (even) play them.

Michael Talbot
Liverpool, October 2008

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Fuga malinconica for four voices, for keyboard added by Michael Talbot

The pdf and midi files of this piece may be downloaded HERE

This four-part fugue is a little experimental in structure, so it is a “novelty” fugue as well as being a “character” fugue expressing (mostly) melancholy.

Its rather foursquare subject and countersubject recall Buxtehude and Bach in their ambling character.

The first exposition (bars 1–17) is very regular in structure. The four entries are in a “hook” formation (ATBS). The interweaving of parts is tricky for the performer to negotiate. I normally compose directly on to the computer but try my compositions out at the keyboard just to make sure that they are technically possible. This one is – just! The Larghetto tempo needs to be taken very literally.

The very brief first episode (bars 18–21) plays with a fragment of the subject and takes the music to D major in preparation for the second exposition.

The second exposition has time for entries in D major (bar 22) and A major (bar 25) before giving way to a long codetta (or episode) taking the music to E minor (with elaborate dominant preparation in bars 30–32), where the subject reappears, with an initial hint of canonic imitation, in bar 33.

In the second half of bar 35 there begins a new episode, this time with a concertante, treble-dominated character reminiscent of the concerto. It leads back, with dominant preparation, to the tonic, B minor, in preparation for what is anticipated to be a final group of entries.

The third exposition begins normally enough in bar 41, but instead of accumulating further entries begins to “drift off” episodically in bar 45, travelling continuously in a flatward direction. In bar 51 we hear the dominant seventh of C major. However, this is immediately reinterpreted enharmonically as a German sixth and the dominant seventh of B minor is regained through this sleight of hand in bar 53, continuing up to bar 55.

Then I pull a rabbit out of the hat, as it were. Bars 56–82 are a compact fugato in B major (in 6/8 metre and Allegro tempo) on a subject that is a metamorphosis of the earlier one. This kind of variation fugue is well known from Froberger and Buxtehude and also Beethoven (think of the fugue in Op. 110), although in my case the contrast is more drastic than usual. Shock and surprise – certainly also humour – are what I am after here. A joker enters the mortuary.

In bar 83 the music pulls itself together and reverts to its original thematic character, metre and tempo. But the modality remains major, and the fugue closes quietly in a manner certainly subdued but no longer truly melancholy.

The pdf and midi files of this piece may be downloaded HERE

10 October 2008

M. Talbot's Comments: -  Approved!

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