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A piece of Cornish brass
band history was handed over to The Cornish Studies Library in Redruth last
week by The Cornwall Youth Brass Band, when the original hand written
score of Sir Malcolm Arnold’s Little Suite No 2 for Brass Band was
presented to them. Now recognised as one of the greatest British
Composers of the 20th Century, Sir Malcolm Arnold spent seven
fruitful years in Cornwall from 1965 to 1972. Whilst living here he
became a close friend of the St Agnes artist, Tony Giles. On the
occasion of Tony’s marriage to Hilary in August 1969, Arnold presented
them with the original hand written score of his Little Suite No 2 for
Brass Band, which he had composed for The Cornwall Youth Brass Band.
This unusual wedding present was inscribed in his own hand, “to Tony and
Hilary with love from Malcolm and Isobel.”
Following the death of
Tony Giles, Hilary Giles presented The Cornwall Youth Brass Band with
her Wedding Present. In order to make the Score available to anyone
wishing to study the work, which has become one of Arnold’s most popular
brass band compositions, the Band Trustees decided to pass it on, with
the approval of Mrs Giles, to The Cornish Studies Library in Redruth on
permanent loan. The presentation was made to Kim Cooper, Principal
Library Officer of The Cornish Studies Library by Leonard Adams,
Chairman of The Cornwall Youth Brass Band. Also present was Robert
Kitchen, the Treasurer of the Band, who along with Leonard was a young
player in the Band at the first performance of the work conducted by the
Composer. He remembers Malcolm Arnold as an ebullient conductor, but
one who took great pains to make every player comfortable and aware of
his requirements.
When Sir Malcolm Arnold
moved to Cornwall in 1965 he threw himself enthusiastically into the
musical life of the County, in particular Brass Bands and specifically
The Cornwall Youth Brass Band. The 1966 Annual Course of the Band took
place at Fowey with Geoffrey Brand as Course Director. One of the pieces
chosen for the course was Arnold’s Little Suite for Brass, which he had
written for The National Youth Brass Band of Scotland in 1963. In a
Foreword to the Concert Programme he wrote “I have known some of the
Brass Bands and Choirs in Cornwall for many years, but it was not until
I came to live here that I became aware of what a living tradition of
music there is in this part of the world. I am certain that such an
organisation as a Youth Brass Band not only does so much good for
talented young musicians, but its influence will be far larger in a
social sense, than only a musical one”.
So impressed was Malcolm
Arnold by The Cornwall Youth Brass Band that he offered to write a work
for them for their next Course. Naturally the offer was gratefully
accepted and on January 19th 1967 the printed score and parts
of The Little Suite No 2 for Brass Band were received by Reg Trudgian,
the then Chairman of the Band. The new work was premiered at Fowey on
Easter Sunday that year. It was received with great acclaim prompting
the Composer to write to Reg Trudgian a few days later that “The Concert
was a great experience which I shall never forget. Every player excelled
themselves and made me realise what a wonderful thing music is”. The
Little Suite was repeated the following year when Malcolm Arnold, to the
delight of the Committee and Band directed the whole Course himself. He
refused any fee or expenses for his services and was quoted in The
Cornish Guardian as saying, “These seventy young people have given me
more than I have given them”. |