Summary of findings for Chapter One

Tertis, like Dean fulfilled many roles as violist and collaborator. 

Lionel Tertis’s roles can be summarised as follows:

1. Viola soloist, great mastery and skill.

2. Interpreter of music.

3. Arranger/transcriber/composer- expanding the viola repertoire.

4. Collaborator- he worked alongside composers in the realisation   of new works and performed with composers. He was responsible for helping create new repertoire for viola, although not all of this repertoire has become part of the standard repertoire today. 

5.     Communicator- not only with the composers in collaborations, also as teacher and lecture –recitalist. 

6.     Promoter- he performed the compositions that came from these collaborations and helped these works reach a wider audience. 

7.     Teacher- he taught at The Royal Academy, and was its first viola professor. He helped train a generation of viola players who could in turn promote the instrument. He also wrote several texts giving advice to musicians. 


Brett Dean’s Roles can be summarised as:

1.     Viola soloist  great mastery and skill

2.     Interpreter- of music.

3.     Composer- creating new music.

4.     Collaborator- working with musicians in the creation of new  works. 

5.     Communicator- through collaborations. 

6.     Performer- he is an active performer.

 

With his mastery on the instrument Dean is an outstanding role model, contributing to the rise of the status of the viola. His Viola concerto is an often performed work. Dean mostly performs his own compositions. 

 

 

The responsibilities that come with these roles as violist and collaborator can be summarised from Tertis’s autobiography as follows:

  • Enlarge the repertory of the viola
  • Choose works that can be related to
  • Encourage composers to write for the viola, not against it
  • Perform new music, live
  • Play with expressiveness and a beauty of sound (in today’s commissioned works, this is not always a pre-requisite, more of a historical aesthetic).
  • Strive to grasp the ideas of the composers the violist is collaborating with
  • Faultless intonation
  • Great technical ability and fine musicianship
  • Practice

 

Brett Dean- a summary of the responsibilities he has that go hand in hand with his roles. 

  • Takes the responsibility of being a composer seriously.
  • "Stay fit" regime on viola for efficient practice skills
  • Does not feel a responsibility to protect nor favor the viola
  • Performs live
  • Be willing to accept feedback
  • Bow control- The bow should be used like the "breath"
  • Artistic and intellectual exchange in collaboration 
  • Writing chamber music is important as it helps him to hone his skills in instrumental writing 
  • Write tangible melody lines but explore different soundscapes as well
  • Write music that is emotionally engaging 
  • To have a good overview of the elements that make up a piece of music


From these examples, I can draw the following conclusions. Violists wishing to collaborate with living composers need to have a high level of skill on the instrument. It is therefore our responsibility to practice, to develop the skills needed in order to be able to interpret music and communicate both with and without our instrument. This means being organised and prioritising our time, and practising regularly. 

 

Dean also highlights the importance of composers collaborating with performers, especially when composing works for an instrument that they cannot play. I take from this that as violists we can raise composers’ awareness and knowledge of our instruments about what is possible and what is not. 

 

Although Tertis’s choice of composers with whom to collaborate may not be to everyone’s taste today, I do not believe that the works he commissioned should be forgotten. If we, as violists resonate with lesser-known historical works it is our responsibility to learn them and promote them. As previously discussed, my experience with Bowen’s and Bax’s works has been very positive. It is also important to keep an open mind when looking at composition for the first time. Tertis for example, passed up the opportunity to play concertos by Walton and Hindemith, yet these works have become standard repertoire today. 

 

As performers, both Tertis and Dean have raised the status of the viola, due to their mastery of the instrument.                                NEXT>