The Ultimate Classic FM Hall of Fame: Greatest Classical Music of All Time
By Darren Henley, Sam Jackson and Tim Lihoreau
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About this ebook
Darren Henley
Darren Henley OBE is chief executive of Arts Council England. His two independent government reviews into music and cultural education resulted in England's first National Plan for Music Education, new networks of Music Education Hubs, Cultural Education Partnerships and Heritage Schools, the Museums and Schools programme, the BFI Film Academy and the National Youth Dance Company. Before joining the Arts Council, he led Classic FM for fifteen years. He holds degrees in politics from the University of Hull, in management from the University of South Wales and in history of art from the University of Buckingham. A recipient of the British Academy President's Medal for his contributions to music education, music research and the arts, his books include The Virtuous Circle: Why Creativity and Cultural Education Count and The Arts Dividend: Why Investment in Culture Pays
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The Ultimate Classic FM Hall of Fame - Darren Henley
Index
Introduction
Back in 1996, when the Classic FM Hall of Fame launched, no one could have predicted the extraordinary popularity and longevity of this countdown. Two decades later, and the world’s biggest annual survey of classical music tastes is more diverse, more surprising and more popular than ever, with over three million votes having been cast in the last twenty years.
The voting process is a very simple one: at the start of every calendar year, we invite our listeners to tell us their three favourite pieces of classical music – online at ClassicFM.com, over the phone or by good old-fashioned snail mail. Three points are assigned to each first choice; two to the second; and one to the third. And from that, we collate a chart of 300 pieces of classical music, spanning over 500 years, which we reveal across the Easter weekend. The process of fitting all 300 choices into a forty-eight-hour period, whilst also taking account of hourly news bulletins, commercial breaks and presenter commentary, is a Herculean task – and our team of producers always breathe a happy sigh of relief when we reach 9 p.m. on Easter Monday.
When we passed the fifteen-year milestone, we published the first book about our chart. Called simply The Classic FM Hall of Fame, it outlined an aggregated top 300, from 1996 through to 2000 – and it proved extremely popular, selling over 20,000 copies within the first few months of publication. Now, with two decades of Classic FM Halls of Fame behind us, we thought it timely to provide an updated and refreshed book, which will hopefully be an even more rewarding read than the first version.
The 300 pieces covered here mirror The Ultimate Classic FM Hall of Fame, which we revealed on-air in August 2015. And in case you’re wondering how a chart that started in 1996 could celebrate its twentieth anniversary in 2015, not 2016, it’s simply because that is the year in which the twentieth Classic FM Hall of Fame occurred. We took the annual top 300 from 1996 to 2015 and created a new chart, based on each work’s relative position in the twenty countdowns. That means that all the works that have seen their popularity ebb and flow over the two decades since the Classic FM Hall of Fame began, receive a chart position based on their achievements over the full period. New works entering the Classic FM Hall of Fame in more recent years – in many cases because they were only written in the last decade or so – are more likely to appear further down, because they don’t benefit from listeners’ votes in the early years of the countdown.
During the first five years of our chart, one composer reigned supreme: Max Bruch. In 1996, he surprised all of us by beating the likes of Mozart and Beethoven to take the Number 1 spot with his Violin Concerto No. 1. At Number 300 the same year was another work by Bruch, Kol Nidrei. So a lesser-known composer, born in Cologne in 1838, not only topped but tailed our debut chart. That Bruch found himself at the top was all the more remarkable when you consider that by the time he died in 1920, his music had drifted out of fashion to such an extent that his reputation had dwindled to almost nothing. It also proves that looks count for very little with Classic FM listeners: a German contemporary of Bruch once said of him, ‘In personal appearance, he is by no means as majestic as one would suppose from his works.’
Bruch maintained his place in pole position a further four times, confounding the pundits who claimed that his early success was merely a fluke. But, in 2001, Classic FM’s listeners voted Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 2 into the top spot. Forever linked to that classic romantic movie moment on a railway platform in the film Brief Encounter, the work also enjoyed five years at the peak of the chart through until 2005. Prior to this piece’s spell at the top, Rachmaninov was a constant bridesmaid to Bruch’s bride, taking the Number 2 position each year.
Then, in the year that we all celebrated his 250th birthday, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart knocked Rachmaninov from his perch with his Clarinet Concerto. But his stay at Number 1 was short-lived, with our first English work topping the poll in 2007, when Vaughan Williams climbed to Number 1 with his beautifully wistful The Lark Ascending. It marks an enormous success for a piece of music that made its chart debut at Number 18 in 1996 – hence its relatively low position in the ‘chart of charts’, which follows over the next few pages.
In the aggregated chart, which we have used as the basis for this book, only three of the four works that have held the Number 1 position in our annual charts take the top four positions in our ‘ultimate’ countdown. The continued popularity and high placing of Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 2 mean it is crowned victorious as the UK’s favourite classical work; and while in the first book, after fifteen years of the chart, it was Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto that appeared in second place, that position is now held by Vaughan Williams’s The Lark Ascending. Mozart falls to Number 3 – and at Number 4, we find Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5 (‘Emperor’): a piece which has never made it to Number 1 in any annual countdown, but which has always hovered near enough to the top spot, and is hence rewarded for its consistency.
No round-up of the Classic FM Hall of Fame would be complete without mention of movie music – and, in particular, that of John Williams, whose five entries in our aggregated chart, including Schindler’s List and Star Wars, put him well ahead of any other film composer. Another of Williams’s soundtrack successes, Harry Potter, together with Howard Shore’s music from Lord of the Rings, are relative newcomers to the Classic FM Hall of Fame, both having been released since we began our series of charts in 1996. The two films have since given birth to major franchises of their own.
In 1997, the highest new entry in the chart was Adiemus, which shot in at Number 134. The haunting voice of Miriam Stockley performing Karl Jenkins’ breakthrough work was one of the biggest-selling records of the 1990s. Jenkins has become the most popular living composer, with Adiemus eventually being eclipsed by his even more wildly successful The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace. Living composers continue to be well represented in the chart, with the likes of Patrick Hawes, Nigel Hess, Paul McCartney and Jon Lord all earning their places in the pages of this book.
Operatic works have performed strongly every year and Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers has consistently been the highest-placed representative of the genre. In terms of choral music, that hardy perennial of choirs across the land, Handel’s Messiah has regularly appeared ahead of the rest of a chasing pack, which includes masterful works from nearly all the other big-hitting composers.
Some pieces become popular with Classic FM listeners because of particular programmes on the station. Among these is the music of the eighteenth-century Italian Jesuit priest Domenico Zipoli, and in particular his beautiful Elevazione. Meanwhile, Arvo Pärt’s deeply minimalist music, such as Spiegel im Spiegel, has grown in popularity since the countdown first aired, while the Italian composer Ludovico Einaudi (Le Onde) and American Jay Ungar (The Ashokan Farewell) have enjoyed great success based on the airplay that they have received on Classic FM.
The success of the Classic FM Hall of Fame is not down to the radio station, though. It is ultimately thanks to you, our listeners, that we have been able to enjoy two decades of this very special countdown. If you’re one of the hundreds of thousands of people who have taken part over the last twenty years, thank you. And if you have yet to dip your toe into the waters of the Classic FM Hall of Fame, I very much hope you’ll be inspired to do so as you leaf through the pages that follow.
Each year, the chart changes – so who knows which composers will come to the fore, which film scores and operas will capture our collective imagination, or which long-forgotten pieces will be revitalised by a new recording? Whatever they may be, you can rest assured that we will be here at Classic FM to share your delight in discovering them.
Sam Jackson,
Managing Editor, Classic FM
Classic FM is the UK’s only 100 per cent classical music radio station. Since we began broadcasting in September 1992, the station has brought classical music to millions of people across the UK. If you’ve yet to discover for yourself the delights of being able to listen to classical music twenty-four hours a day, you can find Classic FM on 100–102 FM, on Digital Radio, online at www.classicfm.com, on Sky channel 0106, on Virgin Media channel 922, on Freeview channel 731 and on FreeSat channel 721. You can also download the free Classic FM app, which will enable you to listen to Classic FM on your iPhone, iPod, iPad, Blackberry or Android device.
Classic FM has a series of partnerships with orchestras across the country: the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, the London Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra of Opera North, the Philharmonia Orchestra, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, the Royal Northern Sinfonia, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and The Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields. And don’t forget the brilliant young musicians of the National Children’s Orchestra of Great Britain and of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain. To see if any of these orchestras are performing near you, log onto our website and click on the ‘Concerts and Events’ section.
Classic FM has a long history of working to develop the next generation of classical music lovers, supporting organisations such as Music for Youth, which runs the annual Schools Proms at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and The Prince’s Foundation for Children & the Arts, which has worked with the Philharmonia Orchestra to deliver an annual orchestral music education project to thousands of children across the UK, thanks to funding from the radio station’s charity appeal.
For more information about any part of Classic FM, log on to our website at www.classicfm.com
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The Top 300 Chart
RICHARD ADDINSELL
(1904–1977)
Dangerous Moonlight
Anyone who has enjoyed a lazy Sunday afternoon weepie may well be unwittingly familiar with Richard Addinsell. In particular, the 1939 classic Robert Donat classic, Goodbye Mr. Chips, which features a halcyon Addinsell score. Although it was his first major success, he was already thirty-five years of age and the veteran of numerous stage plays: Adam’s Opera and a brace of Lewis Carroll adaptations to name just three.
With hindsight, the romantic story of the 1941 film Dangerous Moonlight was always going to prove his overriding hit, though, with its star character, the Warsaw Concerto. Set in the midst of the conflict and arriving in wartime, this dashing tale of love and derring-do set hearts aflutter, and Addinsell’s score was the perfect match. Originally, the object of the producer’s attention was Rachmaninov. A score using a brand new Rachmaninov concerto would do perfectly, thank you very much. But when the famous Russian composer passed on the project, Addinsell was given the job, with a strong nudge in the ‘Sergei’ direction. With vital and musically crucial assistance from Roy Douglas, a man who worked as musical right-hand man to such figures as Vaughan Williams and Walton, the score to the story of the concert pianist at war became an international best seller, spawning a succession of British sound-alikes.
RECOMMENDED RECORDING
Cristina Ortiz (piano); Royal Philharmonic Orchestra; Vladimir Ashkenazy (conductor). Decca 414 3482
CHART POSITION 154
TOMASO ALBINONI
(1671–1751)
Adagio in G minor
Albinoni was a Baroque composer who had a financially rather well-cushioned life, thanks to the shares he inherited in his father’s stationery firm, which manufactured playing cards, among other things. In 1945, the Italian academic Remo Giazotto published a book on Albinoni entitled The Violin Music of the Venetian Dilettante. Albinoni was just one area of expertise for Giazotto. Others included the composers Vivaldi and Busoni, as well as the music of the Baroque and Classical periods in general in Giazotto’s native Genoa.
The academic’s expertise on the life and