This Man and Music: Q&A with Raymond Yiu

Posted by Bethan Hirst - Wednesday, 8 Apr 2020

Share

Raymond Yiu, composer of the song cycle The World Was Once All Miracle based on Anthony Burgess’s poems, describes his love for This Man and Music in this Q&A exclusive to the Burgess Foundation and Manchester University Press.

Tell us how you first came to Anthony Burgess’s This Man and Music. What impression did it make on you?

I first came across This Man and Music over 20 years in a second-hand bookshop. At the time I was interested in the music of Paul Bowles, and hence curious to know if there were any other writers who also composed. Discovering Anthony Burgess the composer via This Man and Music was timely. In fact, it was the first book of Burgess that I read. For that reason, I always saw him as a composer who wrote books.

Your journey as a composer is perhaps unusual as you are self-taught: as was Anthony Burgess. Did this similarity resonate with you? What other aspects of Anthony Burgess’s approach to music did you respond to?

"Burgess the dramatist is most evident.His music can be as unpredictable and surprising as his stories."

I think the fact that both Burgess and myself are autodidacts as composer allowed me to hear and understand his music in a more sympathetic way. Although technically far from perfect – after all, he did not get to hear his music until much later on in life, and composing is a practical craft which can only be improved by hearing the errors and misjudgments one made in his/her older works – all the compositions by him that I have heard displayed an unique sense of structure, and more important, an often unusual musical discourse. In a sense, Burgess the dramatist is most evident. His music can be as unpredictable and surprising as his stories.

Burgess’s most ambitious work is perhaps his Symphony in C, to which he devotes a chapter in this book. Who do you think were Burgess’s main influences, and what makes his music distinctive?

I think one of the towering figures in Burgess’s musical thinking is undoubtedly Beethoven, an obsession which can be traced from the way he discussed Symphony in C in This Man and Music and the fact that Napoleon Symphony (1974) is modelled on Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony. Harmonically, there are traces of the influence of Elgar, Britten, Hindemith, Walton, Tippett (most notably in the third m

This Man and Music is in part an autobiography and in part a book about composition. How would you describe it to those who haven’t seen it before? Why is it so worth a read?

It is a fascinating glimpse into a fascinating mind. To understand Anthony Burgess the writer completely, it is essential to see how the mind of Anthony Burgess the composer works, and one cannot find a more perfect place to do so that to read This Man and Music. Burgess always considered himself a composer who wrote words in order to make a living, and for that reason, I saw This Man and Music was a love letter to a mistress who he truly adored but knowing full well it would never be accepted fully by the general public.

You set Anthony Burgess’s poetry to music for your song cycle The World Was Once All Miracle. Tell us something about how you wrote that work.

 

This Man and Music and Revolutionary SonnetsTaking from my knowledge and impression of Anthony Burgess as a composer who wrote books, I wanted to create a musical impression of him of the music for the celebration of the centenary of his birth. After a lengthy period of research, I finally managed to locate six fragments from his poetry collection Revolutionary Sonnets (2017) to highlight the three things that concerned his most in his works – words, music and the conflict between good and evil. I have also taken into account of the several years that him and his first wife lived in Malay in the mid-1950s (which forms the premises of the third song in my song cycle). The title of the cycle, however, comes from Earthy Powers (1980).

 

We’re looking forward to your album appearing later this year. What are you working on at the moment, and what are you excited about for the future?

If everything is going as planned, the album of three orchestral works of mine, including The World Was Once All Miracle will be released later this year by Delphian Records. Currently I am composing work celebrating Beethoven 250 for Hong Kong Philharmonic, as well as a violin concerto in the pipeline.

Until April 30th, get 50% off any Irwell Editions brought from Manchester University Press. Enter the code IRWELL20 at checkout here.

 

Re-posted with kind permission of The International Anthony Burgess Foundation

 

 

Newsletter Sign Up

Manchester University Press
Close

Your cart is empty.

Total
Select your shipping destination to estimate postage costs

(Based on standard shipping costs)

Final cost calculated on checkout
Checkout
Promotional codes can be added on Checkout