By Daniel Jaffé

Published: Monday, 08 August 2022 at 12:00 am


It’s a pity that some of the most exciting and evocative music we know has been saddled with the misleading label ‘classical’. All the more ironic since certain styles of music regularly filed under that category feature in so many Hollywood blockbusters and increasingly sophisticated on-line and computer games (indeed, there has been a BBC Prom dedicated to just that genre of music in 2022).

Perhaps it’s best to regard ‘classical’ music as the equivalent of ‘literary fiction’: just as authors as diverse as Jane Austen, PG Wodehouse, James Joyce, Iris Murdoch, Tolstoy and Shakespeare are caught up in this single term, so JS Bach, Elisabeth Lutyens, Stravinsky, Florence Price, Walton and Philip Glass are all examples of ‘classical’. No ten composers, let alone a mere ten works, can do more than give a hint of the riches in store for anyone prepared and willing to embark on what can become a wonderful lifetime of discovery through centuries of some of the greatest and most enduring musical works filed under that capacious category.

All that said – here is a selection of works which are not just attractive in themselves, but which we hope will whet any beginner’s appetite to try other similar works or to explore more by a particular composer or period of music. We’ve tried, on one hand, to avoid ‘cheating’ by suggesting left-field or one-off works which aren’t typical of mainstream classical repertoire – while these can be exciting in themselves, so often they can lead to disappointment if a classical music beginner hopes to find more of the same.

We’ve also tried to avoid offering clichés of a particular genre or repertoire. While there’s something to be said for getting into such classics as Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony or Moonlight Sonata, they carry such a level of ‘familiarity’ (however based that may be on just a movement or even just an opening theme!) that it’s perhaps best to start with less obvious pieces which may surprise and (we hope) delight rather than lull the listener into thinking ‘I know this already’. So here are some suggestions which we hope are not too obvious, but which give solid starting points from which to start your own journey of discovery.

Best classical music for beginners

William Byrd: Haec dies (for unaccompanied chorus)

For many people, choral music – precisely because it is sung by human voices and usually involves the setting of meaningful texts – provides some of the most immediately engaging and sometimes transcendent experiences in musical performance. Here’s a relatively old classic, first published in 1591 during the reign of Elizabeth I by the English composer William Byrd. It was a time when England was enjoying an efflorescence in English literature – of which Shakespeare was just the most celebrated of writers – and was also home to some of the greatest composers to be found anywhere in Europe

. One of the greatest of these was William Byrd, a close friend and colleague of Thomas Tallis (whose fame was largely revived early in the 20th century by Vaughan Williams, who introduced several of his melodies to the English Hymnal and also famously used a theme as the basis for his Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis). Byrd’s music is, if anything, even more varied than Tallis’s: he wrote and published music both for the church and for domestic performance (both sacred and secular, since Byrd – as a secretly observant Catholic – wrote a deal of music for covert Catholic service usually performed in private chapels). Given his background, and the way Tudor music is generally presented in historical dramas, one might expect something grave and sombre. Not ‘Haec dies’ – here’s a major key but with an exuberant spring in its step, sometimes fooling the listener with its unexpected syncopated, almost jazzy rhythms.

Recommended recording: The New Company/Harry Bicket (Sony)

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