With this unexpected, subtle masterpiece, Walton established himself as a major composing talent; Julian Haylock finds the best recordings of his Viola Concerto

By Julian Haylock

Published: Tuesday, 14 March 2023 at 12:00 am


Walton’s Viola Concerto established at a stroke his unique creative voice. For several years he had tried distilling the dazzling stylistic range of his Façade (1921) into a convincing long-range structure. There are hints of what was to come in the Portsmouth Point overture and orchestral Siesta, as well as 1927’s Sinfonia Concertante for piano and orchestra.

Yet, as The Times remarked as part of a generally enthusiastic review of the latter, ‘Mr. Walton has not yet fully found his individuality’.

When did Walton compose his Viola Concerto?

In 1928, on a winter holiday in Amalfi, Italy, Walton began making provisional sketches for the Viola Concerto, but his heart wasn’t really in it.

It was the conductor Thomas Beecham who had first suggested he write a concerto for British viola supremo, Lionel Tertis – although Walton was at a loss to see why. At the time, Walton could barely stand the instrument, which he thought made ‘an awful sound’, and could recall only one decent piece of viola music, Berlioz’s Harold in Italy. 

Yet Beecham had clearly spotted something conducive in Walton’s emerging style to the viola’s soulful musical voice – the sense of a lone introspective pitted against the combined might of a modern symphony orchestra. As the 26-year-old Walton warmed to his task, he discovered this was indeed the perfect vehicle for uniting the seemingly disparate elements in his musical personality.

The nostalgic longing at the heart of his creative universe became fused with a rhythmic pizzazz, harmonic pungency and melodic vitality that would become indelible trademarks of his later work. Not only that, but he fully immersed himself in the viola’s elusive soundworld, combining its natural flair for bittersweet cantabile eloquence with a previously unsuspected penchant for pyrotechnics.   

Convinced he had a masterwork on his hands, Walton duly sent the completed manuscript to Tertis for his approval. However, in their enthusiasm, both Beecham and Walton had overlooked Tertis’s conservative nature.

Declaring the work ‘too modern’, Tertis flatly refused to play it. It was only after attending the premiere, with ‘shame and contrition’ (as he put it in his autobiography), that he dramatically revised his opinion and became an enthusiastic advocate.