Did you know Britten’s Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra was initially composed for a film? Daniel Jaffé enjoys instrumental inspiration from piccolo to double bass as he compares the best versions of Britten’s didactic masterpiece

By Daniel Jaffé

Published: Monday, 07 August 2023 at 19:15 PM


Britten composed The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra late in 1945, fresh from the phenomenal success of his first full-scale opera Peter Grimes.

Why did Britten compose The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra?

Yet, significantly, he was first approached to compose his didactic masterpiece well before rehearsals for Grimes had begun. Not yet a celebrated opera composer, Britten was respected for his music for documentaries, having in the 1930s scored approaching 30 such films, including his legendary collaboration with WH Auden, Night Mail (1936). What became Young Person’s Guide was originally written for a 20-minute film featuring Malcolm Sargent and the LSO; this was to be Britten’s last and most celebrated film score.

Basil Wright, a former colleague and now producer-in-charge at Crown Film Unit – formerly the GPO Film Unit responsible for Night Mail – had first contacted Britten about the LSO film late in 1944. Following RA Butler’s 1944 Education Act, by which music for the first time became part of the British school curriculum, the Crown Film Unit was planning a series of educational films including one on the instruments of the orchestra, a project for which Britten appeared ideal.

Notwithstanding his other commitments, Britten accepted, and planning for the film proceeded. A typescript scenario dated 24 February 1945, presumably written in collaboration with Sargent and Wright, includes what was to prove the score’s masterstroke: after all the instruments have been presented according to their families – woodwind and brass, percussion and strings (albeit, the order ultimately changed in Britten’s final composition) – there was to be a ‘fugue-form bringing in all the instruments of the Orchestra section by section until the whole Orchestra is playing the grand climax’.

Britten, having seen Grimes to its premiere, then composed his song cycle The Holy Sonnets of John Donne and his Second String Quartet before finally tackling the film score in earnest in December 1945. For the opening theme played by full orchestra he used a theme from Purcell’s Abdelazer, incidental music written in 1695 for a play by Aphra Behn.

A guide to The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra