By George Hall

Published: Friday, 31 December 2021 at 12:00 am


Let’s start at the beginning. Or, at least, what used to be the beginning. As someone who has been attending orchestral concerts for a very long time, I’ve noticed that over the decades we have witnessed the decline of the overture to a point where it’s relatively unusual to find a concert that starts with one. What has happened?

It was once very different. I’m looking at a programme for A Grand Miscellaneous Selection of Music conducted by Henry Bishop at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, on 4 April 1832. The substantial order of service was in three parts, each commencing with an overture: Weber’s Der Freischütz; Spontini’s Grand Overture to Nurmahal; and Rossini’s Grand Overture to Semiramide.

Move on 26 years, to the Hallé Orchestra’s first concert under its founder conductor Charles Hallé, at Manchester’s Free Trade Hall on 30 January 1858: it, too, opened with Der Freischütz, but also included Auber’s La Sirène and Rossini’s Le siège de Corinthe.

The early Prom seasons conducted by Henry Wood also featured plenty of overtures. The opening programme at London’s Queen’s Hall on Saturday 10 August 1895 began with Wagner’s Rienzi and Ambroise Thomas’s Mignon overture also featured. But during the 20th century, as orchestral concerts became shorter and, from the 1960s onwards, began to feature long symphonies by Mahler and Bruckner, the overture started to disappear from its regular spot as the opener (which is, of course, what the French word ‘ouverture’ means).

I raise the subject with Sir Mark Elder, whose two decades as chief conductor of the Hallé Orchestra (one of the best orchestras in thew world) have revived that ensemble’s artistic reputation. He tells me that when he first started conducting at the BBC Proms as a young man, the BBC controller of music, Robert Ponsonby, virtually banned operatic overtures. ‘He wouldn’t let me do them,’ says Elder. ‘He said, “they belong in the theatre, and that’s where they’re going to stay”.’

Elder agrees that overtures are now something of an endangered species, and reminds me that ‘programmes of 100 or 150 years ago very often had a sort of mixed-bag feeling. The “big listen” was often at the beginning of the first half. I’m trying to bring that back. I think that if you have the “difficult” listen in the first half, and then do a second half that is intentionally made up of shorter, lighter pieces, that’s a very nice way to have an evening of music.’

Does he think that the once near-ubiquitous format of Overture – Concerto – Interval – Symphony, known in the business as ‘meat and two veg’, worked? Or had it become a bit stale? ‘It worked, but you need to ring the changes to make the concert-going experience unexpected and full of variety, so that the public is intrigued.’

Still, isn’t there a risk of losing a lot of rather good pieces by not performing overtures? ‘Yes, absolutely. I enjoy them. In June, we’re welcoming an audience back into the Bridgewater Hall, and I thought we should do two pieces that show off the orchestra and different parts of our Hallé personality. So, it will be Petrushka – Interval – Enigma. Then I started to think about it, and I realised that what this programme needed was a curtain-raiser. People will be coming to the Hall for the first time in a while. Petrushka is about 35 minutes, and it’s a wonderful, colourful listen, but it is a listen, so we’re going to do Glinka’s Ruslan and Lyudmila immediately as a sort of gunshot. It just feels completely right to me.’