Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Obituary: Felix Aprahamian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Obituary: Felix Aprahamian

    Obituary: Felix Aprahamian

    The Independent - United Kingdom
    Jan 18, 2005

    Lewis Foreman


    THE MUSIC critic Felix Aprahamian was a remarkable self-made man, an
    amateur who became a professional, whose enormous influence in musical
    circles was deeply founded in his practical experience of promoting
    music in London, notably by British and French composers.

    The son of an immigrant Armenian family - his father, Avedis
    Aprahamian (who had been born Hovhanessian), was naturalised at the
    turn of the century - Felix lived until the end of his life in the
    family home in Muswell Hill, London, to which they moved on 1 January
    1919, after Felix recovered from diphtheria. There he accumulated the
    unique library which survives him.

    Felix attended the local Tollington High School, and, becoming
    interested in the organ, had lessons from Eric Thiman, whom he
    assisted at Park Chapel, Crouch End. Felix Aprahamian would explain,
    half-jokingly, "I failed Matriculation because I discovered music",
    and otherwise only acquired formal education from evening classes,
    notably at the Working Men's College in Crowndale Road, where he later
    lectured. His father's carpet business was adversely affected by the
    crash in 1929, but even so he was able to use his contacts to find
    Felix a position in the City. He became an office boy in Fenchurch
    Street and Mincing Lane, but had no interest in the metal exchange or
    the produce markets, and at the same time was developing his musical
    interests by constant concert-going and by moonlighting with various
    organisations.

    He worked for the Organ Music Society, of which he was assistant
    secretary from the age of 17. In this capacity he was soon in
    correspondence with the leading French names of the day - Andre
    Marchal, Charles Tournemire, Maurice Durufle and the young Olivier
    Messiaen, even in his teens arranging their visits to London. When the
    society announced a series of improvisations in London, Aprahamian
    wrote to the leading composers of the day asking them to write themes,
    his respondents including Jean Sibelius, Benjamin Britten, Albert
    Roussel, William Walton and Constant Lambert.

    Aprahamian's enthusiasm led him to strike up acquaintance with many
    composers, and he never lost an opportunity to have his copies of
    their scores inscribed. In August 1933, the 19-year-old Aprahamian
    with two friends visited Frederick Delius at Grez-sur-Loing, and while
    in Paris, with his London organ credentials, inveigled himself a seat
    in the organ loft beside the aged Charles-Marie Widor, the old man
    obligingly autographing Felix's copy of the score.

    Thanks to his surviving diaries, these events are documented in
    amazing detail. Aprahamian could make a slim reminiscence go an
    enormously long way, and once, in the 1980s, to a group of visiting
    London press correspondents, he gave the full range of his
    contacts. One journalist said as he left the room: "That must the be
    most amazing example of sustained name-dropping I have ever heard!"

    Quite where Aprahamian acquired his fluent French he never revealed,
    though he did well in the subject at school, and he would recall his
    father first taking him to Paris in 1923. Yet during the Second World
    War he was able to broadcast in French from Bush House and certainly
    conversed fluently with his French friends and colleagues,
    interpreting for others where necessary. When, in the late 1980s, a
    French radio team visited London preparing a programme on British
    composers, he was far from pleased when they stopped him in full flow
    and insisted on recording his contribution in English, over which a
    French actor later read a translation.

    Working for ARP, he spent the war as concert director of the London
    Philharmonic Orchestra, and had vivid memories of the ruins of Queen's
    Hall the night after it was bombed - he kept one of the posters taken
    from the smouldering ruins. This took him to visit Keith Douglas, who
    for two years (1940, 1941) ran the Proms on behalf of the Royal
    Philharmonic Society from the Victoria Hotel, Rickmansworth. His work
    with the LPO led to an association with Sir Thomas Beecham, the
    conductor responding to Aprahamian's knowledge of Delius and the
    French repertoire, Aprahamian becoming an informal assistant.

    Aprahamian's sympathy for and knowledge of French music led him to
    become in 1942 the organiser of the Concerts de Musique Francaise for
    the Free French in London, working with Tony Mayer, Conseiller
    Culturel from the French Embassy, which gave him access to all the
    leading French performers and composers of the day. He presented 104
    concerts in all. On one occasion, he found the Princesse de Polignac
    standing in the queue outside the Wigmore Hall and was able to usher
    her inside.

    After the liberation of Paris, a wide circle of outstanding French
    musicians and composers included Francis Poulenc, Messiaen, Pierre
    Bernac and Pierre Fournier, many of whom became personal
    friends. Aprahamian worked from 1946 to 1984 for United Music
    Publishers, the principal agent for French music in the UK, his job
    described as "consultant". In fact he promoted French music in the UK,
    from a delightful office in Bloomsbury lined with photographs of the
    greatest French artists of the day inscribed to himself and dominated
    by a piano piled with music. Aprahamian's energy at this time was
    prodigious, one former colleague describing him as "effervescent".

    In 1982 Marchal's chamber organ was brought from the Basque country
    and installed at Muswell Hill specifically for Aprahamian's protege
    the organist David Liddle. Aprahamian was particularly concerned with
    the promotion of Messiaen and Poulenc, and later became associated
    with the organist Jennifer Bate, facilitating the arrangements for the
    London premiere of Messiaen's Livre du Saint Sacrement and playing
    host to Messiaen and his wife. When in waggish mood, he would take one
    to the door of his house pointing out a tree against which, in a
    moment of emergency, Poulenc had relieved himself.

    Aprahamian claimed his first contribution to the musical press was in
    1931 and his first in the newspapers in 1937. He had his first by-line
    as a critic when he was asked by the Daily Express to review a concert
    he had not attended and, by managing to find a way of evoking Faure's
    Ballade which he described as "evergreen", without actually describing
    the performance, found himself a working critic.

    He made his name as Deputy Music Critic on the Sunday Times where, for
    41 years from 1948 to 1989, he was required reading, notable for his
    literate and humane commentary, and for his desire to cover the
    breadth of London music-making rather than always the plums, and for
    his championship of the British and French music of the early 20th
    century at a time of serial extremes.

    Aprahamian also contributed erudite and well-judged record reviews,
    writing for Gramophone from 1964 until 1975. In his later years as
    critic he found it increasingly difficult to meet deadlines, and
    Gramophone dropped him. His end as a critic came when he published a
    review of a Gennadi Rozhdestvensky concert on the night Rozhdestvensky
    was ill.

    Aprahamian's innumerable programme notes set new standards for
    literacy and elegance, and his accounts notably of his favourite
    French repertoire deserve collection. He also wrote a great many
    articles, reminiscences and introductions to books, and edited and
    translated Claude Samuel's Conversations with Olivier Messiaen
    (1976). Nigel Simeone has published collections of his correspondence
    with Messiaen and Tournemire. Aprahamian was delighted when
    commissioned by John Murray to write his autobiography ("Byron's
    publisher," he would say), but was never able to make progress.

    The warmth of London music's appreciation of Aprahamian was all too
    apparent when on June 1994 the Nash Ensemble presented an 80th
    birthday concert for him at a packed Wigmore Hall. The programme
    consisted largely of French music.

    Aprahamian was celebrated for the brilliant detail of his recall, and
    once when engaged in conversation with Lady Bliss on the subject of
    butterflies impressed her and everyone present with his knowledge of
    the Latin names of all species mentioned. Thus, when he suffered a
    stroke in 1993, his characteristic tap of a finger on his temple with
    the remark "The old clockwork's still OK" was so reassuring. This,
    too, made his final illness so distressing when, after a succession of
    small strokes, he often would not recognise his visitors or
    remember. He also lost most of his hearing, which became distorted,
    organ music being most painful.

    Felix Aprahamian was a showman, an autodidact and a complete
    one-off. He helped many young musicians develop their careers and was
    associated with many associations and musical organisation, perhaps
    being most proud of his presidency of the Delius Society. In 1996 he
    was appointed Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in
    recognition of his contribution to French culture.

    Felix Aprahamian, music critic and concert organiser: born London 5
    June 1914; Honorary Secretary, Organ Music Society 1935-70; Concerts
    Manager, London Philharmonic Orchestra 1940-46; Deputy Music Critic,
    Sunday Times 1948-89; died London 15 January 2005.
Working...
X