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Composer Brian Elias: Making music with meaning

Elusive composer Brian Elias has a busy year ahead

April 13, 2017 14:45
Brian Elias
3 min read

Brian Elias has a packed schedule this year — and that is a bigger statement than it sounds. An elusive composer, now 68, who lives quietly in Golders Green, he has never been prolific. Yet now his star is in the ascendant. This autumn, his score for The Judas Tree returns to the Royal Ballet; the last ballet choreographed by Kenneth MacMillan, it was premiered 25 years ago. Before that, a cello concerto is due for its first airing. A new CD of his works is released this spring on the NMC label. And next week at the Wigmore Hall, the oboist Nicholas Daniel and the Britten Sinfonia premiere his new Oboe Quintet.

Why so few pieces? Partly, Elias suggests, because he is convinced music needs a real, urgent purpose behind it. This realisation, he says, was a breakthrough when he wrote L’Eylah (premiered at the Proms in 1984), paying tribute to his sister, who had died tragically of a drugs overdose. The title is a quotation from the Kaddish. “I became conscious that a piece has to have a reason for its existence and that it should be written out of real need, not simply to fill up paper or to fulfil a commission,” says Elias. L’Eylah was also the first occasion on which his music drew on his unusual Iraqi Jewish Indian background: “A solo viola quotes an Iraqi Jewish love song that our grandmother used to sing to us as a lullaby.”

He was born in Bombay and in childhood absorbed a rich soundworld from the surrounding melting pot of Indian street music, different languages and colourful dialects. He began trying to compose as soon as he started piano lessons, aged seven, “but it was only when I was sent to school in England that people really began to encourage me,” he says.

Later, having experienced disappointments at the Royal College of Music (“my teacher was usually drunk”) and Cambridge, which ended with a nervous breakdown, he took private lessons with the composer Elizabeth Lutyens, whom he met at the Dartington International Summer School of Music and who provided the intense, practical guidance he needed. “My first lesson with her lasted five hours,” he remembers, “as she showed me how to lay out an orchestral score properly.”