This composition, kith, is about two geographies, two cultures, one friendship. Originally, the Old English word ‘kith’ meant a person’s home, or native land, referring more specifically to a knowledge of and a frequent contact with the natural outdoors: woods, moors, streams, mountains, shores and such like. In more recent social history, ‘kith’ has become a familiar term to mean friends, as in the commonly used alliterative phrase ‘kith and kin’ to denote ‘friends and relatives’. In this one movement work for unaccompanied double bass, ‘kith’ is freely combined in both of the above given senses, of geography – place – and human friendship, with the two friends depicted within characterised by a folk song from each of their respective home lands.
After a brief introduction, the opening section alludes to Flamborough Head on the Yorkshire coast, where David Heyes spent many a happy childhood summer, exploring rock pools on the beach beneath the distinctive horizontal layers of white chalk cliffs and watching waves, and sometimes the mist, roll in from the North Sea, as well as to listening at night to the boom of the Flamborough Head lighthouse when such fog emerged. The second section consists of two variations on the English folk song, ‘A Sailor in the North Country’, a song collected by Ralph Vaughan Williams in Horsham, West Sussex during 1904. A loud, low ‘boom’ from the lighthouse transports player and listener to a completely different place.
The village of Lány, in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic, 35 km west of Prague, is where František Posta was born and brought up. The word ‘Lány’ means ‘fields’ in Czech and the village’s symbol on their coat of arms and flag is a clover. One can imagine colourful green meadows full of wild flowers surrounding the home of young František, through and where the country loving boy could rejoice, roam and rest; and this image informs the central third section of ‘kith’. In the fourth there is a variation of the Bohemian folk song, ‘The Farmer’, modelled on the characteristic wild rhythm of a Czech folk-dance called The Furiant, which Smetana utilised in his opera ‘The Bartered Bride’ and one that Dvo?ák introduced rhythmically in his First Symphony.
This elides into the short final section, an almost straight forward melodic setting of ‘A Sailor from the North Country’. In the little coda, the opening few bars of the ‘Flamborough Head’ and ‘Lány’ themes are joined together, pivoting on the fulcrum note of G (neatly belonging to both snatches of melody), on which open chord the work ends. This piece, full of musical metaphor, connections and memory, is warmly dedicated to David Heyes to celebrate the 95th birthday of František Posta, each a great player of the double bass and each a wonderful teacher of that instrument. (Programme note by John Alexander, November 2013)
- ISMN: 9790570457007 (M570457007)