With the outbreak of World War II UE London operated under the aegis
of Boosey & Hawkes, where Kalmus added a new concern, the Anglo-Soviet
Press, to propagate the music of leading Soviet composers.
UE London became independent again in 1949, and on 5th June 1951
the new “old” Universal Edition, the original holding,
was re-established in Vienna.
The board members were Alfred A. Kalmus, Alfred Schlee and Ernst
Hartmann.
In London, a brave and bold publishing programme also started in
the 1950s, with the decision to publish the music of Richard
Rodney Bennett. The Mines of Sulphur provoked
a mixture of applause and cushion-throwing at its Italian premiere
at La Scala, whilst his Jazz Calendar became a
regular feature of the Royal Ballet's repertoire.
Publication of a wind quintet, Refrains and Choruses,
in 1957 marked the beginning of a long and fruitful association
with Sir
Harrison Birtwistle, stretching for almost 40 years. Emerging
from the progressive 'Manchester School' of composers, the uncompromising
music of Birtwistle provided a challenging antidote to the prevailing
tradition in Britain, as manifested in the performance of Punch
and Judy at the Aldeburgh Festival in 1966.
David
Bedford also joined UE London in the 1960s. Perhaps one of the
first 'crossover' composers, he orchestrated Mike Oldfield's Tubular
Bells and also composed Star's End for
rock instruments and orchestra. In expanding the frontiers of musical
expression, his works sometimes called for such extra-musical resources
as kazoos, balloons, pebbles and milk bottles.
In the 1960s, the music department of York University had established
a reputation for progressive training in composition and the notation
of contemporary music. At the forefront of this initiative was the
composer Bernard Rands, whose music this company has published for
nearly 40 years.
York University also provided and early impetus for UE London's
educational programme. The Music for Young Players series appeared
under the guidance of York's Dr John Paynter, and an enterprising
annual summer school, 'New Music in Action', was organised by UE
London in association with the university. At that time, music teaching
in schools was also undergoing change, and UE London led the field
in providing resources for the creative and experimental approach
that was then developing.
Since then, a significant part of UE London's remit continues to
be devoted to the thriving activity of music in education. There
are few examination syllabuses throughout the world that do not
feature the works of UE London's composers. James
Rae's and Mike
Cornick's works, for example, have regularly found a place on
the syllabuses of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.
But of equal importance is the provision of music which is both
enjoyable and challenging to the developing musician.
In 1969 Dr Kalmus was honoured on the occasion of his 80th birthday
with musical tributes from many leading composers of the time, including
Boulez,
Berio
and Stockhausen.
A Garland for Dr K, performed
at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, on 22nd April 1969, demonstrated the
esteem in which he and the company was held.
Dr Kalmus died in 1972 and John Palmer became Managing Director.
Throughout the next two decades many of the finest composing talents
were welcomed to the company and promoted by William Colleran, a
director who was committed to the task of furthering new music.
These composers included:
Michael
Finnissy, Simon Holt, Vic
Hoyland, James MacMillan, Dominic
Muldowney, Nigel
Osborne, Paul
Patterson and Peter
Wiegold. The UE London catalogue also features three of North
America's leading avant-gardists, Earle
Brown, Morton
Feldman and R
Murray Schafer, and from Australasia, Barry
Conyngham, Ross
Edwards, Jennifer
Fowler, David
Lumsdaine, Richard
Meale and Julian
Yu.
The internationally renowned composer David
Sawer has been published by UE London since the 1980s, and his
opera From Morning to Midnight was received to
great acclaim at its English National Opera debut in 2001. Sawer’s
Piano Concerto, premiered by Rolf Hind at the 2002
BBC Proms, was referred to as a “real jeu d’esprit”,
and Rebus, a musikFabrik commission, has been premiered
with much success in Germany and London (the latter performance
forming part of a day-long focus by the London Sinfonietta on Sawer’s
music).
Meanwhile, the Irish composer Ian
Wilson has enjoyed many performances of his works in places
as diverse as Venice, Granada, Amsterdam, Dublin, Flensburg, Oslo,
Paris, Budapest, Stockholm, Warsaw, Geneva, Gozo, Mexico City, and
of course in the three homes of UE: Vienna, London and New York.
Wilson’s work has been called “economical, subtle and
perfectly judged“ whilst he is considered “a composer
of integrity, resourcefulness and (crucially) genuine communicative
gifts“.
Recently, the young London-based composer Roxanna
Panufnik has been signed up to Universal Edition. Much in demand
for her fascinating choral and vocal works, a recent commission,
however, from Savannah Festival, is a violin concerto, Abraham,
which was premiered to great acclaim by virtuoso Daniel Hope.
Universal Edition London continues to this day to nurture the best
of musical composition whether this be for the stage or the school,
the concert hall or the curriculum.