Serenade for Tenor, Saxophone and Orchestra (“My Dear Benjamin”)


Serenade for Tenor, Saxophone and Orchestra is a musical composition by Lyle Chan.
Its text is drawn from letters between English composer Benjamin Britten and his first romantic interest, Wulff Scherchen. This orchestral song cycle forms a section within Chan's larger work Voices and Instruments.
The work was commissioned by Queensland Symphony Orchestra and premiered at the 2016 Brisbane Festival on 22 September 2016. Scherchen died six weeks before the concert, at the age of 96, and the concert was dedicated to his memory.
Both Arts Hub and The AU Review included the song cycle in their Top Ten shows at the 2016 Brisbane Festival. It is one of 4 works shortlisted for Orchestral Work of the Year in the 2017 Art Music Awards.
The work has been broadcast in its entirety twice by ABC Classic FM, in November 2016 and January 2017.
A complete performance lasts approximately 40 minutes. The world premiere was performed by tenor Andrew Goodwin, saxophonist Michael Duke and the Queensland Symphony Orchestra under conductor Paul Kildea, the noted Britten biographer.

Historical background

Wulff Scherchen was a young German man, the son of the conductor Hermann Scherchen. Though they first met in Siena, Italy when Britten was 20 and Scherchen nearly 14, the romantic friendship did not begin until four years later when Scherchen had started living in Cambridge.
This relationship hit a crisis when World War II broke out and Scherchen was incarcerated as an enemy alien. He was deported to a Prisoner of War camp in Canada.
Throughout the relationship, Britten and Scherchen corresponded. "The one person constantly in my thoughts and on my mind without fail was you. No one else occupied my heart, my mind or my body,” wrote Scherchen to Britten in 1941.
Lyle Chan discovered this story via the book and film Britten's Children by John Bridcut. Chan met Scherchen after learning that he was alive at the age of 95 and living in northern New South Wales with his wife of over 70 years under the name John Woolford, which he had assumed after his release from enemy alien internment in 1941.
In 2015 Scherchen consented to have these letters turned into a song cycle. Chan theorized that Britten's own works contain a coded symbol of Scherchen, the saxophone, and so this instrument was given a solo role.

Structure

The song cycle is four sections containing thirteen numbers.

Epilogue and Part 1

"Epilogue", 1941
I: The Past Is Still Terrifyingly Alive
England, 1938
II: “I live in a wind mill”
III: “Well, old thing ”
IV: “No Presents”
V: “Go boil yourself”

Part 2

America, 1939
VI: “Wulffsick”
VIIa: “War has broken out”
VIIb: “I was interned on Whit Sunday”

Part 3

Canada, 1940
VIIc: “Not a love letter”
VIIIa: “One doesn't get answers”
VIIIb: Double Double Bass
IX: “You must forgive me”

Part 4

England, 1941
X: “I have returned to England”
XI: “It seems too good to be true”
XII: “My thoughts are put at rest”
XIII: Postlude