This is a classic documentary, the first of Ken Russell’s BBC films about composers. The scene in the cornfield with the music of Salut d’Amour has stayed with me ever since the original TV transmission forty years ago. Again and again Russell matches image and music to stunning effect, and his love of the music is infectious. As so often with him, scenes of exquisite sensitivity and taste are succeeded by others of plonking over-emphasis, and the constraints of 1962 TV make the film seem dated in places (actors in documentaries were not allowed to speak, let alone romp naked in sex scenes). It should also be noted that a lot has been discovered about Elgar since this was shot – so we don’t hear anything about ‘Windflower’ for example.
A huge bonus is the delightfully impromptu commentary in which Russell is interviewed by Michael Kennedy. The opening scene shows young Elgar riding a white pony over the Malvern Hills. When Kennedy points out that Elgar never rode, Russell says ‘Well, somebody rides a white horse in most of my films…’ He remembers Huw Weldon warning ‘not too many crucifixes now, Russell’. And we hear of his plans for a Wagner musical: ‘no singing, just the orchestra and people dancing… on motorcycles’. I could go on quoting… Russell is just as interesting a character as Elgar – someone should make a documentary about him.
The extra features include silent film of the Three Choirs Festival showing Elgar and Vaughan Williams, other luminaries of the English music scene and even George Bernard Shaw. The stills gallery has some excellent and evocative shots of the filming, including the whole film crew crammed in the back of a 60s estate car filming the white horse sequence. The whole package is very worthwhile.