Benjamin Britten: Incidental music for The Ascent of F6

Scope and Content

Incidental music for The Ascent of F6, a stage play by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood.

Signed by Britten on ff 1, 1v, 3, and 47. The volume is not dated.

Full autograph score, in ink (with some additions in pencil and red crayon), for voices (SATB), percussion, ukulele, and two pianos, as follows:

  • signed title page, in red crayon (f. 1);
  • 'Music to Group Theatre production of Ascent of F6' (a numbered list, in ink, of the sequence of compositions), and a note in pencil of the published scores available, stamped 'Boosey & Hawkes Rental Library' (ff. 1v-2);
  • 'I Overture', signed by Britten (ff. 3-11v);
  • 'IIA' and 'IIB', 'Entr'actes for Mr & Mrs A' (f. 12);
  • 'III Entr'acte & Gunn's Song' (f. 13-13v);
  • 'IV Pantomime & Mother's Song' (ff. 14-17v);
  • 'V Chant' (f. 18);
  • 'VIA Climbing Music' (f. 19);
  • 'VIB Climbing Music' (f. 20);
  • 'VIC Funeral March and Chorus (off)' (ff. 21-23);
  • 'VII Gunn's Song' (f. 24);
  • 'VIII Caberet [sic] Jazz Song' (ff. 25-38);
  • 'IX Mother's song with chorus' (ff. 39-42);
  • text fragment, partly struck-through with red crayon (f. 42v);
  • 'F6 Blues / ask the court to be cleared', beginning with Auden's text 'Stop all the clocks' (ff. 43-46v);
  • 'Prelude to Act II' (ff. 47-48).

First performance: 26 February 1937, Mercury Theatre, London. First broadcast: BBC TV, 18 September 1938. First broadcast with complete score: BBC National, 5 December 1938.

Access Information

Restrictions to access apply please consult British Library staff

Not Public Record(s)

Alternative Form Available

Digitised copy available on British Library Digitised Manuscripts: http://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?ref=Add_MS_60622

Physical Characteristics and/or Technical Requirements

Folio dimensions: 360 x 260 mm, except for several small pasted down or hinged folios (ff. 22, 23, 26, 28, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, and 38. A number of folios have been repaired with clear adhesive tape.

Bibliography

For the poem beginning 'Stop all the clocks' by W. H. Auden, from which the lyrics of 'Caberet Song' (ff. 25-38) are partly drawn, see Edward Mendelson (ed.), The English Auden: Poems , Essays and Dramatic Writings 1927-1939 (London: Faber and Faber, 1977), p. 163.