Early works Although there has been speculation about earlier works, Sorabji's first known (albeit lost) composition is a 1914 piano
transcription of Delius's orchestral piece
In a Summer Garden. His early works are predominantly
piano sonatas, songs and
piano concertos. Of these, Piano Sonatas Nos. 1–3 (1919; 1920; 1922) are the most ambitious and developed. They are characterised mainly by their use of the single-movement format and by their
athematism. The main criticism against them is that they lack stylistic consistency and
organic form. Sorabji developed a largely unfavourable view of his early works, described them as derivative and lacking in cohesion, and even considered destroying many of their manuscripts late in his life.
Middle-period works and symphonic style of Sorabji's
Tāntrik Symphony for Piano Alone. The numbering of
themes follows the manuscript. The
Three Pastiches for Piano (1922) and
Le jardin parfumé (1923) have often been seen as the beginning of Sorabji's compositional maturity. Sorabji himself considered that it began with his Organ Symphony No. 1 (1924), his first work to make ample use of
forms like the
chorale prelude, the
passacaglia and the
fugue, which are descended from
baroque music. The first piece to apply the architectural blueprint of this style is his Fourth Piano Sonata (1928–29), which is in three sections: • An opening
polythematic movement; • An
ornamental slow movement (labelled as a
nocturne); • A multi-sectional
finale, which includes a fugue. They have been described as being based superficially on either the fugue or the
sonata-allegro form, but they differ from the normal application of those forms: the
exposition and
development of themes are not guided by conventional
tonal principles, but by how the themes, as the musicologist Simon John Abrahams says, "battle with each other for domination of the texture". These movements can last over 90 minutes, and their thematic nature varies considerably: while the opening movement of his Fourth Piano Sonata introduces seven themes, his Second Piano Symphony's has sixty-nine. There is still a "dominant theme" or "motto" in these polythematic movements that is given primary significance and permeates the rest of the composition. music: an extract from "Anāhata Cakra", the fourth movement of his
Tāntrik Symphony for Piano Alone The nocturnes are generally considered to be among Sorabji's most accessible works, and they are also some of his most highly regarded; they have been described by Habermann as "the most successful and beautiful of [his] compositions", Sorabji's descriptions of his Symphony No. 2,
Jāmī, give an insight into their organisation. He compared the piece to his nocturne
Gulistān and wrote of the symphony's "self-cohesive texture relying upon its own inner consistency and cohesiveness without relation to thematic or other matters". Melodic material is treated loosely in such works; instead of themes, ornamentation and
textural patterns assume a preeminent position. The nocturnes explore free,
impressionist harmonies and are usually to be played at subdued
dynamic levels, though some of the later ones contain explosive passagework. They can be stand-alone works, such as
Villa Tasca, or parts of larger pieces, like "Anāhata Cakra", the fourth movement of his
Tāntrik Symphony for Piano Alone. Sections titled "aria" and "punta d'organo" (the latter of which have been likened to "Le gibet" from Maurice Ravel's
Gaspard de la nuit) are included in this genre. Sorabji's fugues usually follow traditional methods of development and are the most
atonal and least
polyrhythmic of his works. After an exposition introduces a
subject and one to four
countersubjects, the thematic material undergoes development. It is followed by a
stretto that leads to a section featuring
augmentation and a thickening of
lines into
chords. If a fugue has multiple themes, this pattern is repeated for each subject and material from all expositions is combined near the end. Sorabji's fugal writing has at times been treated with suspicion or criticised. The subjects can lack the frequent
changes of direction present in most melodic writing, and some of the fugues are among the longest ever penned, one being the two-hour "Fuga triplex" that closes the Second Symphony for Organ. This structural layout was employed and refined in most of Sorabji's piano and organ symphonies. In some cases, a
variation set takes the place of the slow movement.
Interludes and
moto perpetuo-type sections link larger movements together and make appearances in Sorabji's later fugues, like in the Sixth Symphony for Piano (1975–76), whose "Quasi fuga" alternates fugal and non-fugal sections. Other important forms in Sorabji's output are the
toccata and the autonomous variation set. The latter, along with his non-orchestral symphonies, are his most ambitious works and have been praised for the imagination exhibited in them.
Sequentia cyclica super "Dies irae" ex Missa pro defunctis (1948–49), a set of 27 variations on the original
Dies irae plainchant, is considered by some to be his greatest work. His four multi-movement toccatas are generally more modest in scope and take the structure of Busoni's work of the same name as their starting point.
Late works thinning out of his late music and its use of
extended harmonies In 1953, Sorabji expressed uninterest in continuing to compose when he described
Sequentia cyclica (1948–49) as "the climax and crown of his work for the piano and, in all probability, the last he will write". His rate of composition slowed down in the early 1960s, Sorabji's next two pieces, ''Benedizione di San Francesco d'Assisi
and Symphonia brevis for Piano
, were written in 1973, the year after the two first met, and marked the beginning of what has been identified as his "late style", one characterised by thinner textures and greater use of extended harmonies. Roberge writes that Sorabji, upon completing the first movement of Symphonia brevis
, "felt that it broke new ground for him and was his most mature work, one in which he was doing things he had never done before". Sorabji said his late works were designed "as a seamless coat'' ... from which the threads cannot be disassociated" without compromising the coherence of the music. During his late period and several years before his creative hiatus, he also produced sets of "aphoristic fragments", musical utterances that can last just a few seconds.
Inspiration and influences Sorabji's early influences include
Cyril Scott,
Ravel,
Leo Ornstein and particularly
Alexander Scriabin. He later became more critical of Scriabin and, after meeting Busoni in 1919, was influenced primarily by the latter in both his music and writings. His later work was also significantly influenced by the
virtuoso writing of
Charles-Valentin Alkan and
Leopold Godowsky,
Max Reger's use of
counterpoint, and the impressionist harmonies of
Claude Debussy and
Karol Szymanowski. Allusions to various composers appear in Sorabji's works, including his Sixth Symphony for Piano and
Sequentia cyclica, which contain sections titled "Quasi Alkan" and "Quasi Debussy" respectively. Sorabji wrote in 1960 that he almost never sought to blend Eastern and Western music, and although he had positive things to say about
Indian music in the 1920s, he later criticised what he saw as limitations inherent in it and the
raga, including a lack of thematic development, which was sidelined in favour of repetition. A major source of inspiration were his readings of
Persian literature, especially for his nocturnes, which have been described by Sorabji and others as evoking tropical heat, a hothouse or a rainforest. Various religious and occult references appear in Sorabji's music, including allusions to the
tarot, a setting of a Catholic benediction and sections named after the
seven deadly sins. Sorabji rarely intended for his works to be
programmatic; although pieces like
"Quaere reliqua hujus materiei inter secretiora" and
St. Bertrand de Comminges: "He was laughing in the tower" (both inspired by ghost stories by
M. R. James) have been described as such, Sorabji's interest in numerology can be seen in his allotting of a number to the length of his scores, the amount of variations a piece contains or the number of
bars in a work. Recent scholarly writings on Sorabji's music have suggested an interest in the
golden section as a means of formal division.
Squares,
repdigits and other numbers with special symbolism are common. Page numbers may be used twice or absent to achieve the desired result; Sorabji, who claimed to be of Spanish-Sicilian ancestry, composed pieces that reflect an enthusiasm for Southern European cultures, such as
Fantasia ispanica, ''Rosario d'arabeschi
and Passeggiata veneziana''. These are works of a Mediterranean character and are inspired by Busoni's
Elegy No. 2, "All'Italia! in modo napolitano", and the Spanish music of
Isaac Albéniz, Debussy,
Enrique Granados and
Franz Liszt. They are considered to be among his outwardly more virtuosic and musically less ambitious works. French culture and art also appealed to Sorabji, and he set French texts to music. Around 60 per cent of his known works have titles in Latin, Italian and other foreign languages.
Harmony, counterpoint and form Sorabji's counterpoint stems from Busoni and Reger, as did his reliance on theme-oriented baroque forms. His use of these often contrasts with the more rhapsodic, improvisatory writing of his
fantasias and nocturnes, which, because of their non-thematic nature, have been called "static". his largest works (for which he is perhaps best known) examples include his Piano Sonata No. 5 (
Opus archimagicum),
Sequentia cyclica and the
Symphonic Variations for Piano, which last about six, eight and nine hours respectively. Roberge estimates that Sorabji's extant musical output, which he describes as "[perhaps] the most extensive of any twentieth-century composer", may occupy up to 160 hours in performance. Sorabji's harmonic language often combines tonal and atonal elements, frequently uses
triadic harmonies and
bitonal combinations, and it does not avoid tonal references. It also reflects his fondness for
tritone and
semitone relationships. Despite the use of harmonies traditionally considered harsh, it has been remarked that his writing rarely contains the tension that is associated with very
dissonant music. Sorabji achieved this in part by using widely spaced chords rooted in triadic harmonies and
pedal points in the low
registers, which act as sound cushions and soften dissonances in the upper
voices. In bitonal passages, melodies may be
consonant within a harmonic area, but not with those from the other one. Sorabji uses
non-functional harmony, in which no
key or bitonal relationship is allowed to become established. This lends flexibility to his harmonic language and helps justify the superimposition of semitonally opposed harmonies.
Creative process and notation Because of Sorabji's sense of privacy, little is known about his compositional process. According to early accounts by Warlock, he composed
off the cuff and did not revise his work. This claim is generally regarded as dubious and contradicts statements made by Sorabji himself (as well as some of his musical manuscripts). In the 1950s, Sorabji stated that he would conceive the general outline of a work in advance and long before the thematic material. A few sketches survive; crossed-out passages are mostly found in his early works. Some have claimed that Sorabji used yoga to gather "creative energies", when in fact it helped him regulate his thoughts and achieve self-discipline. He found composition enervating and often completed works with headaches and experiencing sleepless nights afterwards. He wrote extremely quickly, and there are many ambiguities in his musical autographs, which has prompted comparisons with his other characteristics. Hinton suggested a link between them and Sorabji's speech, and said that "[Sorabji] invariably spoke at a speed almost too great for intelligibility", After complaining about errors in one of his open letters, the editor of the journal responded, "If Mr. Sorabji will in future send his letters in typescript instead of barely decipherable handwriting, we will promise a freedom from misprints". In later life, similar issues came to affect his typewriting.
Pianism and keyboard music As a performer Sorabji's pianistic abilities have been the subject of much contention. After his early lessons, he appeared to have been self-taught. In the 1920s and 1930s, when he was performing his works in public, their alleged unplayability and his piano technique generated considerable controversy. At the same time, his closest friends and a few other people hailed him as a first-class performer. Roberge says that he was "far from a polished virtuoso in the usual sense", Sorabji was a reluctant performer and struggled with the pressure of playing in public. On various occasions, he stated that he was not a pianist, Contemporary reviews noted Sorabji's tendency to rush the music and his lack of patience with quiet passages, and the private recordings that he made in the 1960s contain substantial deviations from his scores, attributed in part to his impatience and uninterest in playing clearly and accurately. Writers have thus argued that early reactions to his music were significantly coloured by flaws in his performances.
As a composer Many of Sorabji's works are written for the piano or have an important piano
part. His writing for the instrument was influenced by composers such as Liszt and Busoni, and he has been called a
composer-pianist in their tradition. Godowsky's
polyphony, polyrhythms and polydynamics were particularly influential and led to the regular use of the
sostenuto pedal and
systems of three or more
staves in Sorabji's keyboard parts; his largest such system appears on page 124 of his Third Organ Symphony and consists of 11 staves. In some works, Sorabji writes for the extra keys available on the
Imperial Bösendorfer. While its extended keyboard includes only additional low notes, at times he called for extra notes at its upper end. Sorabji's piano writing has been praised by some for its variety and understanding of the piano's sonorities. His approach to the piano was non-percussive, and he emphasised that his music is conceived vocally. He once described
Opus clavicembalisticum as "a colossal song", and the pianist
Geoffrey Douglas Madge compared Sorabji's playing to
bel canto singing. Sorabji once said, "If a composer can't sing, a composer can't compose." Some of Sorabji's piano pieces strive to emulate the sounds of other instruments, as seen in score markings such as "quasi organo pieno" (like a full organ), "
pizzicato" and "quasi tuba con sordino" (like a
tuba with
mute). In this respect, Alkan was a key source of inspiration: Sorabji was influenced by his
Symphony for Solo Piano and the
Concerto pour piano seul, and he admired Alkan's "orchestral" writing for the instrument.
Organ music Besides the piano, the other keyboard instrument to occupy a prominent position in Sorabji's output is the organ. Sorabji's largest orchestral works have organ parts, Organ Symphony No. 1 was regarded by Sorabji as his first mature work and he numbered the Third Organ Symphony among his finest achievements. He considered even the best orchestras of the day to be inferior to the modern organ and wrote of the "tonal splendour, grandeur and magnificence" of the instruments in
Liverpool Cathedral and the
Royal Albert Hall. Organists were described by him as being more cultured and having sounder musical judgement than most musicians.
Creative transcription Transcription was a creative endeavour for Sorabji, as it had been for many of the composer-pianists who inspired him: Sorabji echoed Busoni's view that composition is the transcription of an abstract idea, as is performance. For Sorabji, transcription enabled older material to undergo transformation to create an entirely new work (which he did in his
pastiches), and he saw the practice as a way to enrich and uncover the ideas concealed in a piece. His transcriptions include an adaptation of Bach's
Chromatic Fantasia, in the preface to which he denounced those who perform Bach on the piano without "any substitution in pianistic terms". Sorabji praised performers like
Egon Petri and
Wanda Landowska for taking liberties in performance and for their perceived ability to understand a composer's intentions, including his own. == Writings ==