In 1936, Tippett became an executive member of the newly-formed Workers Music Association In 1934, he wrote a 'ballad opera' with the title Robin Hood, which, in his own words 'enabled me to reinterpret the legend of the famous outlaw in terms of the class war then dividing English society'. This and other early revolutionary pieces are never performed today. [The composer regarded these and other works of his from the period as musically immature.]
In the early 1930s, Tippett involved himself directly in questions of working-class culture. He became the conductor for amateur choirs organised through the Co-op in South-East London, and subsequently in the London Labour Choral Union. In 1932, he formed the South London Orchestra, based at Morley College, to find work for unemployed musicians (there were large numbers of former cinema musicians made redundant by the development of sound on film). He also worked in work-camp projects in Northern England, where community self-help schemes were being developed in the face of unemployment following mine closures. There he organised performances of The Beggar's Opera in 1933, and in 1934 of his own Robin Hood.
'In the mid-1930s', Tippett's cousin Phyllis Kemp began to involve him in discussions about Marxism. In response, he read Trotsky's History of the Russian Revolution (which had been published by Gollancz in 1932-33) and John Reed's Ten Days That Shook the World. He must also have had access to more immediately oppositional literature, because he writes that at this time he regarded Stalin as 'inherently a tyrant', and the Communist Party as 'slavishly Stalinist'.
In his biography of Tippett, Ian Kemp states that these ideas came from the propaganda of the Communist League, the British Section of the International Left Opposition. This group developed out of the Balham Group, a Trotskyist opposition within the Communist Party, and operated between 1932 and 1934. Reg Groves, one of the leaders of the Communist League, recalled that Tippett attended their meetings and took part in discussions, but was not a member. The Communist League managed to retain a toe-hold in the Communist Party until 1934, and their paper, The Red Flag, described the struggles of the Trotskyists within the Communist Party. Kemp's theory is therefore consistent with the available facts.
With Phyllis Kemp, Tippett was admitted into membership of the Communist Party after being examined for suitability by no less a figure than Emil Burns. He neglected to inform Burns that most of his political education came from Trotsky. He joined the Camden Town branch, but he gives us no account of his activity there. It was his intention to convert the party to Trotskyism, but whether he actually attempted any such thing is not recorded. In any event, he left after a few months, having made contact with some other Trotskyists (who presumably did not try to persuade him to conduct a protracted fight within the Communist Party). Nor does Tippett inform us of the name of the group he joined, or the names of any of his comrades (with the exception of a mention of Betty Hamilton, in a context where she could not be politically identified). One of Tippett's biographers, Meirion Bowen, dates the episode with the Communist Party to 1935, and claims that Tippett left having 'failed to convert his party branch to Trotskyism'. We know from Groves and Wicks how short-lived any open oppositional activity would have been.
Phyllis Kemp broke off relations with him because of his adherence to Trotskyism, and they did not meet for many years. Tippett found his own position reinforced by the purges and the Moscow Trials, and also by the way the Stalinists betrayed the Trotskyists and the Anarchists during the war against Franco. Tippett is generously and benevolently reticent about his relations with Alan Bush after this political break.
The group that Tippett joined was the Bolshevik-Leninist Group in the Labour Party, formed at the end of 1935. Work in the Labour Party was one of the key aims of this group, taking its central political perspectives from Denzil Dean Harber. Often known as the Youth Militant group, or sometimes just as the Militant group, they began to attract a cadre of skilled and experienced revolutionaries, including Bert Matlow and the formidable organiser Starkey Jackson. In Bornstein and Richardson's Against the Stream is an extract from a transcribed interview with Rose Carson, who remembered Tippett visiting her father's shop in the East End to buy copies of the Militant. (Sam Levy told me that he bought Trotskyist and Anarchist literature there, and once met Starkey Jackson visiting the shop.) But, again, the comments we have available are not adequate to date Tippett's affiliation to the group with much accuracy.
Tippett informs us that in the 1930s, he was in regular contact with activists in his local Labour Party (Oxted), and trying to make converts to Trotskyism there. The syntax of this section is, perhaps deliberately, obscure, and can be read as referring either to 1932 or to 1938. Certainly by the later date, he was attending Labour Party meetings with his neighbour 'Bolshie Ben' Lewis (previously a coal-miner in Wales, and subsequently a road-mender), and trying to convert Labour Party members to Trotskyism. This pattern of activity is strongly indicative of the guidance of the Militant.
We owe to John Archer's diligent research a document providing not only a definite date for Tippett's presence in the BLG, but also an indication of his significance within it. In preparing material which he intended to be appended to his article on CLR James in Revolutionary History, Volume 6, no 2/3 (Summer 1996), Archer provided us with a statement by the Executive Committee of the Bolshevik-Leninist Group in the Labour Party, dated 29 December 1936, addressed to the Bureau of the Fourth International.
In analysing the relations amongst the UK Trotskyist groups and the Fourth International, the Executive Committee of the BLG stated:
'The fact that the MG now have principled differences with the policy of our international organisation was admitted by Cde James in a conversation with Cdes Harber and Tippet [sic], when he stated that the reason why they had not expressed these differences in the form of theses was because they feared this would mean expulsion from the international organisation.'
Clearly then, by the end of 1936, Tippett's status within the BLG was such that he was able to take part in discussions amongst leaders of contending groups.
Another important political influence on Tippett in the 1930s was Paul Dienes, a mathematician who had served as Commissar for Education in the short-lived revolutionary government in Budapest led by Béla Kun at the end of the First World War. Dienes introduced Tippett to the writings of the major Anarchist theorists — Kropotkin, Bakunin, etc — as well as instilling in him an enthusiasm for the music of Bartók. Tippett explains: 'For Paul, Anarchism was the next step after the Communist revolution.'
In 1935, Tippett's agit-prop play War Ramp was performed in Labour Party halls around London. In its final scene (from which Tippett was later to recoil as his pacifism became more explicit), two soldiers returning from the First World War conclude that they should get back their guns to solve the social and economic crisis in which they found themselves.
There is reason to consider that Tippett was less than wholeheartedly in support of Trotskyist work in the Labour Party at this point. Ernie Rogers has informed us that Tippett wrote to the Leninist League in 1935, expressing agreement with their opposition to Labour Party 'entry work'.
A play was never going to satisfy Tippett as a means of expression. He began to make plans for a major musical work that grew out of his revolutionary ideas. Charlotte Despard suggested to him an opera about the 1916 revolution in Ireland, but this project did not make much progress. Tippett's determination to make a major musical statement of his political and ethical positions meshed with the gathering pace of political events in mainland Europe. The outcome was to be the oratorio A Child of Our Time, which probably remains his best known work. As he expresses it himself, 'the work began to come together with the sounds of the shot itself and the shattering of glass in the Kristallnacht'.
A central inspiration to the piece was the figure of Herschel Grynszpan, the young Jew who, in November 1938, shot a German 'diplomat', as a result of which a wave of terror was unleashed against the European Jews. Trotsky's article 'For Grynszpan: Against Fascist Pogrom Gangs and Stalinist Scoundrels' appeared in the US Socialist Appeal on 14 February 1939. The document which we reproduce below proves that Tippett was still actively involved in the Militant group at the beginning of 1938. It is almost certain therefore that he would have read Trotsky's article, and very likely that he would have taken part in selling and circulating it.
Trotsky wrote of Grynszpan in language and tone quite unusually emotional and moving (compare it, for example, with his obituary notice for Krupskaya only a few days later). He, of course, disagrees with Grynszpan's individualistic action, but is full of praise for his courage and self-sacrifice, describing him as 'the precious leaven of mankind'. It does not seem fanciful to see in this article one of the roots of Tippett's A Child of Our Time.
It was around this time that Tippett parted company with the Trotskyist movement, but his parting is as little documented as his arrival. We don't have any direct information on this development. The suggestion that he found too much conflict between his Trotskyism and his pacifism is probably not accurate. In 1935, Tippett had joined the Peace Pledge Union, a mass pacifist movement of people pledged never to support war, directly or indirectly. ..We know that he continued as an active Trotskyist at least into 1938, so there was an extended period during which he was active in both movements.
In June 1943, he was imprisoned for following his Peace Pledge through to its practical conclusion — a refusal to take part in any war work. In his letters from prison, he mentions correspondence with Betty Hamilton, one of the longest-serving of the Trotskyists in Britain, but gives no more information. Although his term in Wormwood Scrubs lasted only a few weeks, and was not especially unpleasant by the standards of the times, Tippett had made his point, and was not pressed any further by the authorities.
In 1948 and 1949 attempts were made to recruit Tippett into the circuit of international peace congresses and similar events (splendidly satirised by Anthony Powell in his A Dance to the Music of Time) through which the Moscow bureaucracy sought to influence and manipulate the international intelligentsia. He declined all such blandishments, and continued to do so in protest at the Stalinist repression in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
Although Tippett never returned to the Trotskyist movement, the following extract from a letter to the Guardian, 16 January 1998, from Peter Young illustrates how in later life he held to the political lessons he had learned from Trotsky and Trotskyism:
'Sir Michael Tippett was 74 when I met him during my research into conscientious objection in the Second World War. My first impression of him as being his own man was confirmed in his early remark: "Being a natural maverick, I read Trotsky before I read Marx and was pretty clear that Trotsky had the truth of it. Stalin's notion of Socialism in One Country was a backward move." Appalled by Stalin's show trials, he explained that he began to ponder issues of violence and the extent to which an artist could or should abstract himself from social commitment.'
Tippett & The Lee Affair
In 1937 Tippett put in writing his views on the 'Lee Affair', which exploded within the Militant group in November that year. During the summer, a group of South African Trotskyists arrived in London and joined the Militant group, operating in the Paddington Branch, to which Tippett refers several times. Depressingly quickly, rumours began to be circulated amongst the Militant leadership to the effect that one of the South Africans, Ralph Lee, had misappropriated strike funds from a struggle by laundry workers he had led in South Africa. These rumours in fact originated with the South African Stalinists, but in London they were not challenged by the Militant leaders. When Lee discovered what had happened, the result was a series of angry meetings, culminating in Lee quitting the group, accompanied by Ted Grant, Gerry Healy, Jock Haston and others. The Fourth International intervened in the affair, and condemned the actions of the Militant leadership, and also criticised the walkout by the Lee group. But by that stage, the breach was irreversible, and the Lee group was to become the Workers International League.
Tippett's statement was written after the departure of Lee's group, but several months before the International Secretariat announced its views. Whilst he does not condemn the split as unpolitical, as the International Secretariat was to do, he criticises the failure of the Lee Group to force a fuller discussion of the issues and methods involved. But he adopts no even-handed pose here. His trenchant criticisms are directed squarely at the leadership, and he proposes that the strongest disciplinary measures against them should be considered.
This is not a resignation statement, but it does indicate a clear move away from the Militant group, and the beginning of a search for a better context in which to operate. We have no information available on how Tippett carried out his search, and when he decided to break from the Militant. We know from an interview given by Ted Grant to Sam Bornstein that Tippett was a supporter of the WIL for a short period, recruited by Betty Hamilton, but we have no information at present about how long he remained in the movement.
3. The following two short passage on Tippett can be found in Against the Stream, Vol.I of a History of Trotskyism in Britain by Sam Bornstein and Al Richardson (1986: Socialist Platform ISBN 09508 42311).
(i)
In an interview with Rose Carson (Rosa Selner): a member of an old revolutionary family Chapter 10
"All kinds of people came down to buy the Militant - Michael Tippett, for instance, and other famous people came in. I can't remember names now. And eventually Harber came down to see us, and the South African, Van Gelderen ..."
(ii)
Appendix Two
Michael Tippett and the Trotskyist Movement
The latest biography of Michael Tippett notes that Tippett was attracted to the Trotskyist position as a result of reading the propaganda of the Communist League; and Reg Groves recalls that he came along to several of their meetings and took part in their discussions, but that he was not a dues-paying member, or an activist, as far as he was aware. However, the statement that he, never ' joined a Trotskyist Party' is certainly incorrect. An earlier account by Meirion Bowen is far more accurate when it describes Tippett as joining the Communist Party for a few months in 1935 but leaving 'when he failed to convert his party branch to Trotskyism'. He was part of the Musicians' Group of the Bolshevik/Leninist Group in the Labour Party (the Militant Group), and his anti-militarist play, War Ramp, was performed at various Labour Party rallies. On 8th January 1938 he wrote a letter protesting about the handling of the 'Lee Affair' to the leadership of the Militant Group and according to Ted Grant he was a supporter of the WIL. for a short time, recruited by Betty Hamilton, who had been a pupil of Isadora Duncan. But in 1940, despairing of the ability of Trotskyism to halt 'the barbarities of Nazism and Stalinism', he joined the Peace Pledge Union and registered as a conscientious objector. He spent three months in prison for resisting the terms of registration.
Notes
I. Kemp, Tippett: The Composer and His Music, London, 1984, pp.31-3.
Reg Groves, Conversation with Al Richardson, 30th June 1985.
Kemp, Tippett, p. 33.
M. Bowen, Michael Tippett, London, 1981, p. 21.
To be dealt with in our next volume.
Interview with Sam Bornstein, 22nd August 1982.
Bowen, Michael Tippett, p. 23.
A further note on Tippett came to light in 1995, long after the book from which the extracts came was published, when this document was copied. From the context Tippett is certainly a member of this Trotskyist group since he is participating in a faction fight or at any rate is being used in one by being cited as a witness. The reference comes in a "Statement to the Bureau for the Fourth International from the Bolshevik-Leninist Group in the Labour Party regarding the fulfilment of the Geneva Resolution in the Question of the Unity of the British Groups." from "The Executive Committee, Bolshevik-Leninist Group in the Labour Party" and the letter is dated Dec. 29th, 1936. The Bureau mentioned operated from Paris. The statement, seeking support from the International, and in my view somewhat nasty and sectarian in tone, goes as follows:-
"d. The majority of the group who have taken this new turn consists almost entirely of the personal following of Comrade James, who is himself completely under the ideological influence of the Field group and is in close touch with Crame of the Canadian section of the Field group. It is obvious from the resolution of James passed at the Nov. 15th meeting of the MG that in so far as they have any political line at all in carrying out their new turn they base themselves in the arguments of Bauer, Oehler, Field etc. The fact that the MG now have principled differences with the policy of our international organisation was admitted by Cde. James in a conversation with Cdes. Harber and Tippet when he stated that the reason why they had not expressed these differences in the form of theses was because they feared this would mean expulsion from the international organisation." (Spelling of MT's name as in the original.)
The James mentioned is the late CLR James, the celebrated Afro-Caribbean writer, whose book on the slave revolt in Haiti, The Black Jacobins is still in print. MG is the abbreviation for the Marxist Group. Tippett is clearly part of the Harber faction. Harber himself, after leaving Trotskyism, took up bird watching and managed to create an enormous faction fight among the ornithologists. Harber's boy, Julian, has given all his father's papers to a university and no longer makes any conditions about who can look at them. Bauer, Oehler, Field or Crame – were other dissident Trotsyists or Marxists. Bauer may be Erwin Bauer a German, Oehler is Hugo Oehler an American.
This information did not appear in the book cited above as the document concerned was not made available to the authors. The man who had this piece (a now v. elderly follower of the old Harber) also wanted to write a history of Trotskyism.
The following can be found in a note Chapter 7 (The Bolshevik-Leninists and the Militant) page 220 of Dr Martin Upham's doctoral thesis, (Hull University, September 1980, The History of British Trotskyism to 1949). It refers to Trotskyist activity in the Musicians Union.
Principal activist was Michael Kemp Tippett (1905- ) a Royal College of Music graduate who taught French at Hazlewood until 1931. He then entered adult education in music, working for the L.C.C. and the Royal Arsenal Cooperative education departments. Tippett had worked for a time with the Marxist League and Marxist Group and was now the organiser of Socialist International Press a translators' group service formed on an IS initiative on 1 March 1937, (Who's Who; 'Statement of MT', 8 Jan. 1938, HP, DJH - 2A/ 100),
And on page 228-229 in the main body of the text, same chapter
The discussion over Lee, which seems to have occupied the whole Militant organisation for two months reveals little sense of proportion. In their letter to the executive Harber, Jackson and van Gelderen spoke of it being the 'only revolutionary group'. A letter from Harber to Betty Hamilton, (a French member of the Central branch who had backed Lee), talked of only fifty functioning members in London, ten of whom were on the EC.3 One group member who tried at least to understand how such a minor affair could gain this importance was Michael Tippett, who detected a residue of the 'low political and moral level of the past', (by which he meant the Marxist League and the Marxist Group). Those longest in the movement, were, he thought, the most likely to be drawn into personal recriminations. Exhibitions like those at the General Members' Meeting, which he had not attended, would be 'unthinkable in a group of comrades that felt the living revolution as at all imminent'. Tippett thought the situation was worsening and called for a new leadership, free of suspicion. (Note As from the Central Group, 26 Nov. 1937, H.P., D.J.H. 2a/9a.) Another explanation was volunteered by Hamilton who thought group members were recruiting their personal friends rather than working in the wider movement. Tippett's fears were confirmed in December. Camille (Klement) the IS secretary expressed alarm at the 'bad internal situation' in the group, (.Note 'Camille' to Jackson, 5 Dec. 1937, H.P., D.J.H. 2a/9b.) and the centre was deluged with letters from members levelling (and occasionally retracting) charges. ……….. Tippett at least attempted to generalise, (Note M. Tippett [to the Militant Group], 11 Dec. 1937, H.P., D.J.H. 2a/9c. Tippett linked the Lee affair to the suspension of the Liverpool Group and concluded that in the face of war those anticipating illegal or semi-legal work would have to look elsewhere for leadership.) but it is impossible to dissent from the lament of K. Alexander who had witnessed two months of strife and frenzy from afar:
'I sign for the translation of all that labour power into the more fruitful channels of work in the Labour Party'
On 19 December 1937, a GMM heavily condemned splits and called for adherence to Group decisions. But Lee and his supporters insisted on the expulsion of the officials who had mishandled the affair. When this did not happen they withdrew. (See Note. Below). Everyone who accompanied Lee was from his own Paddington group, (E.S. Jackson to [South African Trotskyists), 30. Dec. 1937, H.P. 2B.3.15).] Tippett and Hamilton, nominated for the vacant EC places, refused to fill them.
Note. The withdrawal took place early in the meeting during discussion on matters arising from the minutes of the November G.M.M. They may have just pulled out of the meeting, (Interview with E. Grant, Jan. 1973). Group leaders believed they were leaving the Group, (Comments of E.C. on Statement of Former Members of Paddington, Central and North Groups, March?) 1938 , H.P.). Tippett, who was well-disposed towards them, believed they should have followed the meeting through, (Statement of Comrade M.T., 8 Jan. 1938, H.P. 2a/10a).
Page 230.
The split was formalised the following year by a letter from nineteen former Militant Group members to the Group.(Note. see Below) Much of the letter was concerned with the Lee affair..
Note. To the Militant Group, 10 March 1938. Signed by K. Chapman, F. Clifford, T. de Moor, B. Fisher, R. Freislich, B. French, T. Grant, J. Haston, B. Hamilton, G. Healy, D. James, K. Kemshead, M. Kahn, H. Lee, R. Lee, T. Mundy, H. Ratner, M. Tippett, E. Truman.
And a note on page 336
Hilary Sumner-Boyd withdrew from collaboration with Ralph Lee after the second issue of WIN, (see Chapter VIII). Michael Tippett, to whom the WIN project had appealed, (see: Statement of M.T., 8 March 1938) now ceased to be involved with Trotskyism. In 1940 he became Director of Music at Morley College, and in June 1943 was sentenced to three months imprisonment as a conscientious objector.
To explain the dramatis personae mentioned here. Groves, one of the founders of British Trotskyism, died in 1988 but had a High Anglican funeral to the horror of all the Trotskyists attending it who included Tony Cliff (Gluckstein) the guru of the Socialist Workers Party. Groves was probably secretly a High Anglican all his life and he wrote a fascinating biography of Conrad Noel the "Red" Vicar of Thaxted - worth reading. His widow Daisy Groves, lives in South London and is in touch with us. Ted Grant, aged over 80, was the rather boring guru of the Militant Tendency (only a very distant relation of the other Militant mentioned) but was thrown out in 1993 and has but a tiny group (Socialist appeal) round him now. I last spoke to Ted at the funeral of Sam Bornstein in 1990. Betty Hamilton was of Swiss origin (Jewish), as a girl knew Max Platten who organised Lenin's train through Germany from Zurich, and she was later a supporter of the Workers' Revolutionary Party whose guru, Gerry Healy, died in 1990. She was about eighty-five, lived in Victoria, had been a dancer and was trained by Isadora Duncan.
Ralph Lee (Kahn) committed suicide in South Africa to which he had returned, (for his life see Revolutionary History Vol 4 No.4 pp57-84) while his sister Millie, still alive, is the widow of Jock Haston, the leader of the united (for once) wartime Trotskyist group. Jock was an ex-cat burglar. Starkey Jackson was killed in the war when his ship went down, Harber, a graduate of the LSE, is dead - his son is an academic in Yorkshire's muesli belt - while Charlie van Gelderen lives in Cambridge.