The listener does not need to be
a genius of musical and literary allusion to guess who Robin Stevens’s
‘affectionate tribute’ is dedicated to. Each year Her Majesty the Queen and her
family spend time at Balmoral. The ‘eponymous’ suite takes a quirky look at
several Scottish dances and suggests some evocative moods with a few twists and
turns in the harmonic language. I guess the titles of the movements are
timeless, and do not require the listener to put names to endeavours,
especially ‘Grandpa hankering after the past’! The heart of this suite is the ‘Celtic’
infused ‘A Graceful Beauty’. This movement is a well-judged balance between the
recorder and strings. It is quite gorgeous. The finale enters the ‘rough and
tumble’ of the nursery and majors on the exploits of ‘younger Royals’. This is
a forceful jig presenting some discordant moments that do not upset the ‘regal’
aspect of this suite.
Peter Hope’s Geordie Tunes
have appeared on CD before with harpsichord accompaniment (Recorder
Fireworks PRIMA FACIE PFCD010). In
2010, Hope orchestrated these five dances. Geordie Tunes are always
interesting and just occasionally quite moving. The two slow movements, ‘Bonny
at Morning’ and ‘Blow the Wind Southerly’ are simply delicious. Who can hear
the latter without thinking of the late Kathleen Ferrier? Fortunately, any
sense of sorrow is blown away with ‘Bobby Shafto.’ They are a masterclass in the writing of a
folk song suite.
The most heart-felt work on this
disc is the beautiful ‘Elegy for Tony’ by Anthony Hedges. This was written in
2017 for a memorial concert given in memory of Anthony Goldstone who died in
January of that year. The ‘Elegy’ is a masterpiece, with a wonderfully
interactive relationship between the wistfulness of the recorder and the deeply
romantic sounding orchestra.
A Playford Garland,
written in 1982, does exactly what it says in the tin. Nicolas Marshall has
taken several tunes from John Playford’s collection, The Dancing Master
and has worked them up into a charming suite. Marshall’s original version of
this work was for recorder and guitar.
The liner notes suggest that
Wilfred Heaton’s Little Suite is ‘concise in scale’ but ‘big in character.’
They evoke a wide variety of moods in a very short timescale. The work opens
with a strong fanfare, is followed by a Bartokian dance, and then a grave
‘cantabile’ which really slows the pace of the work down. The fourth movement
is a brisk march. Interestingly, the finale seems to be a summing up of what
has already been heard. This is the most ‘modernist’ and piquant movement in
the Suite. The documentation does not mention when this piece was composed. I
am guessing it was probably sometime in the 1950s. It is the most challenging
piece on this disc. And one of the best.
Elis Pehkonen’s ‘Twilight and
Evening Bell’ is written in ternary form: a vigorous ‘Medieval Dance’ is
bookended by slow, thoughtful music that has a bell accompaniment. The bells
used on this recording once belonged to early music specialist David Munrow. ‘Extended’
playing techniques occur in both the recorder part and the strings.
The Recorder Concerto was
composed by David Beck in 2006. There are three movements. The opening ‘Nocturne’
that seems to be spooky, rather than romantic, makes use of the deep tones of
the bass recorder and the ‘rattling bones’ of the xylophone. Super Halloween
music! ‘Seascape’ begins with phrases that sounds just a touch like Britten’s ‘Sea
Interludes’. But soon Beck’s own hand takes over. This is moody, sometimes
slightly turbulent music. ‘Playtime’ begins with a recorder tune that eventually
gets into all sorts of trouble: it opens quietly but ends with lots of fun
without ever getting out of hand. This Concerto has been well-orchestrated.
I enjoyed the New World Dances,
Op. 62a, for recorder and strings by John Golland. Originally written for
recorder and guitar (or piano), these three dances were reworked to feature a
string orchestra. The opening ragtime is pure pastiche/parody, but who cares? It
is quite charming. This is followed by a cool blues of the lazy, ‘gone fishin’ kind.
The finale is a rumbustious ‘Bossa Nova’. Here things really get into the
groove, with the recorder breaking for the border. A great work and deservedly
popular in places where they blow the recorder.
Colin Hands’s Saltarello, for
recorder and string quartet is the finale extracted from a three movement Concerto
Cantico written for Carl Dolmetsch back in 1983. The composer was unhappy
with the work and immediately withdrew it. Some years later it was revised,
however, the complete work was now somewhat unbalanced. Especially with a very
long opening movement and a finale which is less than three minutes long. So,
we only hear this ‘Salterello’, which is sweet and too short really. It ends on
a question mark – an interrupted cadence. A ‘salterello’ is an energetic folk-dance
from Italy and was popular in the 16th century. It was noted for
including leaps and jumps in the melody.
It goes without saying the man
behind virtually every work on the CD is the redoubtable John Turner. Where
would contemporary recorder music be without him? Every work is splendidly
played by Turner and the ensemble. The liner notes written/assembled by the
recorderist are most helpful, even if the tiny font is hard on the eyes. The
total timing of CD not given, and date of the Wilfred Heaton work is not (as
noted above) included.
This CD presents an excellent
choice of repertoire. As the cover states: ‘Old Favourites’ and ‘A few
rarities.’ Splendid stuff.
Track Listing:
Balmoral Suite and other Recorder Favourites
Robin STEVENS (b.1958) Balmoral Suite, for recorder,
strings and harp: Overture – ‘The Family Gathers’; ‘Grandpa hankers for the
Past’; ‘A Graceful Beauty’; ‘Enter Great-Grandpa’; ‘Rough and Tumble in the Nursery’
(2017)
Peter HOPE (b.1930) Geordie Tunes, for recorder,
strings and harp: ‘Go to Berwick, Johnnie’; ‘Bonny at Morn’; ‘Fairly Shot of
Her’; ‘Blow the Wind Southerly’; ‘Bobby Shafto’ (2009/10)
Anthony HEDGES (b.1931) Elegy for Tony, for recorder,
string orchestra and harp (2017)
Nicholas MARSHALL (b.1942) A Playford Garland, for
recorder and strings: ‘The Old Mole’; ‘The Irish Lamentation’; ‘Prince Rupert’s
March’; ‘Spring Garden’; ‘The Fit’s come on me now’ (1982)
Wilfred HEATON (1918-2000) Little Suite, for recorder
and string orchestra: Grave/Prestissimo; ‘Con Energia’; ‘Cantabile’; ‘Giocoso e
Ritmico’; ‘Presto’ (1950s?)
Elis PEHKONEN (b.1942) Twilight and Evening Bell, for
recorder, string orchestra and bells (2013)
David BECK (b.1941) Concerto No. 2 (Tableaux), for
recorder, strings, harp and percussion; ‘Nocturne’; ‘Seascape’; ‘Playtime’
(2006)
John GOLLAND (b.1942) New World Dances, Op. 62a, for
recorder and strings; ‘Ragtime’; ‘Blues’; ‘Bossa Nova’ (1997)
Colin HAND (1929-2015) Saltarello, for recorder and
string quartet (1984)
John Turner (recorder); Manchester Sinfonia/Richard Howarth
Rec. St. Thomas's Church Stockport on 5-6 April 2018
PRIMA FACIE PFCD 101 [70:54]
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review
was first published.
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