To be continued…
This essay was first printed in the 2021 edition of Spirited, the Journal of the English Music Festival.
‘Smart, well-written and knowledgeable’ – Saga Magazine
I guess that one of the hazards for pianists is playing the rags at too great a tempo - as high-speed novelties. Joplin himself once wrote that "It is never right to play Ragtime fast." Here Licad approaches the tempo correctly: the playing is always neat and cool, rather than frenetic. Her approach to repeats is to bring variation in colour, voicing, and dynamics. The basic left-hand pattern of a rag is “oom-pah” and usually the syncopated right hand needs to be crisp and sometimes a little wayward. Licad captures this balance effectively, ensuring the rhythm remains the focus without becoming mechanical.
The Entertainer (1902) shot to fame in the 1973 film The Sting, starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford. Like countless others I bought the score and found I could make a reasonable fist of it. In the intervening years, this rag has become a bit hackneyed, and it is to Cecile Licad’s credit that she is able to bring a charming freshness to this world-famous number.
For those who think that all rags are indistinguishable, the Solace (A Mexican Serenade) is a refreshing change. Joplin has been influenced by the Tango here, and has created a moody, melancholic little composition.
As a little encore, Licad has concluded her recital with Bill Evans’s quiet and contemplative Peace Piece. It provides a poignant, ‘modern’ contrast to the syncopated vitality of the preceding rags.
This is not a chronological account of these rags. Unfortunately, no dates are given for each piece, but Licad’s presentation is based on variety of moods and styles. She has performed this recital on a Steinway concert grand rather than using a “honky-tonk” or parlour piano, so there is warmth and subtlety here. Yet the original brightness and vivacity have not been sacrificed. The liner notes give a fair introduction to the repertoire, although more detail might have been given about each piece. There are brief notes about the genre’s historical context.
I was taken by all four works on first hearing, and they have remained favourites for more than half a century. Even so, it was the Liszt that captivated me most, and I played it over and over again.
A few years later I discovered another version of this piece on a remarkable LP which I found in the school music room library. This was Clifford Curzon’s LP, A Liszt Recital (Decca SXL 6076). The details are straight forward. The recording was made at the Sofiensaal, Vienna during sessions in April and September 1963. It was engineered by Gordon Parry and produced by John Culshaw. Interestingly, the recording was made using Decca’s “wideband” stereo era technology, which was noted for its clarity and warmth. Side A offered the Sonata in B minor, with Side B comprising present piece, the Valse oubliée No. 1, Gnomenreigen, and the Berceuse - a sequence that places the Liebestraum as the programme’s lyrical centre of gravity.
The album was later released on international issues (e.g., London Records CS 6371 in the US, 1964) which helped cement the recording’s reputation and ensured wide circulation. It has since been remastered on CD.
A few words about Clifford Curzon may be of interest. He was born in Islington, London of 18 May 1907. He was originally named Clifford Michael Siegenberg, with the family changing their name on the outbreak of the First World War. Precocious, he entered the Royal Academy of Music in 1919, where he would become a sub-professor by the age of nineteen. He won the Macfarren Gold Medal in 1924. Curzon continued his studies with Artur Schnabel in Berlin and Wanda Landowska and Nadia Boulanger in Paris. His first Promenade Concert appearance was on 3 October 1924, playing the Concerto for Three Keyboards in D minor, BWV 1063 under Sir Henry Wood, aged only seventeen.
International recognition came
during the 1930s eventually making an acclaimed tour of the United States in
1939. Despite having a wide-ranging repertoire, he specialised in Mozart,
Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, and Brahms, with critics praising his
combination of delicacy, structural insight, and expressive depth. He was honoured
with major distinctions including CBE (1958), knighthood (1977), and the Royal
Philharmonic Society Gold Medal (1980). Sir Clifford Curzon died on 1 September
1982.
While Franz Liszt published three Liebesträume (“Dreams of Love”) in 1850, it is the third number that has achieved near-universal immortality, while its companions remain rarely performed. Like many of Liszt’s finest lyrical works for the piano, it began life as a song: specifically, his 1845 setting of Ferdinand Freiligrath’s poem O lieb, so lang du lieben kannst (“Love as long as you can love”). Liszt revised the original song twice before publishing this definitive solo piano transcription in 1850, transforming a vocal reflection into a Romantic masterpiece that prioritises expressive narrative over strict formal complexity.
The piece begins quietly in A‑flat major, with its well‑known, soaring melody floating over soft, rippling chords. For the middle section, Liszt gently moves into the brighter, more remote key of B major, giving the music a lift in colour and emotional intensity. As it develops, the writing becomes fuller and more dramatic. There are two delicate, virtuosic cadenzas that serve as structural hinges. The music rises to a passionate high point, where the main theme returns in bold right‑hand octaves above sweeping figures in both hands, before everything gradually settles into a calm, reflective ending.
Listen to Clifford Curzon playing Liszt’s Liebesträume No.3 on YouTube, here.
Organ buffs might have explored the ten organ symphonies and discovered that the movements in these are good, and perhaps, indifferent. For those of us who indulge in obscurity, there may have been adventures with one or other of the two piano concertos, the Symphony No.1, the Violin Concerto, or the Piano Trio and Quintet. That said, I imagine precious few will have discovered the piano music.
The advertising flyer for this new disc from Danacord, explains that Daniel Grimwood recognised that Widor was “so famous and so unknown” after reading John R Near’s definitive modern biography and was made aware of the solo piano music. This has, until now, remained in the shadows.
The recital opens with the Variations sur un Thème original, op. 29 (1892), which were a recrafting of the earlier Variations de concert sur un thème original, op.1 (1867). The liner notes suggest that this work most approximates Widor’s organ music style but also includes nods to the baroque era. Charming is the best description of most of this work with Variation No.4, Adagio, being quite profound.
Grimwood rightly suggests that Widor’s Carnival (1889) is modelled on Schumann’s eponymous album. He describes this twelve-movement collection as “sexy, profound, whimsical, dangerous, [and] occasionally silly.” Like the elder composer’s work, it is a vivid sequence of character pieces portraying masked revellers, friends, lovers, and alter egos: Widor presents a “varied cast” without always giving a hint as to who is who.
The collection is framed by two
marches, Timbales et Trompettes and the cheeky Finale. The
loveliest is Francesca, who may or may not nod to the Italian noble
woman of Rimini, portrayed by artists, writers, and composers since Dante. This
is ravishing music, which could well stand alone. There are various dances
here, including a fine Bal Masqué, a vibrant Hongroise and an
elfin Entrée Turque. And one wonders who Zanetto (a young poet
and minstrel from the later Pietro Mascagni 1896 opera?) and Rosita were
modelled on. This is a wonderful collection of pieces, that typically should be
heard together (with the aforementioned exception).
The notes explain that Widor’s Cinq Pièces, op. 71, was probably completed around 1895. They were not published until 1903 followed by subsequent revisions and later editions. The stunning opening Valse gaie has several contrasting sections, staccato, complex whimsical and with clear nods to Schumann. This is succeeded by the brief, lugubrious Valse triste, which is excessively chromatic. The Kermesse carillonnante has been described as “Widor’s most bravura style piano piece, made to measure for concert use…” This is a celebration of a saint’s festival, and features insistent chromatic runs, bell-like sonorities, vivid arpeggios, and hints of waltzes. Different in mood is the “desolate” Valse oubliée, however relief is brought about by a delightful Schubertian waltz as the contrasting theme. This is a love lost and recalled. Daniel Grimwood provides a suggested narrative for Après la Fête, which implies “morning-after recollections of a party stabbed through with pangs of guilt a drunken misdemeanour or other.” I am not quite so sure about this contention: again, there seems to be some angst here that suggests a misunderstanding with the beloved… Overall, the Cinq Pièces’s graceful textures and virtuosity place them within the French piano tradition shaped by Saint‑Saëns, Franck and Fauré.
The delicious Nocturne (1892) was originally part of the incidental music for Auguste Dorchain’s play Conte d’Avril, based on Shakespeare’s comedy Twelfth Night. The liner notes suggest that this present transcription came by way of the third movement (there a Romance) of the Suite for flute and piano, op.34 (1884).
It does not come as a shock to discover that the final track on this disc presents Widor’s own piano transcription of his most legendary movement from his best-known organ work, the Toccata. The pedal part is cleverly absorbed by the left hand, with the beloved figurations still complete in the right. It makes a splendid conclusion to an interesting and novel recording.
Daniel Grimwood is noted for his performances of 19th-century virtuosic piano repertoire, particularly of the works of German composer, Adolph von Henselt. He has appeared at significant venues worldwide, including the Wigmore Hall, and Symphony Hall, Birmingham, as well as venues in Europe, Egypt, Lebanon, and Oman, and Australia. Grimwood is a Research Associate at the University of York, specialising in 19th-century performance practice. For enthusiasts of British music, his recording of works by Doreen Carwithen and William Alwyn (Edition Peters, EPS007, 2019) was warmly received by critics.
With clear, vibrant sound and scholarly liner notes, this release successfully rescues Widor’s piano output from the shadows of his organ symphonies. Daniel Grimwood proves to be the ideal advocate for these "character pieces," successfully navigating their varied moods. It is a novel, refreshing recording that leaves the listener with a single thought: why has it taken this long to hear them?
Track Listing:Although Butterworth rarely quoted traditional melodies outright, he seems to have absorbed the idiom of British folk music so completely that it re-emerged in his work as something unmistakably personal yet firmly rooted in the soil of his homeland. The most characteristic examples of his art are the two song cycles on A. E. Housman’s A Shropshire Lad. These much‑loved poems, which have inspired many composers, are here set with a modern sensibility and a striking originality.
The Rhapsody (1912) functions as an orchestral epilogue to the two cycles, drawing on the theme
from one of them- Loveliest of Trees:
Rather than interpreting the poem directly, the Rhapsody offers a kind of musical after‑image: the impression of someone recalling the song long afterwards, stirred by its memory into gentle regret and longing.
The work opens with a soft A‑minor
chord in muted strings, over which the violas introduce a brief figure in
thirds, echoed by the clarinets. This motif returns several times with subtle
variations, always in the same instrumental colours, establishing a mood of
tender melancholy. At bar sixteen, following a harp chord, a lyrical clarinet
phrase emerges; five bars later, another short idea appears in the woodwind and
violins. These three ideas form the backbone of the piece and recur throughout.
Their development unfolds across
several pages until a half‑climax is reached, marked by an emphatic trumpet
phrase above a descending figure in the lower brass and a drum roll. The music
then intensifies, the orchestration thickening for a time, before subsiding
into a quieter passage where a new theme moves gently in the strings. The
woodwind joins in, and the work soon surges toward a passionate full‑orchestra
climax.
The remainder of the Rhapsody
continues to develop the now-familiar material with a remarkable sensitivity to
atmosphere and orchestral colour. As the close approaches, the opening mood
returns, and the piece ends quietly on the same chord with which it began.
Listen to Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s 1955 performance of George Butterworth’s A Shropshire Lad, Rhapsody for Full Orchestra on YouTube , here.
The six-movement Lyric Suite was completed during early October 1926. It is a definitive example of Berg’s ability to blend late-Romanticism with his personal adaptation of Schoenberg’s serialism. But it is not just a wonderful blend of tonal and atonal material; it also encodes a secret autobiographical programme, first fully revealed by the scholar George Perle. The work is understood to incorporate allusions to his affair with Hanna Fuchs. To this end, Berg used numerology, ciphered initials (A-B-H-F), and many hidden musical quotations. Unsurprisingly, the progress of this quartet covers a wide range: often anguished, sometimes ecstatic, clearly mirroring his clandestine relationship. Before Perle’s scholarship, a listener would hear this Suite as abstract modernist chamber music, with wildly varying emotions, but always bound by a strong structural logic. Understanding the Berg/Fuchs relationship simply adds a human touch: a series of “Intimate Letters” to his lover.
Briefly, Erwin Schulhoff was a Czech-Jewish composer and pianist who fused jazz, Dada, modernism, and late-Romanticism in his opus. He pioneered the treatment of jazz as a serious art form in Europe. He was (unsurprisingly) banned by the Nazi regime as musically degenerate. Tragically, his life and prolific career were cut short in 1942 at the Wülzburg concentration camp.
A different air is breathed in Webern’s freely atonal Five Movements for string quartet, op.5, completed in 1909. By now, he was nearing the end of his apprenticeship with Schoenberg. He stated that the inspiration was the death of his mother in 1906. Here there are no Romantic gestures: these miniatures are compressed to the barest of essentials. It is a fragile sound of isolated notes, half-heard whispers, and sudden explosions of colour. Webern uses a variety of techniques to create his sound world: harmonics, mutes, novel or rarely used instrumental techniques, and silence. The concept of “Perpetual Variation” is inherent, avoiding any sense of repetition or recapitulation in a traditional sense.
The liner notes, written by Nicolas Derny, give a good introduction to all four quartet. They are printed in English, French, and German. The recording is outstanding.
This new recording by the Leonkoro Quartet brings clarity, character, and emotional integrity to three strikingly different modernist voices (four pieces), offering a satisfying introduction to each of these remarkable works.
Track Listing:William Hurlstone (1876-1906 ) wrote
many pieces of chamber music, including his Phantasy String Quartet which won
the first W.W. Cobbett Chamber Music Prizes in 1905. The runners up in this
competition were Frank Bridge and James Friskin. There was a Piano Quartet
published in 1906, a Trio for violin, cello and piano as well as a Wind Quartet
for flute, oboe, horn and bassoon. Hurlstone
wrote a number of sonatas – including one each for bassoon, violin, piano solo
and cello.
The Cello Sonata in D major was probably composed around 1899, the year after he graduated from the Royal College of Music where Hurlstone had studied piano with Algernon Ashton (1859-1937) and Edward Dannreuther (1844-1905) and composition with Charles Villiers Stanford (1852-1924).
The Sonata is dedicated to the
British cellist May Mukle (1880-1963) who ‘by the turn of the century…was fully recognized not only as
an outstanding musician, but as one of the most remarkable cellists this
country had produced.’ (The Times, 1
March 1963) She often played the Cello Sonata with Hurlstone and continued to
promote this work in the years after the composer’s early death.
The premiere of the Sonata was on 5 December 1899 at a British Chamber Music Concert in the recital room attached to the Queen’s Hall. The soloists were Herbert Walenn, cello and Ethel Bauer, piano. May Mukle did not perform the sonata until 29 October 1900, when she was accompanied by William Hurlstone at the Pembroke Hall, West Croydon.
The Cello Sonata is presented in four classically balanced movements, with the scherzo being placed third. The opening ‘allegro ma non troppo’ begins with a striking theme, displaying ‘neat precision’ which is followed by a more reflective and folk-like melody. This movement is unusual in having the second subject precede the first in the recapitulation. It was a device that Hurlstone would use again in his Trio in G major. The ‘adagio lamentoso’ owes a debt to Brahms and Schumann with its serenity and subtle interplay between the piano and cello. Sometimes there are hints of Elgar. The ‘scherzo’ is quite short: it is characterised by incisive playing in the outer sections, whilst the ‘trio’ is relatively gentle and straightforward. The finale, ‘allegretto moderato’ is in rondo form and is bursting with ‘fresh air and sunshine.’
In 1944, May Mukle sent a letter to the composer’s sister Katherine, who was gathering material for a memorial volume. (William Hurlstone, Musician: Memories and Records by his Friends, London, Cary & Co.,1947) Mukle wrote: ‘Hurlstone’s Sonata for cello and piano is…one of his best works, and I am very proud to think that it was dedicated to me, and that I had the happiness of playing it with the composer many times, when it was still in manuscript.’
May Mukle has suggested that the work has ‘a freshness than can never be dated.’ Interestingly, Hurlstone suggested to the critic and composer Marion Scott that he felt it was ‘a bit too sugary’ however Scott insisted that this was just a reflection of his innate modesty and being ‘progressively self-critical.’ In fact, William Hurlstone has created a truly amiable work for cello and piano.
Listen to William Hurlstone’s Cello Sonata in D major on YouTube, here. The performers are
Andrew Fuller, cello and Michael Dussek, piano.
With thanks to the English Music Festival, where this essay first appeared.
The list of contributors reads like a "who’s who" of British music: Alexander Mackenzie, George Dyson, Marion M. Scott, Edgar L. Bainton, Thomas F. Dunhill, Charles Wood, Rebecca Clarke, James Friskin, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Cecil Forsyth, and Cyril Rootham
Frank Bridge studied at the RCM from 1899 to 1903. This puts his "period of more than twenty years" into perspective- he is looking back at his formative student years from the height of his own career. Bridge’s recollection of Stanford’s contempt for the "vulgar" provides a perfect opening to explore the fascinating irony that he - who would eventually embrace a radical, dissonant modernism - still credited his old master’s traditionalist "refining influence" for providing the solid architectural foundation necessary to effectively break the rules.
Bridge wrote: “It may be that the perspective of an early impression is altered by the march of time, or indeed by the present day enthusiasms which inevitably dominate one’s point of view, but after a period of more than twenty years there remains the conviction that in Sir Charles Stanford we all had a master-mind at work. Whether during a composition lesson or at an orchestral rehearsal, one was conscious of the power and sincerity with which he exercised his art. His complete sympathy with the classics and their traditions was an outstanding quality which he happily imparted to all who came under his refining influence.
Note:
[1] Bridge’s phonetic
transcription of Stanford’s accent ("me bhoy") is a classic
trope among Stanford’s pupils (Vaughan Williams and Holst often recalled
similar quips). It highlights the blend of intimidation and affection his
students felt.
Fortunately, Duncan Honeybourne has come to the rescue with this delightful album of piano miniatures by this forgotten composer. Sadly, there is precious little information about Reginald Redman on the internet or in reference books. The above-mentioned volume manages a single paragraph, and there is no mention whatsoever in Grove Music Online. Philip Scowcroft of this parish came to the rescue with a page long discussion, here. I am also beholden to the liner notes written by the pianist.
Synthesising these texts provides
a brief but essential biography. Reginald “Rex” Redman (1892–1972) was one of
the BBC’s most accomplished regional conductor‑composers. Trained at the
Guildhall School, he joined the Western Region of the BBC founding the West
Country Studio Orchestra and West Country Singers. Though small and confined to
light repertoire, the orchestra flourished under Redman and successors John
Bath and Frank Cantell. As noted above, Redman was a prolific composer: his
light orchestral music which included picturesque titles like Marston Court,
From a Moorish Village, Pan’s Garden, West Country Suite, and
Away on the Hills were especially admired.
This is not an album designed for a continuous sitting. Most of the tracks are short, averaging two or three minutes, the longest being the Three Preludes lasting for more than a quarter of an hour. They tend to blur. Select a title that appeals and enjoy.
The recital opens with the impressionistic Mist on the Moors evoking the landscape of Bodmin or Dartmoor. I am not sure what the mysterious Cornish Legend is referring to. There are so many to choose from. But surely it is a secret well kept. There is a sense of the tricksy about the Arabesque, with its improvisatory freedom. Honeybourne notes that La Nuit seems to be “alternating touches of Chinese music with that of church music”! The Lyric Piece may nod towards Edvard Grieg: it is a charming little number. Once again Redman looks to Asia with his perfumed The Mystic Garden. It is a thoughtful nocturne. The Graceful Dance is just what it says on the tin: slightly Baroque in tone. Hardly a lullaby, the Cradle Song is more complex in mood and technique than its title suggests. A fantastic seascape is created with On the Cornish Coast, which has all the stormy drama of Greville Cooke’s Cormorant Crag. One of the best pieces on this disc. The Great God Pan is evoked in his quieter mood in The Lonely Faun although he becomes a little more playful in the central episode. Once again Gossamer lives up to its title – delicate and ethereal.
Three of these miniatures appeal to children of whatever age! The Lullaby for a Kitten is deliciously sentimental. This is followed by Deep in the Woods which is more about a “Famous Five” adventure rather than a psychodrama. And finally, Children at Play, is pure salon music that conjures games, chases, and hide-and-seek.
In Changing Moods is fun. Moving between whimsy and reflection it is well-wrought with lovely tunes and subtle harmonies. Both In a Gondola and Venetian Barcarolle provide an enchanting picture of ‘La Serenissima.’ They should be played as a “set.”
Reginald Redman’s Song of the Fountain is not as elaborate as Ravel’s Jeux d'eau or Franz Liszt’s Les jeux d'eau à la Villa d'Este: it is more of a little water-feature in a Home Counties garden. The short Humoreske is a piece of two parts: vivacious in its opening and closing and with a lyrical trio section. It is not necessarily ‘humorous’ in the modern sense, but touched with wit, grace, and a gentle eccentricity.
It should be noted that those who choose to download or stream can access additional tracks including At the Opera (1935) and In Amberley Vale (1925)
British pianist Duncan Honeybourne is noted for his deep sympathy with British and Irish repertoire and his championship of neglected music. He has explored a wide range of “forgotten” composers including Greville Cooke, Geoff Cummings-Knight, Archy Rosenthal, and William Baines.
This new disc gives long‑neglected Reginald Redman a toehold in the recorded legacy. These miniatures, by turns atmospheric, whimsical, and deeply felt are played with characteristic warmth, sincerity, and imagination.
Track Listing:How does a musical revolutionary
remember a traditionalist? In July 1924, a few months after the death of Sir
Charles Villiers Stanford, his former pupil Frank Bridge offered a surprising
answer.
On the death of the elder composer on 29 March 1924, many tributes were written about him. A selection by his former pupils were included in the journal Music & Letters (July 1924). These included words by Ralph Vaughan Williams, George Dyson, Ivor Gurney, Herbert Howells, and Frank Bridge.
Frank Bridge (1879-1941) was a pivotal figure in early 20th-century British music, bridging the gap between Victorian tradition and modernism. A competent violist and conductor, his deep understanding of string instruments infused his chamber music, such as the evocative piano trios and string quartets. While his early works like the orchestral The Sea radiated late-Romantic warmth, the distress of World War I pushed him toward a more radical, expressionistic style. He became the link between Victorian/Edwardian tradition and the modernism of his own pupil, Benjamin Britten.
Robert Farnon’s miniature Holiday Flight epitomises this social shift. It was composed around 1958 during the post-war golden age of British light music. It reflects the optimism and glamour of commercial air travel during this period. Enthusiastically, it presents flying as adventurous, novel, and stylish. It is a quintessential example of light orchestral writing that distils Farnon’s melodic appeal and cinematic sweep into a small, evocative piece that functions like a musical postcard, capturing mood and imagery with effortless clarity.
Although there is some musical onomatopoeia in this piece, it is more a celebration of the possibility of air travel rather than a actual description. Farnon avoids the literal roar of engines, choosing instead to replicate the feeling of soaring above a layer of stratocumulus clouds. It opens mid-flight rather than taking off or landing. The mood is buoyant and propulsive, with sweeping strings, but sometimes pizzicato, smart woodwind figures and muted brass. Yet in the concluding bars there is a definite sense that the plane is landing, with all the pleasure of a sun-soaked holiday lying ahead.
My only memento of my aunt’s holiday is a small drum with a picture of a toreador on it, a pair of castanets and a pack of Spanish stamps (these last sadly long disappeared.) These mementos were (for me) the exotic spoils of a new era, brought back from a world that felt impossibly far from 1950s Glasgow. It would be some fifty years later that I would arrive at Palma, Mallorca, on board a cruise ship.
Listen to Robert Farnon’s Holiday Flight on YouTube, here. The composer is conducting the London Symphony Orchestra.
Whilst there have been arrangements for wind
ensemble and for solo piano accompaniment, this new Albion disc features the c.1925
arrangement for baritone, piano and string quintet. This is ideally suited for small
ensembles, church performances, or intimate recitals.
Bearing in mind that RVW was not a “man of faith” in the traditional sense, but a self-described “cheerful agnostic,” the ethos of Five Mystical Songs is best understood as a spiritual journey. But it is important to add that he was deeply sympathetic to Christian liturgy, theology, and devotional language. The “cycle” becomes the point where three trajectories meet: the world of personal faith, George Herbert’s luminous poetry, and the composer’s instinctive English musical pastoralism. This is not a conventional song cycle but a bit like a private devotional journal set to music. Herbert’s poetry here feels less mystical than numinous, with an emphasis on human tenderness, vulnerability, and wonder. It is Christianity seen through the lens of the English countryside, where the sacred and the pastoral breathe the same air.
Roderick Williams, the Sacconi Quartet, Levi Andreassen, double bass, and pianist William Vann bring a warmth and instrumental colour that far exceeds the piano-only edition. It is a beautiful, deeply felt account.
In 1905 RVW published two settings of poems by Christina Rossetti. The melancholic When I am Dead, My Dearest considers an acceptance of death’s calm, inviting remembrance or forgetting, both without sorrow. Equally melancholic both in words and music is Dreamland where the poet has chosen a twilight journey into eternal rest, beyond sorrow or waking. Both have been recorded on Albion Records (ALBCD002) but this is the first recording with “a male protagonist.” They are both heartbreakingly lovely.
The liner notes explain that all eighty-one of Vaughan Williams folksongs have been issued on the Albion label (ALBCD042-45). For the present disc Roderick Williams has chosen eight of these and arranged them for string quartet. I think that they would make an effective song cycle, although there is no obvious connecting theme. The singer expresses the hope that these will provide a strong introduction to RVW’s folksongs.
In Rossetti’s poems, the ‘Wood’
is an imaginary landscape where Love and Loss meet. Contemporary critics felt
the songs themselves were seen as “turbulent, shadowy, and melancholy.” Some
suggested that the cantata needed an orchestra, as “its complexities and its
breadth seem to demand an orchestral medium.”
The composer duly orchestrated it for a performance in 1909, adding a
wordless female chorus. RVW himself was not happy with the final iteration,
scrawling in his copy of the vocal score, “first (and last)
performance…complete flop.”
The programme notes pose the
question: Does the cantata tell a story? It concludes that Willow-Wood
is “a song of love and grief, love lost and love remembered. Poetry stands
precedent over narrative and finds further expression in music.”
Whether this challenging work
will ever become ‘popular’ is arguable. I find it just a touch too melancholy. That
said, Roderick Williams champions its wide ranging and demanding vocal part
with conviction.
This is a deeply moving exploration of Vaughan Williams’ more intimate side, where Roderick Williams brings a rare, human warmth to both the well-loved Herbert settings and the shadowy rarities of Rossetti.
A friend of mine who does not claim to understand or appreciate the complexities of Bartok String Quartets or the transcendental piano studies of Franz Liszt finds this Holiday Suite full of evocative images. And these are images of her holidays too. Memories of her girlhood at Scarborough and Bridlington are evoked in these three movements. And who is to say that Max Jaffa (The Spa, Scarborough) is not as important to aesthetic enjoyment as Yehudi Menuhin or Nigel Kennedy? Certainly, not these gentlemen!
Three movements and one enigma. The suite opens with a fine Waltz: ‘In the Ballroom.’ This is in the spirit of so many similar pieces by Eric Coates – a fine English Dance. We feel that at times it is a restrained movement. Is it a tea dance? But then the orchestra breaks out into a fine sweep, which along with the saxophones leads back into a typical lilting swing. Then a short codetta and off into the next eight! I can so easily see a pre-war audience moving gracefully around the ballroom. The ‘Ballroom’ in the title is the one behind the Bournemouth Pavilion Concert Hall.
The second is a delightful polka that manages to incorporate the good old English tune ‘Cherry Ripe.’ This had been done already by Frank Bridge in one of his string orchestra pieces and by Eric Coates in his London Suite. Whitlock would have known both these works. It is the composer’s delightful sense of humour that gave this movement its back to front title – ‘Spade and Bucket’ Polka. It is a well-written miniature, which certainly evokes thoughts of major excavations on the beach!
The last movement is entitled quite simply, ‘Civic March.’ Yet there is an enigma here. The Performing Rights Society has this listed as the ‘Picnic March.’ The score and the parts all have the current title of ‘Civic March.’ I spoke with the Whitlock expert Malcolm Riley about this discrepancy, and he is of the opinion that the official title links it in nicely to the ‘municipal’ – the ballroom and the Pavilion belonging to the town council. I have listened to this march a number of times and I am unable to imagine processions of councillors and the newly made Mayor and civil dignitaries and their partners.
Personally? I’m not buying it. The music is too bright and breezy. There is an open-air quality to this tune. It is easier to imagine the Famous Five and Timmy the dog, off on a picnic with their ginger beer and jam sandwiches: it fits in with the idea of ‘being at the seaside.’ The last thing I would want to do as a child is watch old fogeys dressed up in outdated clothes shamble along the High Street! Nevertheless, I will defer, for scholarships sake and concede that this last movement is a bright and carefree ‘civic’ march. Humph.
Listen to Whitlock’s Holiday Suite on YouTube, here. The RTÉ Concert Orchestra Conductor: Gavin Sutherland and it appears on Marco Polo 8.225162.
Repost from 1 November 2008
with edits and new link.
Speaking about his Piano Quartet No.3 in C minor, op.60, Brahms told his publisher Simrock, that the score should feature a picture of a man with a pistol pointed at his head, referencing Goethe’s book. This would have signalled the present quartet's themes of unrequited love and despair. Simrock did not take him up on this suggestion.
When Brahms began initial sketches for his three piano quartets in 1855, he was deeply in love with Clara Schumann, wife of Robert, who at that time was institutionalised in an insane asylum. Instead of Werther’s pistol shots, the writing of this music was a catharsis for his mental turmoil. Shortly after Robert’s death in 1856, he found another distraction, this time with Agathe von Siebold. The quartet was put to one side, remaining in a drawer for nearly twenty years (there was some revision) before emerging in 1875.
The opening movement begins starkly before the strings introduce a ‘sighing’ motif often associated with Clara, setting the tone for a narrative of tension and release throughout this Allegro non troppo. An appealing second theme in E‑flat major offers warmth, yet the movement never fully escapes its C‑minor gravity. An angry and intense Scherzo Allegro follows; instead of a formal trio, Brahms inserts a brief, unsettled episode. The Andante, the emotional heart, begins with a beautiful long cello melody that offers a measure of consolation. It is thought to be a “farewell to Clara,” and is tenderly played here. The Finale is a turbulent Allegro comodo, its agitated figures driven forward until they finally gain a hard‑won, unsentimental C‑major close. Any performance must recognise the sense of tragedy that overshadows this Piano Quartet. I feel that Confringo Klavierquartett get this mood exactly right.
Hans Gál was an Austrian‑British composer, teacher and scholar who was forced to flee from Austria in 1938. He rebuilt his career in Britain, producing symphonies, chamber works, and operas defined by a rare blend of elegance and contrapuntal wit.
The Piano Quartet in A major was written in 1926 for the pianist Paul Wittgenstein who had lost his right arm during the First World War. The piano writing is so complex it successfully creates the illusion of two hands. Certainly, Wittgenstein’s left hand had its work cut out. At a time when composers were experimenting with various forms of modernism, Gál uses what might be regarded as old-fashioned tonal clarity.
Unfolding across four well
balanced movements, the Quartet is defined by appealing melodies and formal balance.
The opening Vivace ma non troppo nods unapologetically to Brahms.
It is optimistic, but occasionally melancholy, presenting contrasting
themes and a vivid development. A buoyant Scherzo, Presto e leggiero possesses
a will o’ the wisp fleetingness. Central to this Quartet is the
poignant, introspective Adagio, dolce ed espressivo using expansive tunes
supported by a subtle accompaniment. The Quartet concludes with a mercurial Molto
vivace which is Bartókian in its rhythmic bite. The middle section is
brooding, before an exhilarating and witty build up to the final pages.
There have been at least two other recordings of Hans Gál’s Piano Quartet in A major (CPO 555 276-2), reviewed here, here, and here. The other is Left Hand Legacy Vol.1: Chamber Music Written for Paul Wittgenstein (COBRA0087) reviewed, here.
Confringo Klavierquartett was formed by musicians from Germany, Serbia, and South Korea during their studies in Berlin and Hanover. The Quartet shares a strong interest in Classical, Romantic, and Contemporary repertoire. They have earned significant recognition, including the 2024 Hans Gál Prize and a German Music Competition scholarship.
The liner notes by Florian Gierring give a good introduction to the two important works featured on this disc. Biographical details of the ensemble are included. The booklet is printed in English and German.
This is a splendid debut performance by Confringo Klavierquartett. Both Quartets are performed with enthusiasm and self-assurance. They reflect Brahms’s darker shadows and Gál’s intricate, lyrical wit.
Track Listing:The English writer Jerome K. Jerome was born in Walsall, West Midlands on 2 May 1859. Where remembered today, it is for his engaging conversational style that bridged Victorian sensibilities and a more modern, lightly ironic wit. Despite never again achieving the runaway success of Three Men in a Boat, he continued to write until his death in 1927. His output included plays, short stories, essays, and non-fiction as well as Three Men on a Bummel, the sequel to the present title.
The ‘technicolor’ film adaption was directed by English film maker Ken Annakin, with the screenplay developed by Hubert Gregg and Vernon Harris. The three eponymous stars were the suave Laurence Harvey as George, the moustachioed Jimmy Edwards playing Harris and David Tomlinson, who was later to play Mr Banks in Mary Poppins, as Jerome “J.” Supporting cast included Shirley Eaton (some eight years before her appearance as a Bond Girl in Goldfinger), Jill Ireland, Robertson Hare, and Esme Cannon.
The plot is simple: three Victorian gentlemen, convinced they are suffering from various psychosomatic illnesses brought on by "overwork," decide that a rowing trip up the River Thames is the only cure. Accompanied by their sceptical fox terrier, Montmorency, they set off on a journey that is about relaxation but quickly descends into a series of alluring disasters.
The film delights in everyday incompetence: simple tasks become epic trials, tempers fray beneath Victorian politeness, and Montmorency observes it all with silent disdain. The entire movie celebrates the river’s quirks and reminds us that holidays go awry - and those mishaps become the memories we cherish most.
Sadly, the critic of The Monthly Film Bulletin was unimpressed: he wrote that "Jimmy Edwards and David Tomlinson should have been ideally cast in Jerome's delightful comedy. Unfortunately, the curious adaptation and clumsy handling have effectively destroyed most of the charm and humour of the original book. The slapstick is crude and uninventive.”
John Addison (1920–1998) was a prolific British composer recalled for his versatile, approachable style across film and concert hall. After serving in the 23rd Hussars during WWII, he studied at the Royal College of Music, later returning as a Professor of Composition.
He gained fame as the "Angry
Young Man’s Composer," scoring classics like John Osborne’s play The
Entertainer. His diverse portfolio includes the Oscar-winning Tom Jones
(1963), the iconic TV series Murder, She Wrote theme and military epics such
as Reach for the Sky. Of significant importance are his concert works
which include the ballet score Carte Blanche, a Trumpet Concerto,
and a Partita for string orchestra. Addison’s music, whether for the recital
room or for the screen, is always approachable and well-crafted.
The score for the 1956 Three Men in a Boat fuses his Addison’s conservatory polish with a distinctly British lightness. Rather than the grand orchestral sweep typical of 1950s adventure or romantic films, he writes with chamber-like clarity, letting cheerful woodwinds propel the trio’s mishaps while serene pastoral strings evoke the Thames. His mock‑heroic brass elevates trivial triumphs into comic spectacle, perfectly matching the story’s Victorian self‑importance. Avoiding cartoonish literalism, Addison offers a witty, sophisticated commentary on the action. The score reveals his mastery of “light” music, crafted with the same rigour as his concert works.
Watch the opening and closing credits of Three Men in a Boat on YouTube, here.
Straight away, the listener will be struck by the menacing opening of Mars, brutal and insistent; the Vienna brass producing a disturbing ‘snarl’ throughout. My touchstone in The Planets is Venus, and here Karajan creates a suitably numinous account which stresses its serenity. Mercury is often described as “quicksilver,” an adjective entirely appropriate here. One contemporary reviewer felt that the celesta was slightly out of tune with the orchestra. Maybe. It remains a sparkling performance.
Like other critics I wondered how
Karajan would approach the quintessentially English sound of Jupiter. In
fact, he provides a broad sweep in the “trio” section, whilst avoiding any hint
of sentimentality. The lead up to that ‘big tune’ is a riot of sound.
Saturn is a remorseless
march, dark and lugubrious relieved only by occasional flashes of light. The anvils
at the climax are particularly effective. One commentator perfectly summed up
the movement by explaining that the
Bringer of Old Age, “is a creaky giant, wheezy and weary, but still an eminent
presence when roused.” Uranus gets
a “rollicking” performance: the brass fanfare at the beginning is genuinely
scary. In Neptune, Karajan creates pure mystery. The wordless female voices
(the Vienna State Opera Chorus) sustain a perfectly eerie mood as they fade
away into a haunting and desolate silence.
An understanding of the poem by
Alexander Ritter is not essential to appreciating the symphonic poem Death
and Transfiguration, composed in 1889. In fact, Ritter wrote the
text after the score was complete. The basic idea is that of a “lonely and
ailing” man fighting against his inevitable death, while recalling incidents
from his past life. There is no suggestion that Strauss had any specific individual
in mind. More likely he was reflecting about the “eternal suffering” of humanity.
The work is divided into four sections: The sick man on his deathbed, The
battle between life and death, The moment of death and, finally, Transfiguration.
Most people will sympathise with at least part of the “programme” – certainly as
they grow older. But it is possible to hear this as absolute music: a purely
musical drama without reference to any programme, whose strength lies in its
thematic transformation, orchestral colour, and long‑spanned architecture.
Karajan’s account presents two
sides of the piece. There is a “shattering intensity” inherent in the struggle
between life and death, but also a gentler, more sensitive side in the
childhood memories and the apotheosis. Surely the interpretation of these
closing bars is heartbreakingly beautiful.
This CD is a true classic, capturing a legendary conductor and orchestra at the height of their powers; if you want to hear these two epic masterworks played with maximum drama and rich, golden sound, this is the recording to own. All this is perfectly preserved by this early stereo recording.
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