This fascinating new CD is the
fourth volume of a series of British Celebration. The first was reviewed here.
Personally, I have only heard Volume 3, reviewed here.
The present disc seems to be a compilation of pieces from various sources. See
below for a wee bit more detail.
Proceedings get off to a great start with Llandudno-born Eric Hughes’s Prelude to a Festival (1972). This piece won the second prize in the Light Music Society competition held that year. The style is wholly approachable and balances joie de vivre with a wistful romanticism. Now and again, there are moments that suggest influence from one of his composition teachers, Franz Reizenstein.
Howard Blake is best known for his television and film scores, including A Month in the Country, and most especially, The Snowman. Yet there is another side to his work. This includes many concertos for a variety of instruments, an oratorio The Passion of Mary, and a Sinfonietta for brass. Amazingly, his opus numbers currently stand at op.722. His latest piece, The Enchantment of Venus for bass trombone and piano was completed in April 2021. The Four Miniatures were written in 1958, when the composer was only 20 years old. The first is a charming little Pastorale which ticks the boxes of a country ramble. Then, a cheeky little March, complete with “wrong notes”. More for toys, than for soldiers. The Interlude is sometimes moody and smoky, with hints of jazz, but otherwise just beguiling. Blake’s orchestration is especially telling here. The suite closes with a spirited Finale.
We are fortunate in having Howard
Blake’s Symphony No.1, op.42, on this CD. Subtitled Movement for Orchestra
“Impressions of a City”, it was completed in 1967. Opening quietly, with a wide string
cantilena, the music picks up rhythmic intensity. There is a quiet, and
romantic interlude. An adventure in pizzicato leads into more intense and
serious matters, before bringing this absorbing twelve-minute symphony to a
conclusion with a jazzy swing. A good balance between “light” and “filmic”
music as well as occasional irruptions of something a little more profound.
I am delighted that the Hungarian émigré composer Mátyás Seiber’s legendary collaboration with the jazz legend Johnny Dankworth has been included on this disc. Both composers were able to step outside their normal aesthetic boxes. And it must not be forgotten that Seiber composed music for jazz piano and ensembles, as well as majoring in serialism. Historically, these Improvisations were first heard at the conclusion of a series of concerts given by the London Philharmonic Orchestra during 1958. The plan of the series involved devoting a concert to each decade of the 20th century. The 1950s event featured jazz. Malcolm Rayment explained that the work is “emphatically not a composition by Dankworth arranged and orchestrated by Seiber, nor one in which Dankworth has written for his band and Seiber for the symphony orchestra exclusively…each contributed individual ideas and sections for both ensembles.” The result is a splendid fusion of symphonic music, jazz and Latin American idioms. Finally, I understand that the pianist in the jazz band is the late Dudley Moore.
Next up is Lennox Berkeley’s ballet score, The Judgement of Paris. This was premiered at the Vic-Wells on 10 May 1938. The ballet was choreographed by the celebrated Frederick Ashton. Berkeley’s score is neo-classical with some delicious scoring, and not a few twists and turns in its stylistic parameters. It is strange that this composer only produced a single dance score. The liner notes mention that Berkeley’s Divertimento in B flat was used for a ballet called The Lovers’ Gallery, performed in the United States during 1947.
Geoffrey Wright’s Three Neapolitan Dances were completed in 1960. They are remarkable for their inventive orchestration. The composer has not used any traditional tunes but has paid homage to the general style of the exemplars. It should be in the repertoire of all orchestras who play “light music.”
I have often wondered where Adam Saunder’s Magical Kingdom was located. I tend to think Tinseltown rather than Narnia, A Wood near Athens or Prospero’s Island. Here and there, sweeping tunes evocative of Hollywood blockbusters emerge. There are some rumbustious moments as well as a tender bar or two. It is an attractively scored piece.
The final work on this CD is Carlo Martelli’s wonderful pastiche of English march tunes, the Jubilee March. William Walton, Edward Elgar and Eric Coates are fused into one spectacularly impressive tribute to Her Majesty the Queen, during her Golden Jubilee. According to the liner notes, it was premiered at Glamis Castle during 2002.
All these pieces are given exemplary performances. Paul Marden-Taylor has done an excellent job with the remastering process. The liner notes by Philip Lane are helpful but could have been a bit more detailed. They are printed on flimsy computer paper. I am not sure where all these tracks have come from. Certainly, some would seem to have been issued on the first of Dutton Epoch’s British Light Music Premieres series back in 2004. I believe that the Seiber/Dankworth was originally released in 1963 on the Society record label (SOC 963). Here it was coupled with Igor Stravinsky’s Ebony Concerto, and Leonard Salzedo/David Lindup’s stunning Rendezvous for jazz and symphony orchestra.
Track Listing:Eric HUGHES (1924-2000)
Prelude to a Festival (1972)
Howard BLAKE (b.1938)
Four Miniatures, op.7 (1958)
Symphony No.1: Movement for Orchestra “Impressions of a City”, op.42 (1967)
Matyas SEIBER (1905-60)/Johnny DANKWORTH (1927-2010)
Improvisations for jazz band and symphony orchestra (1959)
Lennox BERKELEY (1903-89)
The Judgement of Paris (1938)
Geoffrey WRIGHT (1912-2010)
Three Neapolitan Dances (1960)
Adam SAUNDERS (b.1968)
The Magical Kingdom (2003)
Carlo MARTELLI (b.1935)
Jubilee March (2002)
RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra/Samo Hubad (Hughes/Blake)
The Johnny Dankworth Band/London Philharmonic Orchestra/Hugo Rignold (Seiber/Dankworth)
Royal Ballet Sinfonia/Barry Wordsworth, Gavin Sutherland (Berkeley, Wright, Saunders)
Neil Thomson and his Orchestra (Martelli)
rec. 1972/2004
HERITAGE HTGCD 165
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