British Tone Poems
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Henry Balfour Gardiner, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Granville Bantock, Frederic Austin, Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, William Alwyn
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 04/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 76
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHAN10939
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphonic Rhapsody " Spring " |
Frederic Austin, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Frederic Austin, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Blackdown - a Tone Poem from the Surrey hills |
William Alwyn, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Rumon Gamba, Conductor William Alwyn, Composer |
(The) Witch of Atlas |
Granville Bantock, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Granville Bantock, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
A Gloucestershire Rhapsody |
Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
A Berkshire Idyll |
Henry Balfour Gardiner, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Henry Balfour Gardiner, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
The Solent |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
BBC National Orchestra of Wales Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer Rumon Gamba, Conductor |
Author: Andrew Achenbach
Other treats to savour include Bantock’s opulent 1902 tone poem after Shelley, The Witch of Atlas (in which these artists manage to hold their own alongside Vernon Handley and the RPO – Hyperion, 5/91), William Alwyn’s youthful Blackdown (a luminously pretty evocation from 1926 of the North Downs near Haslemere in Surrey) and Ivor Gurney’s rousing tribute to his home county, A Gloucestershire Rhapsody (1919 21), idiomatically pieced together from the troubled composer’s sketches by Philip Lancaster and Ian Venables. The programme concludes with Vaughan Williams’s 1902 impression for orchestra The Solent, whose haunting principal idea for clarinet the composer used again in his first and last symphonies and film score for The England of Elizabeth (1957). Gamba’s outstandingly sensitive conception offers far more of a challenge to Paul Daniel’s eloquent premiere recording with the RLPO (Albion, 11/13) than did the recent Naxos version (2/17) – and how movingly the final fade-out here presages those illimitably mysterious closing bars of A Sea Symphony.
This is altogether most enticing; in fact, I’m already looking forward to the second volume!
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