Always was a good title wasn't it? Bring it back, Cullingford!
Short of time this year, here's a quick catch-up on some of my favourite music purchases recently...
Birtwistle Moth Requiem; On the Sheer Threshold of the Night; Ring Dance of the Nazarene etc.
BBC Singers/Nash Ens./Kok, Signum CD
David Matthews Symphony No.7; Vespers
Soloists/Bach Choir/Bournemouth SO/Carewe/Hill, Dutton Epoch CD
Panufnik Symphony No.5; Landscape; Bassoon Concerto
(Konzerthausorchester Berlin/Borowicz, CPO CD)
At last we have a recording of Birtwistle's On the Sheer Threshold, a stunning choral masterpiece and one of the finest inspirations of Birtwistle's Orpheus obsession. A work of great power, range and intensity, it's always a shock to reach the end and remember that it really is for voices alone! Remarkable density of event for 13 minutes. The gorgeous Moth Requiem is scored for 12 Solo female Voices, alto flute and 3 harps! It was inspired by a moth trapped in a piano - listen to the opening and you may hear it...
The best thing about the Matthews disc is that it inspired me to acquire all the other Dutton releases of his music, which I now feel ashamed not to have properly discovered or really appreciated before. All the symphonies are very distinct, broadly falling into three groups: the big, challenging epics (2 & 6); the classically or neoclassically shaped 4&5; and 1,3 and 7 as continuous structures of 20 minutes or so. The 7th starts out as a deeply eloquent "haunted pastoral" but soon careers off onto rockier paths. I feel this cycle is just as important as that of Maxwell Davies; Matthews may not be as original of means, or sing with such an individual voice as Max, but his music is always fresh and memorable, cunningly structured, often beautiful, dramatic and with a high entertainment value. I really miss it if I don't play any for a few days. The one cavil is with Katie Bray's solos in the marvellous Vespers; I dislike criticising individual performers, but her otherwise beautiful voice does have an intrusive vibrato which I found hard to ignore... she's a young artist - it could, I hope be ironed out a little.
The CPO Panufnik disc is the last, and one of the best, in a great series including all of the symphonies. Three very striking works, and an especially intense, dark-toned, earthy account of the Sinfonia di Sfere (No.5). The last of a noble line, and a series also notable for lovely cover art, paintings mostly by Andre Dzierzynski, which add much to their pleasure.
In other news...
Mendelssohn Symphonies 4 & 5
CBSO/Gardner, Chandos CD
Schubert Symphonies 3,4 and 5
Swedish CO/Dausgaard, BIS CD
Reger Orchestral Works
Norrkoping SO/Segerstam, 3 BIS CDs
(This set has the most extraordinary performance of the Suite im Alten Stil you'll ever hear; intensely expressive, recreative bar-by-bar conducting of rare quality, letting light into the textures; Reger doesn't have to sound like a post-Brahmsian chocolate pudding. And just wait till you hear the conclusion of the fugue, or the climax of Isle of the Dead from the 4 Bocklin TonePoems: wondrously spacious, tonally seamless, natural, midhall perspective, with a frighteningly realistic dynamic range. THAT, my friends, is how you record a symphony orchestra.)
Over to you for your highlights of the year so far...
Short of time this year, here's a quick catch-up on some of my favourite music purchases recently...
Birtwistle Moth Requiem; On the Sheer Threshold of the Night; Ring Dance of the Nazarene etc.
BBC Singers/Nash Ens./Kok, Signum CD
David Matthews Symphony No.7; Vespers
Soloists/Bach Choir/Bournemouth SO/Carewe/Hill, Dutton Epoch CD
Panufnik Symphony No.5; Landscape; Bassoon Concerto
(Konzerthausorchester Berlin/Borowicz, CPO CD)
At last we have a recording of Birtwistle's On the Sheer Threshold, a stunning choral masterpiece and one of the finest inspirations of Birtwistle's Orpheus obsession. A work of great power, range and intensity, it's always a shock to reach the end and remember that it really is for voices alone! Remarkable density of event for 13 minutes. The gorgeous Moth Requiem is scored for 12 Solo female Voices, alto flute and 3 harps! It was inspired by a moth trapped in a piano - listen to the opening and you may hear it...
The best thing about the Matthews disc is that it inspired me to acquire all the other Dutton releases of his music, which I now feel ashamed not to have properly discovered or really appreciated before. All the symphonies are very distinct, broadly falling into three groups: the big, challenging epics (2 & 6); the classically or neoclassically shaped 4&5; and 1,3 and 7 as continuous structures of 20 minutes or so. The 7th starts out as a deeply eloquent "haunted pastoral" but soon careers off onto rockier paths. I feel this cycle is just as important as that of Maxwell Davies; Matthews may not be as original of means, or sing with such an individual voice as Max, but his music is always fresh and memorable, cunningly structured, often beautiful, dramatic and with a high entertainment value. I really miss it if I don't play any for a few days. The one cavil is with Katie Bray's solos in the marvellous Vespers; I dislike criticising individual performers, but her otherwise beautiful voice does have an intrusive vibrato which I found hard to ignore... she's a young artist - it could, I hope be ironed out a little.
The CPO Panufnik disc is the last, and one of the best, in a great series including all of the symphonies. Three very striking works, and an especially intense, dark-toned, earthy account of the Sinfonia di Sfere (No.5). The last of a noble line, and a series also notable for lovely cover art, paintings mostly by Andre Dzierzynski, which add much to their pleasure.
In other news...
Mendelssohn Symphonies 4 & 5
CBSO/Gardner, Chandos CD
Schubert Symphonies 3,4 and 5
Swedish CO/Dausgaard, BIS CD
Reger Orchestral Works
Norrkoping SO/Segerstam, 3 BIS CDs
(This set has the most extraordinary performance of the Suite im Alten Stil you'll ever hear; intensely expressive, recreative bar-by-bar conducting of rare quality, letting light into the textures; Reger doesn't have to sound like a post-Brahmsian chocolate pudding. And just wait till you hear the conclusion of the fugue, or the climax of Isle of the Dead from the 4 Bocklin TonePoems: wondrously spacious, tonally seamless, natural, midhall perspective, with a frighteningly realistic dynamic range. THAT, my friends, is how you record a symphony orchestra.)
Over to you for your highlights of the year so far...
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