British Light Music Classics Vol
3 New London Orchestra conducted
by Ronald Corp Hyperion CDA67148
[78:45] Includes: Portrait
of a Flirt; In a Persian Market; Montmartre, In Party Mood; Theatreland;
Rediffusion March, Miss Melanie; On a Spring note; Melody on the Move; Little
Serenade; Woodland Revel; Soldiers in the Park; In Party Mood; Valse
Septembre;
Hyperion's first two volumes in this series were outstandingly
successful and helped to restore light music to popularity and to introduce
the genre to younger audiences who never had the chance to enjoy pre-television
radio entertainment. Volumes 1 and 2 in the series were followed with an
album of American Light Music Classics and another of European Light Music
Classics.
I have to say that I was somewhat disheartened about the playing
of some of the pieces on the first two volumes; I remember being concerned
about slow tempi and lack of sparkle. This latest volume shows much improvement
and I am nearly convinced but not quite You see I cannot forget the intense
joie de vivre with which these pieces were played in the old days
on the radio. You were really carried away with an incredible sense of
joyousness. Perhaps it is because Corp's young players never really had the
chance to appreciate that style of playing which may well be lost? Perhaps
the spontaneity of a live performance is missing? Take Haydn Wood's
Montmartre, which opens the programme, for instance the tempi are
OK, the characterisation is splendid but half way through it tends to sag
a bit. The old zest seems to be missing. Personally, I think it's a matter
of articulation. The same comment is applicable to the concluding number
if you have heard Eric Coates conducting his own Rediffusion March
you will know what I mean.
Now lest I deter you, I hasten to add that performances are
generally very good throughout and there is much to enjoy in this collection.
As before, in Volumes 1 and 2, many of these tunes will be easily recognised,
if not by name. A number were associated with films and radio programmes.
Sidney Torch's jolly and exuberant, On A Spring Note performed here
with commendable vigour and panache was used in the cinema for Pathé
Gazette; and the perky In Party Mood introduced BBC Light Programme's
`Housewives' Choice'. Clive Richardson's breezy, tuneful Melody on the
Move with it quirky vibraphone figures, gave its name to a radio series.One
of the album's delights is Ronald Binge's delicate, fun-loving and thoroughly
charming Miss Melanie with its very distinctive string figures and
quirky rhythms. So too is Robert Farnon's sparkling, skittish Portrait
of a Flirt, which I seem to remember being used quite often as
source music for films. Jack Strachey's zestful Theatreland has all
its associated glitter and glamour while Harry Dexter's evocative
Siciliano has a laid back rural charm, and Vivian Ellis' Alpine
Pastures is just as carefree with its yodellings and perhaps, flirtings
of shepherd and dairy-maid. And one must not forget the plaintive charm of
Ernest Tomlinson's lovely, fragile Little Serenade.
Old fashioned Victorian/Edwardian charm is served up in two
or three numbers like Godin's sentimental Valse Septembre which was
featured in the film Titanic, and Ivan Carlisle's elegant and
nostalgically romantic, but rather proper Pink Lady Waltz. Albert
Ketèlbey's In A Persian Market has a colourful and evocative
rendering with added choir but Corp just misses capturing that je ne sai
quoi of Ketèlbey that Lanchbery so magically captured in his 1977
recording with the Philharmonia.
Very entertaining and a confident recommendation
Reviewer
Ian Lace