Here’s another album, full of period charm, of lesser known
Ketèlbey pieces all recorded in the early years of the 20th
century. Much of this music was played to accompany silent films. Indeed one
of them, the evocative, A Desert Romance, was used to accompany the film
The Great Sahara! Elsewhere you can just imagine a 1920s silent melodrama
heroine pleading, sighing and wringing her hands to the drama and sentimentality
of Gallantry and I Call You From the Shadows while moustache-twiddling,
leering villains can be imagined when listening to Blow, Blow Thou Winter
Wind (and never darken my doorstep again!). One may also visualise cinema
audiences hearing another bit of Ketèlbey ‘travelogue’ music, Junegle
Drums although it sounds rather a bit too like In The Mystic Land of
Egypt.
The main item on this the third volume of historic Ketèlbey
recordings from Naxos, is the Cockney Suite, the composer’s largest work,
cast in five movements. It rivals similar suites by Eric Coates and it opens
with a delightfully swaggering march for A State Procession. Next
comes The Cockney Lover a serenade harmonised in the style of Debussy
and based on two drinking songs, ‘Arf a pint o’ mild and bitter’ and ‘Little
brown jug’. At the Palais de Danse shows off different sections of a
dance band while the mood turns sombre with muted strings for the elegiac Thoughts
on Passing the Cenotaph. And the whole is rounded off with all the
fun of the Bank Holiday fair on Hampstead Heath with mouth organs, busking
cornets, a steam organ and fragments of drinking songs and military band music.
Also included are several of Ketèlbey’s popular novelties.
Mind the Slide has fun with ‘improper’ trombone glissandos. A Musical
Jigsaw has a succession of 44 well known musical phrases ranging from Rossini’s
William Tell to Tchaikovsky’s 1812 by way of Mendelssohn’s Wedding
March and Ketèlbey’s own Sanctuary of the Heart. Perhaps
the most interesting novelty is Fiddle Fun that features the composer
himself on the piano accompanying an unidentified violinist who shows off, in
comical manner, many of the violinists show techniques like double-stops, harmonics,
glissandi and left hand pizzicato.
Another substantial piece is In a Camp of the Ancient Britons
which according to Ketèlbey was inspired by a visit to Weston-super-Mare
– "…when I saw the gay promenade and in the background the old ramparts
(Worlebury) carrying the mind back to the times of the Roman legions and the
Druids… The music conveys the atmosphere of the old drama gradually merging
into present-day brightness and gaiety."
The programme is rounded off with the stirring processional
march With Honour Crowned composed to celebrate King George V’s
jubilee in 1935 and performed with great occasion by the Massed Bands of the
Aldershot and Eastern Commands conducted by Leslie Seymour.
Another nostalgic album full of period charm to delight Ketèlbey
fans.
Ian Lace
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