In the affectionate booklet note accompanying this
disc, Philip Radcliffe, a music critic with the Manchester Evening News
for many years and no doubt a regular commentator on Hallé concerts
in their home city, recalls with pleasure his personal memories of Hallé
concerts of Christmas past, including those going back to Barbirolli’s
days with the orchestra.
These days the choice of concerts on offer during the
festive season could easily result in a serious case of overdose and
the same can be said of recordings of Christmas music, the variety bewildering
and many with mid and super-budget price tags.
This recording of festive favourites falls into the
latter super-budget category, recorded in the Free Trade Hall in the
positively un-festive climate of May 1980. The programme, with the possible
exception of the Humperdinck, is on the whole rather conventional yet
not without interest, there being a handful of pieces worthy of mention
alongside the predictable fare of O, come all ye faithful and
Leroy Anderson’s Sleigh Ride. Vaughan Williams’ Fantasia on
Christmas Carols is far from under-recorded but it is a radiant
work that never fails to give pleasure, here receiving a spirited performance
with baritone Brian Rayner Cook a fine soloist in the beautiful setting
of the Gloucestershire folk song, This is the truth sent from above,
with sensitive vocal accompaniment from the Hallé Choir. Cook
is again the soloist in Adolphe Adam’s touching Cantique de Noël,
perhaps more familiar to many as O Holy Night or Angel Voices
and heard here in an attractive arrangement by French composer, Henri
Tomasi. Sargent’s arrangement of Cecil Broadhurst’s Cowboy Carol
is a great favourite with amateur choirs and has become very well known
as a result, as has The Three Kings by Peter Cornelius. The inclusion
of Tchaikovsky’s Waltz of the Snowflakes and The Shepherd’s
Farewell from Berlioz’s L’enfance du Christ are again welcome,
the charming Tchaikovsky waltz being particularly appealing, with the
Hallé Choir once again showing themselves to be on good form.
All in all, at around five pounds it is difficult to
be critical of this disc on the grounds of value. For those who prefer
their festive music wrapped in a slightly more adventurous package however,
try the appealing new Naxos release (8.557099) of orchestral music for
the Christmas season, which includes the familiar Carol Symphony
by Victor Hely-Hutchinson alongside the less familiar Christmas Carol
Symphony by Patric Standford and works by Philip Lane and Bryan
Kelly. At around the same price you really can’t go wrong.
Christopher Thomas.