Classico extend their 
                Heritage and Legacy series under 
                Douglas Bostock ever onwards with the 
                second volume. That said only one work 
                here will be unfamiliar; Bliss’s Pyanepsion 
                is actually the final movement of his 
                A Colour Symphony, which was separately 
                published. Only the Austin will be unfamiliar 
                and his Symphony represents the heart 
                of this enterprising if occasionally 
                flawed disc. 
              
Flawed because the 
                surrounding performances don’t quite 
                measure up and the Austin reveals only 
                too well the accumulation of source 
                material that has seeped into its thematic 
                construction. Fascinating to hear and 
                to reflect upon them but ultimately 
                unsatisfactory in strictly musical terms. 
                But if we begin with the Elgar one has 
                to concede that there is a huge amount 
                of orchestral detail audible in Bostock’s 
                In the South from the harp and 
                trombone rasps onwards. His is a very 
                pliant and rubato-rich performance with 
                a very slow second subject; the heat 
                haze is eventful and the nature painting 
                emerges well. The lower brass are caught 
                in all richness in their pounding passages 
                and the Canto Popolare is not at all 
                overtly expressive; rather it’s understated 
                and touching. But overall things do 
                hang fire a bit and the sense of journeying 
                and cumulative power is never really 
                conveyed. Much the same is true of MacCunn’s 
                The Land of the Mountain and the 
                Flood, which has rightly garnered 
                a fair few recordings now. Attractively 
                cast, quite discreetly avuncular and 
                sporting excellent lower string shading 
                this also holds back just a mite. The 
                Bliss receives a strong and convincing 
                reading, the two fugues clearly and 
                objectively played.  
              
Austin’s Symphony was 
                premiered in 1913 but was only recently 
                rediscovered – the fascinating details 
                are in the well-informed and extensive 
                booklet notes majorly by Lewis Foreman 
                and with additions by Martin Lee-Browne. 
                Baritone, arranger, administrator and 
                composer Austin was acquainted with 
                the up and coming British composers 
                of the time, meeting the Frankfurt Gang 
                members, teaching Beecham in Liverpool, 
                giving the British premiere of Delius’s 
                Sea Drift and singing much more 
                contemporary music (Debussy, Strauss, 
                Schoenberg). The symphony is cast in 
                one movement but it falls into four 
                distinct sections and plays for some 
                half an hour. It opens with Debussian 
                wash and fine work for the winds, the 
                oboe and string writing from 4.00 onwards 
                strongly suggestive of Delius. The compound 
                of impressionism and Scriabinesque intensity 
                is fruitful and attractive though the 
                transition section (7.08) is quite abrupt 
                and rather stout of cast. In the Allegro 
                moderato section the wind arabesques 
                and louring lower brass and percussion 
                take on an increasingly verveful animation 
                – some strong quasi-Holstian elements 
                at play here. But the string cantilena 
                of the Andante con moto section is beautiful 
                (was it this to which Percy Grainger 
                was referring when in 1911 he wrote 
                to Balfour Gardiner "Austin has just 
                come back from Ireland very fit, with 
                splendid sketches for what he calls 
                a Symphonic Lark, and a tune in it is 
                ravishing.") The string waves, cuckoo 
                calls and Delian haze are all finely 
                orchestrated, as is the finale section. 
                This however has VW’s A London Symphony 
                (1911) etched all over it from the 
                brass and chimes to the occasionally 
                rather tritely worked out conclusion, 
                for which only Austin can take responsibility. 
              
If the Austin is more 
                a tapestry of influences than a coherent 
                symphonic statement it loses little 
                in subjective interest. Many admirers 
                of this period in British music making 
                will want to hear it and they will, 
                irrespective of other considerations, 
                find it a fascinating listen. 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                 
              
  
              
See Volume 
                1   
              
This 
                disc is also available on the RLPO's 
                own label RLPOLive RLCD501 
                Crotchet