Why companion? Why 
                not dictionary? What’s the difference? 
                Essentially a companion must be companionable. 
                That person does not have to know everything 
                but you need to be at ease in their 
                company. As with any companion (even 
                with a friend) you must expect to be 
                stimulated by their viewpoints, opinions 
                and knowledge and to disagree without 
                wanting to walk off and never come back. 
                As for a dictionary it tends to be a 
                repository of factual material rather 
                than opinions. The character and preferences 
                of the compiler are revealed only rarely 
                in such cases and has to be implied 
                rather than inferred. 
              
 
              
Griffiths has already 
                produced one major reference work on 
                modern classical music. It is therefore 
                no surprise to find entries such as 
                that for Conlon Nancarrow where the 
                writer opens up his opinions about the 
                music: ‘fascinating and entertaining 
                counterpoint using the rhythmic precision 
                and mechanical oddity of the pianola.’ 
                This is just one example. There are 
                many others. This is valuable as it 
                should provoke you to explore and experiment 
                and then either to agree or disagree 
                violently. 
              
 
              
I had never heard of 
                Tarnopolski but he gets an entry and 
                we are told that his music is polystylistic, 
                searching playful and grotesque. 
              
 
              
In the same admirable 
                track is the entry for Ruggles: ‘a style 
                of unabashed dissonance and strong angular 
                melody a music of quiet exclamations 
                and rampant challenges.’ Fine writing 
                succinct indeed. 
              
 
              
Of course there are 
                blindspots. I was astonished to discover 
                that there is no entry for Erkki Salmenhaara. 
                On the other hand both George Lloyd 
                and Jonathan Lloyd are in as is Robert 
                Saxton. Salonen is there as both conductor 
                and composer. 
              
 
              
Earlier composers are 
                of course covered as are the standard 
                Greats usually in very substantial readable 
                narrative entries. A large number of 
                Bachs appear. As do Muffat, Scheidt, 
                Sweelinck, Lanier, three different Martinis 
                and Taverner to name a few at browse-random. 
              
 
              
Dates of birth/death 
                are given as full dates rather than 
                just the year. Composer entries in some 
                cases include worklists with dates. 
                There are quite a few of these and they 
                are a strength of the book. 
              
 
              
More reactionary figures 
                such as Constant Lambert have a place 
                here but why no reference to major works 
                of his such as his Music for Orchestra 
                and Summer’s Last Will and Testament? 
                Miaskovsky and Langgaard are there with 
                highly detailed and dated worklists 
                for their 27 and 16 symphonies. Vladimir 
                Shcherbachev is present and is mentioned 
                as the only one not to condemn Shostakovich’s 
                Lady Macbeth when he discussed 
                the work in Leningrad. I was delighted 
                to see Boris Lyatoshinsky, Max Steinberg, 
                Shebalin and Shaporin putting in an 
                appearance as well as Rudi Stephan; 
                that expressionist-impressionist German 
                composer killed in the Great War. Ropartz 
                and Marcel Landowski are present. 
              
 
              
Film music denizens 
                get their place so you can find information 
                on Korngold, Herrmann, Williams, Waxman 
                and Rozsa but not for Poledouris or 
                Friedhofer. I think they have struck 
                the balance reasonably well there although 
                I was sorry that their film music entries 
                tend to obliterate reference to their 
                concert works: thus nothing about Waxman’s 
                Joshua or Sinfonietta. 
              
 
              
Errors? There are bound 
                to be a few. Go to the Lyapunov entry 
                and you will find that it is claimed 
                that his Symphony No. 1 was written 
                in 1917. That’s wrong. It dates from 
                1887. His Second Symphony was written 
                in 1917. Delight at seeing a reference 
                to T. Appleby Matthews as the first 
                conductor of the Birmingham Symphony 
                Orchestra was tempered by seeing Louis 
                Frémaux, a most unfairly neglected 
                conductor (he does not get an entry 
                of his own), spelt as Frémeaux. 
              
 
              
Among musicians rather 
                than composers I was sorry to find no 
                reference for the conductor Vernon Handley. 
              
 
              
There are entries for 
                subjects you might not expect to find 
                in a music companion: try the ones for 
                Sex and Madness. Hymns get a mention 
                as does the Bible. There are also sections 
                for Italy, Norway, Sweden and France. 
              
 
              
Hyperion get their 
                own entry. That’s a new one: a record 
                company! Quite right too. Nothing for 
                ASV-Sanctuary. There is one for EMI, 
                Decca and DG. 
              
 
              
The book appears to 
                be up to date as far as 2003. For example 
                the characterful entry for the pianist 
                Vladimir de Pachmann lists Mark Mitchell’s 
                2003 biography of de Pachmann. Some 
                websites are also cited. 
              
 
              
Browsing or using this 
                delightful book as a reference work 
                is a pleasure. The font is on the larger 
                side and the grade of paper is substantial 
                and quite white. Definition of typography 
                is sharply focused; not to be taken 
                for granted I am afraid. 
              
 
              
Penguin continue to 
                push out the boundaries of their reference 
                library and have done so successfully 
                and with distinct character in Paul 
                Griffiths’ book. 
              
Rob Barnett