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George LLOYD(1913-1998)
Symphony No. 4 in B (1945-6) [60:02]
Symphony No. 5 in B flat (1947-8) [57:34]
Symphony No. 8 (1961 orch. 1965) [45:28]
Philharmonia Orchestra/Edward
Downes
rec. 1982-84, London? ADD LYRITA SRCD.2258 [3 CDs:
60:02 + 57:34 + 45:28]
I went to the world
premiere of two Lloyd works and even went so far as to write
him fan letters; his replies were characteristically warm.
What I admired so much, and what others unimpeded by aesthetic
strait-jackets liked so much, were his rich melodic sense
and his control of texture, his dramatic march rhythms, those
moments of almost Ravelian clarity, and the affecting groundswelling
of his slow movements. It was one of those that I heard when
the Eighth Symphony first came out on LP and I remember being
rooted to the spot during its long length. I bought it the
next day.
Lyrita has issued
this three-for-the-price-of-two set at a propitious time
and it makes strong claims on collectors new and old, even
those who may have collected the composer-conducted recordings
on Albany. For one thing Downes has the architectural sagacity
to pace the symphonies with absolute assurance; for another
he has been accorded some typically spot-on Lyrita recordings
with a forward, bright sound that reveals plenty of detail,
rather more so in fact than the Albanys.
The symphonies are
presented logically enough in chronological order. The Fourth,
his hour-long work of 1945-46, is heard best in this ardent,
passionate and dynamic reading by Downes. It’s tighter than
the rival Albany by five minutes and the major differences
arise in the outer movements. The gradual screwing up of
tension is terrifically exciting in this Lyrita and its subsequent
relaxation via the skittish winds is vividly conveyed. Resist,
if you can – but don’t worry, plenty can resist – the ardour
and beauty of the great string tune that emerges at 15:00
into the first movement. The rapt stillness of the slow movement,
one of Lloyd’s finest, embraces both the high lying strings
and also the almost Rachmaninovian sumptuousness of the scoring -
unashamed beauty. This in its turn contrasts with the capricious
pointing of the scherzo whose waltz themes and jauntily,
even lissomly depicted. Thrilling is the word for the finale.
I don’t care how you cut your musical mustard this is avid
and resplendent stuff – and just listen to that wide-open
trumpet solo.
The Fifth followed
in the wake of the companion symphony and was finished in
1948. There is no brass or percussion in the first movement
and no violins or violas in the second. Lloyd’s Ravelian
instincts are immediately apparent in the opening movement
though the Tristanesque chordal sunset at the end adds its
own yearning gloss on the earlier material. Little here prepares
one for the sombre, immutable and defiant balefulness of
the Corale or for the immediate turning away to the almost
unbearable lightness that is the Rondo. This genial and affirmative
movement is imbued with its own ration of puckish elements
and it comprehensively outwits expectations in prefacing
the mighty Lamento. This is one ceaseless search, beautifully
balanced, during which, amongst many other things, a remarkable
string cantilena is abruptly thwarted. The finale’s start
sounds like Prokofiev, ballet style, and the vitality of
the percussive writing adds to the air of volubility and
excitement.
The Eighth Symphony
was completed in 1961 but not orchestrated until 1965. When
Lloyd recorded this with the Philharmonia he was slightly
slower in the first movement, slightly faster in the second,
and pretty much the same as Downes in the finale. In effect
the differences are as good as insignificant when it comes
to matters of mere timing. There’s little strain about the
opening – the tranquillo withdrawal is offset against perky
match themes and a sense of light music with capital L and
capital M. Ideas unfold with profuse generosity and Lloyd’s
trademark effulgent string tunes emerge like forces of nature.
Better is to come in the central movement when from 9:00
onwards time stops still as Lloyd unleashes a melody ravishing
in its beauty, total in its eloquence. It’s one of his most
special moments in one of his most special symphonic movements.
After which in the finale dynamism rules, from the freshness
and zest of the trumpets to the colour injected by the percussion.
This completes a
Lyrita symphonic triptych. Lewis Foreman’s notes are from
the top drawer, even to the quotation citing Lloyd’s reaction
to Britten: unfavourable if succinct. Clear, detailed but
warm recording quality further intensifies the quality of
this set.
Jonathan Woolf