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             Edward GREGSON (b.1945)   
              The Gregson Collection: Celebrating a Life of Brass 
              Band Composition   
              CD 1  
              March: Dalarö (1964) [3:24]  
              Sadness and Tenderness, from Voices of Youth (1967) 
              [2:34]  
              March Prelude (1968) [3:34]  
              Essay for Band (1970) [12:35]  
              Allegro non troppo from Horn Concerto (1971) [5:00]  
              Partita (1972) [10:53]  
              Festival March: Chalk Farm No.2 (1975) [5:02]  
              Variations on Laudate Dominum (1976 rev 2007) [14:20]  
              2nd movement from Tuba Concerto (1976) [6:03]  
              Connotations (1977) [12:41]  
              CD 2  
              Dances and Arias (1984) [13:55]  
              Of Men and Mountains (1990) [17:48]  
              The Trumpets of the Angels (2000) [19:51]  
              Meditation: Before the Cross (2003) [3:39]  
              Battle Music and Hymn of Thanksgiving from 
              An Age of Kings (2004) [4:57]  
              Rococo Variations (2008) [18:02]  
                
              Black Dyke Band/Nicholas J Childs (An Age of Kings, Dalarö, The 
              Trumpets of the Angels, Variations on Laudate Dominum); Black Dyke 
              Band/James Watson (Essay and Partita); Philip Cobb, Cory Band/Stephen 
              Cobb (Before the Cross); Cory Band/Robert Childs (Of Men and Mountains); 
              Fodens Motor Works Band/Garry Cutt (Rococo Variations); James Gourlay, 
              Fodens Motor Works Band/Howard Snell (Tuba Concerto); Grimethorpe 
              Colliery Band/Elgar Howarth (Connotations); Frank Lloyd (horn), 
              Desford Colliery Caterpillar Band/Edward Gregson (Horn Concerto 
              and Dances and Arias); Williams Fairey Band/James Gourlay (Voices 
              of Youth, March Prelude and Chalk Farm No.2)  
              Recording details not given  
                
              DOYEN DOY CD252 [77:05 + 78:46]   
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                  If ever a life of working for and on behalf of brass bands was 
                  worth celebrating it’s that of Edward Gregson. I cannot think 
                  of a single composer who has done more to expand and enrich 
                  the repertoire of music for band than this man. True, Eric Ball 
                  wrote a lot of fine band music (Elgar was fan of his) and Gilbert 
                  Vinter created some significant pieces towards the end of his 
                  life, but it was Gregson who really dragged the band movement 
                  into contemporary composition, through a life-time of devotion 
                  to the genre. He hasn’t ignored other fields of composition. 
                  There are Concertos and orchestral works, as well as piano and 
                  chamber music, choral and symphonic wind band compositions, 
                  but the mention of Gregson’s name will, to many, bring to mind 
                  the brass band.  
                   
                  Born in Sunderland, he studied with Alan Bush at the Royal Academy 
                  of Music, where he won five composition prizes, including the 
                  Frederick Corder Memorial Prize for his Brass Quintet 
                  – his first significant work. When young he played in Salvation 
                  Army bands, so the sound of the band was in his ears from an 
                  early age.  
                   
                  This 2 CD set has been released to celebrate Gregson’s 65th 
                  birthday and takes recordings from many of the excellent issues 
                  of his work on the Doyen label, presenting them in chronological 
                  order. This is very sensible indeed, for one can hear his development 
                  as a composer and as an innovator.  
                   
                  Dalarö was written after Gregson attended a students’ 
                  conference in that town in Sweden and it’s a jaunty, up–beat, 
                  march. The three movement Suite, Voices of Youth was 
                  written at the same time as the prize-winning Brass Quintet 
                  and here we have the middle movement, which shows the influence 
                  of Vaughan Williams, but it’s none the worse for that. With 
                  the March Prelude we hear, for the first time, the quirkiness 
                  which can be found in so many of Gregson’s compositions, changing 
                  time signatures and a constant  
                  restlessness. The Essay is his first major achievement 
                  for band. It’s amazing what Gregson manages to pack into his 
                  12 minutes playing time – it should be mentioned that at this 
                  time 15 minutes was thought long enough for a band composition. 
                  Gilbert Vinter’s The Trumpets plays for three quarters 
                  of an hour, but that’s an oratorio with chorus so is somewhat 
                  different. Gregson was soon to change our perceptions of what 
                  was possible in terms of duration – and he has written a challenging 
                  piece. It’s slightly indebted to Hindemith perhaps – he has 
                  said that on becoming a student he discovered the German composer 
                  who entered his sphere of interest. There’s also an obviously 
                  English voice at work, a sort of highly powered VW! The Horn 
                  Concerto was written for Ifor James, a musician who also 
                  grew up in the band movement, who was a great supporter of contemporary 
                  music – he played, for many years, in a duo with John McCabe 
                  for whom he wrote the astonishing Goddess Trilogy which 
                  should be recorded at the earliest opportunity, for it is a 
                  masterpiece of writing for the horn – and was conductor of the 
                  Besses o’th’ Barn Brass Band. It’s a shame that we only have 
                  the first movement here for it is a strong work, and there still 
                  aren’t that many concerted works with band accompaniment, so 
                  the chance to hear the complete thing would have been most welcome. 
                  Frank Lloyd makes a very good soloist and he was a pupil of 
                  Ifor James so it’s close to a creator recording. That said, 
                  one mustn’t forget Ifor’s own recording on Chandos with the 
                  Besses o’th’ Barn Brass Band under Roy Newsome (CHAN 4526, coupled 
                  with James Gourlay playing the Tuba Concerto and James 
                  Watson playing Gordon Langford’s Rhapsody for cornet). 
                   
                   
                  The Partita is based on the plainsong chant Dies Irae 
                  and the work is darker than the title might suggest. The final 
                  march is more outgoing than the previous two movements but the 
                  Dies Irae is still there, and it creates a disturbing 
                  undercurrent to what should be a happier mood. This is, surely, 
                  Gregson’s first masterpiece for brass. Chalk Farm No.2 
                  celebrates the centenary of the birth of Alfred W Punchard who 
                  had been conductor of the Chalk Farm Band for 50 years. It’s 
                  called No.2 because the first, original, Chalk Farm March 
                  was written in 1909 – not by Gregson! Cheekily, our composer 
                  inserts bars of irregular metre as well as bongos! Its out–going, 
                  exuberant air comes as a bit of a shock after the seriousness 
                  of the Partita!  
                   
                  The Variations on Laudate Dominum was written for the 
                  London Citadel Band of Ontario, Canada, whose conductor from 
                  1964 to 1978, and again from 1981 to 1995, was the composer’s 
                  brother Bramwell. It’s a straightforward set of variations and 
                  thirty years later, as a tribute to the Black Dyke Band, Gregson 
                  added two new variations; it’s this later version heard here. 
                  The work includes some nicely conceived solos, each variation 
                  is well characterised and the whole is topped off with a jubilant 
                  fugue. The Tuba Concerto was a commission from the Besses 
                  o’th’ Barn Brass Band and its then conductor Ifor James. As 
                  with the Horn Concerto we only get a movement, but this 
                  slow movement is of such grave beauty as to be able to stand 
                  alone more easily than the earlier piece.  
                   
                  Connotations is a more integrated set of variations, 
                  and much more of a display piece, which is what one would expect 
                  from a commission for the Royal Albert Hall final of the National 
                  Brass Band Championships. It’s a real symphonic conception, 
                  with a powerful inner logic and superb growth as the material 
                  is worked out. This proved to be Gregson’s final band composition 
                  for five years, as he turned to other areas of composition and 
                  only took on new band commissions when he felt he had something 
                  to say.  
                   
                  In 1984, on receipt of a commission for a test-piece for the 
                  final of the National Brass Band Championships, Gregson found 
                  that he had a lot to say and wrote Dances and Arias, 
                  a tour de force of a piece, austere in language, powerful 
                  in intent and totally compelling. Using a large percussion section 
                  – one of the many things Gregson has achieved in his band compositions 
                  is to expand the use of percussion – and with writing of the 
                  most virtuoso standard this is one of his very best, and most 
                  satisfying works. What a piece! This is true symphonic music. 
                   
                   
                  Of Men and Mountains was written for the 10th 
                  Netherlands Brass Band Championships and here is another large-scale 
                  structure – exceeding the 15 minute plying time – which continues 
                  the symphonic development of material started with Dances 
                  and Arias. With these two works Gregson has reached a new 
                  maturity in his language, where his compositional technique 
                  is as virtuoso as the writing for the instruments. This work 
                  sounds to me to be a nightmare of a piece to perform, but what 
                  an effect it makes in performance! With such economy, and strength, 
                  of writing, one is left wondering why he hasn’t written a Symphony. 
                   
                   
                  If Gregson had stopped writing for brass at this point he would 
                  still have been acknowledged as a master. Fortunately he didn’t, 
                  and the music just got better! For  
                  The Trumpets of the Angels Gregson really pulls out all 
                  the stops – and that isn’t a pun brought about by the fact that 
                  this work incorporates a part for organ. He creates a vibrant 
                  scene of the seven trumpets of the seven angels at the Day of 
                  Judgement, as told in the Book of Revelation. This is an apocalyptic 
                  vision with Gregson’s wildest music and most vivid imaginings. 
                   
                   
                  Before the Cross is a short piece for solo cornet, based 
                  on a hymn Gregson wrote 40 years earlier. In the late 1980s 
                  and early 1990s Gregson composed music for the Royal Shakespeare 
                  Company and from that he created two suites for wind band, and 
                  from them a shorter suite for brass. Battle Music and Hymn 
                  of Thanksgiving is the third movement from An 
                  Age of Kings and it is resplendent in rich colours and a 
                  splendid Elgarian peroration.  
                   
                  Rococo Variations was jointly commissioned by the British 
                  Open Championships for the 2008 contest held in Symphony Hall, 
                  Birmingham, and the Norwegian Band Federation, for their National 
                  Championship in Bergen in 2009. It pays tribute to six composers 
                  who have contributed to the band repertoire, whilst never losing 
                  sight of the fact that it is a  
                  Test-piece and, as such, must contain music of a challenging 
                  nature.  
                   
                  When a composer has been working in one field for some time 
                  one can easily forget the quality of his work, and take it for 
                  granted. I have the feeling that this may have happened with 
                  Gregson’s brass music so this re–issue is timely both as a birthday 
                  present from Doyen to him, and to re–awaken our attention to 
                  the quality and variety of his work. This is a splendid set, 
                  which gives a very good idea of what the composer has been doing 
                  these past 45 years and shows the development of both his style 
                  and band music. The recordings were made over a 20 year period 
                  but they all sound freshly minted and are bright and clear. 
                  If you’ve written off the brass band medium, thinking it to 
                  be a restricted genre, Gregson is the man to bring you into 
                  the fold with his colourful, sometimes challenging and always 
                  entertaining music. Happy birthday Mr Gregson, and many more, 
                  filled with music.  
                   
                  Bob Briggs   
                   
                 
                
				  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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