This is a very valuable, and most welcome, set, and in the composer’s 
                centenary year it’s a timely reminder of the variety and integrity 
                of Barber’s music and of these fine performances. The disks have 
                been well planned, allowing for a mixture of the well known and 
                less so to sit side by side. 
                  
                The 
Serenade for Strings is Barber’s opus 1 – it was preceded 
                by a few songs and a 
Violin Sonata, of which only one movement 
                appears to still exist – and it’s a delight from start to finish. 
                It may recall, for some, Elgar’s 
Serenade, or perhaps Holst, 
                and it has a quaintly English feel to parts of it, but it is essentially 
                Barber’s own work and one can feel a new talent emerging. By the 
                time he wrote his first score for full orchestra, his style was 
                fully formed – no mean achievement in so short a time. Despite 
                taking its title from Sheridan’s comedy, 
The School for Scandal 
                Overture is rumoured to be about the Curtis Institute, where 
                Barber studied. If that is so, then it’s good to know that he 
                had as good a time as a student as I did! I learned this work, 
                and the 
1st Essay, from an old Mercury LP by the Eastman 
                Rochester Orchestra, under Howard Hanson, (no longer available) 
                and those performances had a real bite to them – they are quite 
                spiky, modernistic works in some ways – and they can take such 
                an approach. Alsop doesn’t quite manage to get the power Hanson 
                achieves but they are both very good in their own way. The 
Music 
                for a Scene from Shelley is the first orchestral work of Barber’s 
                which he heard in performance. There is a real nobility here, 
                and it is an impressive score, which makes one wonder why it is 
                almost unknown. 
                  
                Barber’s 
First Symphony was written during his stay in 
                Europe; it’s a short piece which telescopes the four movements 
                of a conventional Symphony into one span. The work was revised 
                and this version was premièred, and subsequently recorded, by 
                Bruno Walter and the New York Philharmonic. Alsop’s performance 
                is full of energy and drama and it can easily stand beside Hanson’s 
                (Mercury LP out of print) or Walter’s (
GEMS 
                049 – part of a collection of première recordings of Barber’s 
                works) fine accounts. 
                  
                
Adagio for Strings needs no introduction, except to say 
                that it has been hijacked by the lamentation brigade who have 
                it wheeled out for any event which requires national mourning. 
                Alsop will have none of this in her interpretation and gives a 
                straightforward reading which allows the music to proceed easily 
                and without descending into misery, which it seems to, too often, 
                these days. 
                  
                The 
Violin Concerto is given a truly technicolor reading 
                by James Buswell. His full romantic playing admirably suits the 
                first two movements of the work and he lets his hair down for 
                the mad dash which is the finale. Buswell is even more red-blooded 
                than Isaac Stern in his recording with the New York Philharmonic 
                under Bernstein, which is an exceptional performance and should 
                not be missed. The Stern is well worth having in its current incarnation 
                as it is coupled with Barber’s 
Piano Concerto, played by 
                John Browning for whom it was written and who was the first performer 
                - 
Sony 
                7529892. 
                  
                The Second Essay was written in wartime, and has a rather anguished 
                tone. It contains bold strokes of orchestral colour and the merest 
                flashes of melodic material which are worked out in a fugue; this 
                constitutes the middle section. The coda ends with a climax of 
                huge proportions which is both resplendent and satisfying. The
 
                Commando 
                March was written for large concert band and later scored 
                for orchestra, which is the version heard here. It’s a brief, 
                but satisfying side-light on Barber’s wartime career. As is the 
                
Second Symphony, which was commissioned on Barber’s conscription 
                into the USAAF. It’s a big work, in three movements and was revised 
                in 1947. However, in 1964 Barber expressed dissatisfaction with 
                the piece and subsequently tried to destroy all copies of it, 
                including the manuscript. Quite how intent he was in this mission 
                must be in question for, by 1967, there would have been more than 
                sufficient copies of the score in private hands not to mention 
                the fact that he had recorded the piece in London in 1951 (
see 
                review of Pearl CD and soon available on Naxos 8.111358)! 
                Certainly it doesn’t have the immediacy of the 
First Symphony 
                but it is a strongly argued work, with much fine music to commend 
                it. This performance should win more admirers for this fascinating 
                work, and, without a doubt, it is the best version currently available 
                on disk. 
                  
                With the 
Capricorn Concerto we enter a time when Barber’s 
                music showed the marked influence of Stravinsky’s neo–classical 
                works. It’s a kind of modern 
Brandenburg Concerto – indeed, 
                it is scored for the same forces as the second of those works 
                – and it’s a bright and breezy concoction, belying the fact that 
                it was written in wartime. It couldn’t provide a bigger contrast 
                to the 
Second Symphony if it were dodecaphonic. 
                The three soloists are splendid, giving forthright performances 
                and they receive admirable support from the strings of the orchestra. 
                
                  
                The 
Cello Concerto is a big work, with bitter sweet lyricism 
                and a nostalgic feel. But the cello is the one instrument which 
                can evoke nostalgia better than any other, and Wendy Warner proves 
                to be a winsome soloist, almost underplaying the piece and bringing 
                to her interpretation a nobility and strength which holds the 
                melancholy at bay. The ballet 
Cave of the Heart was written 
                for the Martha Graham company shortly after the 
Cello Concerto. 
                Scored for Graham’s usual small ensemble – the 
Appalachian 
                Spring group – Barber almost immediately reworked part of 
                the score for orchestra, changing the name to that of the main 
                character, and that is what we have here. The seven movements 
                present some of the most austere music Barber ever composed, it’s 
                dark and demanding, not an easy listen but most satisfying. Later 
                still, he took the music and created the concert work 
Medea's 
                Meditation and Dance of Vengeance for a very large orchestra. 
                This has achieved a hold in the repertoire and rightly so, for 
                it is a magnificent piece; vivid and vital. Alsop directs a particularly 
                trenchant performance. 
                  
                
Knoxville: Summer of 1915 is amongst Barber’s most endearing 
                pieces. It’s a perfect depiction of childhood and the things which 
                are important to a child – home, parents, the comings and goings 
                in the street. The section he chose from James Agee’s autobiography 
                allowed Barber to create a nostalgic scene, possibly recalling 
                his own childhood, and he filled the piece with some of his most 
                sumptuous melodic material. This is a gorgeous work, and one heard 
                too seldom in the concert hall. Karina Gauvin is a good soloist, 
                but insists on using vibrato far too often. This spoils the musical 
                line, whereas a straightforward reading, such as that by Eleanor 
                Steber, who commissioned and premièred the work, recorded in 1950, 
                is perfect (
Sony 
                46727 – as part of a fascinating vocal recital which includes 
                the Hermit Songs, with Leontyne Price and the composer at the 
                piano, Andromache's Farewell, with Martina Arroyo and Fischer–Dieskau 
                in Dover Beach) and achieves the essential innocence of the piece. 
                A more robust performance from Leontyne Price, with the New Philharmonia 
                under Thomas Schippers, recorded in 1968, is available and it 
                is a most attractive performance (RCA Gold Seal 61983 – coupled 
                with Two Scenes from Anthony and Cleopatra, and the Hermit Songs 
                and four other songs with Barber at the piano and also on a 
new 
                Sony Barber collection). I would prefer both of these over 
                the one under discussion for the singing is better and more inspired. 
                
                  
                Alsop directs a perfect performance of the jazzy ballet suite 
                
Souvenirs, which has the right feel to it, and she never 
                tries to make more of the little dances than is in the music. 
                
Vanessa was Barber’s first opera, premiered at the Met, 
                and it won the Pulitzer Prize, being hailed as the first American 
                grand opera. The 
Intermezzo is a bittersweet piece of melancholy, 
                and it’s slight and charming. 
A Hand of Bridge is a mini 
                opera to a libretto by Menotti, in which two couples play bridge 
                and indulge in their private reveries. It’s great fun, and with 
                a naughty tinge of jazz it’s very attractive and approachable. 
                
                  
                
Toccata Festiva, is a joyful, not to say joyous, piece, 
                written to inaugurate a new pipe organ in Philadelphia. In effect 
                a Concerto movement it incorporates a cadenza and some really 
                exciting interplay between soloist and orchestra. One wishes for 
                a full-length Concerto, so satisfying is the writing. E Power 
                Biggs recorded the work with the Philadelphia Orchestra, under 
                Ormandy and his performance is not to be missed (Sony 94739 – 
                in a mixed Barber compilation) for it has a swagger which carries 
                all before it. Thomas Trotter and Alsop are certainly the equal 
                of the creators and it’s a thrilling experience. 
                  
                Written between the high spirits of the 
Toccata Festiva 
                and the seriousness of the 
Piano Concerto, 
Die natali 
                is an odd, not to say backward-looking, work, taking various well 
                known Christmas Carols as the basis for a set of free variations. 
                As a composition, I feel that the composer wasn’t really involved 
                with his material and he was simply going through the compositional 
                motions. This is a very persuasive performance and certainly makes 
                a better case for the piece than the only recorded rival with 
                the Louisville Orchestra under Jorge Mester (Albany TROY 021–2). 
                
                  
                After flirting with 12 note technique in the 
Piano Sonata 
                of 1947, the 
Piano Concerto was Barber’s real entry into 
                “modernism”. Or, at least, an idiom of more modern expression, 
                built from his earlier late-romantic, and neo–Stravinskian styles. 
                Commissioned by the music publisher G Schirme
r, 
                for the centenary of its founding, the work was premièred during 
                the opening festivities of Philharmonic Hall, now Avery Fisher 
                Hall, in the Lincoln Center. It’s a true virtuoso work, with brilliant 
                writing both for soloist and orchestra. Stephen Prutsman performs 
                the work with panache and aplomb rivalling John Browning’s creator 
                recording listed above. This is one of the most exciting performances 
                in this set. 
                  
                
Mutations from Bach is a simple four-fold statement of 
                the plainsong 
Christ, thou lamb of God, for a brass group 
                with timpani - an unpretentious and gallant piece. 
Fadograph 
                of a Yestern Scene, the title is from Joyce, is an impressionistic 
                scene, possibly of times gone by, a ghost town, or perhaps the 
                faded memories of things past. 
                  
                Thirty-six years after the Second Essay, a commission from the 
                Philadelphia Orchestra allowed Barber to return to his invented 
                form and create a one movement discussion. His last completed 
                orchestral work, it isn’t as tightly knit as the first two works 
                with the same title and, indeed, there is a strange whiff of nostalgic 
                Hollywood in the mix. There is a superbly built climax, which 
                brings the work to a massive conclusion. Alsop really gets to 
                the heart of the music here and gives a superbly thought out performance 
                which makes the various sections hang together well, for this 
                work is freer in form than its predecessors. 
                  
                At the very end of his life, Barber was writing an Oboe Concerto 
                for Harold Gomberg, a member of the New York Philharmonic. As 
                it was, he didn’t quite finish this delicate 
Canzonetta, 
                and the scoring was completed by his only pupil, Charles Turner. 
                Stéphane Rancourt is a most eloquent soloist. 
                  
                Despite my one or two alternative preferences, this is a very 
                fine set, and Naxos is to be praised for bringing together this 
                music, some of which is seldom, if ever, heard. Each CD has its 
                own box and booklet, and the whole is encased in a card slipcase. 
                Nice presentation, excellent recordings and performances, in general, 
                to match. I cannot imagine that there is anyone who does not respond 
                to Barber’s brand of late-romanticism, but if there really are 
                such people out there then I urge them to listen to these CDs 
                and revel in the discovery. For those of us who are already fans, 
                it’s a chance to meet some works new to us, and simply to enjoy 
                a master composer at work. This will not disappoint. 
                  
                
Bob Briggs 
                  
                
                  
                
                See 
                also review by Rob Barnett 
                
                Barber 
                on Naxos – individual disc reviews