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              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS  | 
            Gustav HOLST (1874-1934) 
               
              The Planets, Op. 32 (H125) [57:02]  
              The Perfect Fool - Ballet Music, Op. 39 (H150) [10:40] 
              Egdon Heath, Op. 47 (H172) [12:44] 
              A Moorside Suite (H173) [14:24] 
              Suite No. 1 in E flat major, Op. 28a (H105) [9:08] 
              Suite No. 2 in F major, Op. 28b (H106) [10:41] 
              St. Paul’s Suite, Op. 29 No. 2 (H118) [12:32] 
              A Fugal Concerto, Op. 40 No. 2 (H152) [7:23] 
                
              see end of review for performance details 
              rec. 1955-1992. ADD/DDD  
                
              DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 2323 [57:02 + 78:46]    | 
         
        
           
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS  | 
          Gustav HOLST (1874-1934) 
              Twelve Songs to words by Humbert Wolfe Op. 48 (H174) [26:11]  
            Ave Maria, for unaccompanied female voices in eight parts Op. 
            9b (H49) [4:21]  Three Welsh Folk Songs arr. unaccompanied 
            chorus (H183) [7:22]  The Song of the Blacksmith arr. unaccompanied 
            male voices (H136) [1:14]  Two Part-Songs for unaccompanied 
            female voices [3:53]  Two Carols for unaccompanied chorus 
            [2:51] 
            The Hymn of Jesus, Op. 37 (H140) [21:48]  
              
            see end of review for performance details 
            rec. 1962-65. ADD  
              
            DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 2327 [68:14]   | 
         
        
           
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS  | 
          Gustav HOLST (1874-1934) 
              Four Songs for Voice and Violin, Op. 35 (H132) [7:25]  
            This have I done for my true love for unaccompanied voices, 
            Op. 34 (H128) [5:14]  Jesu, Thou the Virgin-born for unaccompanied 
            voices, Op. 20b (H82) [3:00]  Two Carols, with oboe and 
            viola (H91) [4:19]  Terzetto for flute, oboe and viola (H158) 
            [9:52]  Six Canons (H187) [6:25]  The Evening-Watch, 
            Op. 43 No. 1 (H159) [4:16] 
            Six Choruses, Op. 53 (H186) [17:18]  
              
            see end of review for performance details 
            rec. 1965-66. ADD  
              
            DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 2328 [58:26]   | 
         
        
           
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS  | 
          Gustav HOLST (1874-1934) 
              Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda, Op. 26 No. 3 (Third Group) 
            (H99) [12:33]  Sāvitri, Op. 25 (H96) [30:38]  
            Seven Part-Songs, Op. 44 (H162) [21:05] 
            The Evening-Watch, Op. 43 (H159) [4:19]  
              
            see end of review for performance details 
            rec. 1965. ADD  
              
            DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 2329 [69:04]   | 
         
         
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                  Rather than harbouring a phobia against late analogue era recordings 
                  Australian Eloquence have made them a speciality. In this they 
                  have been followed by Newton and a few others. Come on in; there’s 
                  nothing to be frightened of unless you really cannot bear that 
                  even and usually discreet level of background hiss. If you can 
                  live with this slight shadow then there are musical rewards 
                  to be harvested. And so it proves with these five CDs. The first 
                  - a 2CD set - mixes 1950s mono (Fennell) with 1970s Phase Four 
                  stereo and early 1990s digital. The remainder comprise ripe 
                  1960s vintage Argo ZRG originals. One keeps hoping that Eloquence 
                  will be given the entrée to other catalogues including 
                  EMI for its late rarities such as the Abravanel Roy Harris Fourth 
                  Symphony and CBS-Sony’s complete Ruggles orchestral works 
                  from Michael Tilson Thomas but I suspect it’s not going 
                  to happen.  
                     
                  The centre-piece of this clutch of Holst discs is Herrmann’s 
                  Planets. It’s an eccentric version, it has to be 
                  said. It’s the slowest I have encountered but has its 
                  fascinations and rewards. And they are considerable. Herrmann 
                  adds more than a minute to the modern mean timing for each planet. 
                  He takes 57:02 against Holst (Naxos) 
                  42:35, 1940s Boult (Beulah) 
                  47:12, Boult 1979 (EMI 
                  EMI), 
                  Handley (Regis) 
                  49:15, David Lloyd Jones (Naxos) 
                  50:00, Previn (EMI) 
                  50:15, Elder (Hyperion), 
                  Owain Arwel Hughes (Warner) 
                  50:57, Rattle 51:12 (EMI) 
                  and Svetlanov (Brilliant) 
                  [54:12].  
                     
                  Herrmann’s Planets starts well - very well. I cannot 
                  recall another Mars sounding as baleful. One gains the 
                  sense that some horror is wound up to pounce. The spectacular 
                  brass growl with gnarled abrasion. The wild-eyed horns at 1:28 
                  howl like wolves - never heard that effect before. The tattoo 
                  at 5:24 is shod with cruel iron. Venus is flecked with 
                  Hollywood star-dust and its mood is wondrously maintained. Mercury 
                  here is rather viscous and ‘ploddy’. It’s 
                  as if the young god had overindulged at dinner but it does deliver 
                  a fresh perspective. Jupiter sports resinous wind and 
                  a slow motion clarinet - like peeling obstinate cellotape off 
                  a piece of cardboard. It’s all pretty vehement. The great 
                  melody is really trolled out and emerges with stoic grandeur. 
                  This darkly-intoned Saturn frequently brings to mind 
                  Sibelius 4 and Tapiola. However what should be the terror-stricken 
                  outburst at 5:20 is so ponderous it doesn’t really work. 
                  Neptune has some uncannily steely harp glimmerings and 
                  other arcanely whispered sounds at 0:48. It’s a strangely 
                  beautiful world that both grumbles and gleams in a way that 
                  recalls Bax’s Second Symphony. The final fade-out of the 
                  choir seems electronically contrived rather than naturally sung. 
                  So this is an enigmatic and very different Planets. I 
                  liked it and if you feel jaded with ‘the middle way’ 
                  as represented by the great and the good do get this. You will 
                  not be bored.  
                     
                  You might like to read David Trippett’s online biography 
                  of Holst and Dr Len Mullenger’s article 
                  on The Planets elsewhere on this site. There is also an 
                  index for all 
                  Holst reviews on this site. 
                     
                  The second disc in Volume 1 is packed to almost overflowing 
                  with miscellaneously-sourced Holst. Holst, himself a trombonist 
                  and here abetted by Boult, unleashes the instrument in the Dance 
                  Of The Spirits Of Earth - the first episode of the ballet 
                  music from the still-unrecorded yet highly entertaining opera 
                  The Perfect Fool. This particular recording was always 
                  one of the spectaculars of the LP catalogue. It still sounds 
                  handsome and grippingly upfront. We need a recording of the 
                  complete opera please. I could never understand why The Perfect 
                  Fool with its fairy-tale charms and wit and Rimskian brilliance 
                  languished while session-time preference was given to the much 
                  lower key At the Boar’s Head.  
                     
                  The Hardy-inspired Egdon Heath has no surface glamour. 
                  The tonality is mistily ambiguous. There’s even a touch 
                  of Schoenberg there. The Black Dyke/Elgar Howarth Moorside 
                  Suite is excellent - magnificent recording and snortingly 
                  vibrant performance. Shame that all the movements are channelled 
                  down to a single track.  
                     
                  The excellence of that Moorside recording does few favours 
                  to the venerable Eastman/Fennell recordings of the two windband 
                  suites. Cracking playing but that final March of Suite No. 1 
                  is, I now find, just too fast as is the Dargason finale 
                  of Suite 2. It’s as if Fennell is saying to you - I can 
                  play it this fast and I’ll show you how! Stirs the blood, 
                  right enough, but Holst comes only a close second. By contrast 
                  The Song of the Blacksmith movement is just irresistibly 
                  punchy. Grainger has a similar facility with emphatic vehemence. 
                   
                     
                  Hogwood is flattered by a really modern recording - well 1990s, 
                  anyway. His St Paul’s yields rewards in depth and 
                  breadth of sound. The neo-classical Fugal Concerto has 
                  reserves aplenty of sheer oomph and virile élan.  
                     
                  Britten’s admiration for Holst is attested to by his commitment 
                  to Holst’s major song-cycle and by his undeniably imaginative 
                  way in accompanying Pears in the Twelve Humbert Wolfe Songs. 
                  Wolfe’s poetry can be treacly sentimental but more often 
                  encompasses elusive worlds and visions. Pears’ precious 
                  yet assertive way with the words shows commitment and delivers 
                  a fine interpretative standard. Britten is superbly imaginative. 
                  These songs share something with Fauré and Boughton - 
                  the latter in his most symbolist Celtic moments. Betelgeuse 
                  has distance and inhumanity - a strange and brave song with 
                  which to end. Holst’s uncompromising integrity stares 
                  out unblinkingly into a remote infinity. It delivers an applause-defying 
                  ending to the cycle.  
                     
                  The nine choral items launch with a delicate Ave Maria. 
                  Things find their feet with Three Welsh Folksongs. The 
                  prize of the three is the slow-stepping My Sweetheart’s 
                  Like Venus. The Song Of The Blacksmith will be well 
                  known from the counterpart movement of the Suite No. 2. It is 
                  also a swinging masculine partner to Dyson’s The 
                  Blacksmiths.. The female voice Partsongs H92 
                  and H119 are suitably gentle while the Two Carols for 
                  mixed voices are more extrovert and touch on the Moeran-Warlock 
                  toping song territory.  
                     
                  In the same realm as Betelgeuse is The Hymn of Jesus 
                  - exotic and elusive. It is dedicated to RVW and is Holst’s 
                  mystical response to WW1 as was RVW’s 
                  Pastoral 
                  Symphony, Delius’s 
                  Requiem 
                  and Foulds’ strangely conventional and less successful 
                  World 
                  Requiem. The Holst is a mysterious yet triumphant hybrid 
                  of Middle Eastern mood and Greek Orthodox church censers. There 
                  are also parallels to be drawn with Szymanowski though the Holst 
                  is never as lush as the Song 
                  of the Nightor Krol 
                  Roger. This is a classic recording which has not been 
                  excelled. A delicate hushing analogue background is a presence 
                  you have to accept. The spoken incantatory choir, the rising 
                  female waves of praise and grand orchestral rhetoric all register 
                  affirmatively. Divine grace is dancing sounds very much 
                  like Constant Lambert (10:00). Finzi might also have imbibed 
                  the influence in the dancing episodes in Intimations 
                  of Immortality. The more chaste moments recall in beauty 
                  Holst’s own wonderful Whitman setting of Dirge For 
                  Two Veterans paralleled by RVW’s in Dona Nobis 
                  Pacem. This 1960s Hymn of Jesus - a valiantly unfashionable 
                  Decca endeavour at the time - is one of Boult’s classic 
                  recordings. It is amongst the best things he ever did alongside 
                  the Holst 
                  Choral 
                  Symphony, Bax’s 
                  Northern 
                  Ballad No. 1, Moeran’s 
                  Symphony and RVW’s 
                  Dona 
                  Nobis Pacem. The Holst work surely inhabits the realms 
                  of the celestial spheres and of the angels. It fades into an 
                  ineffable Neptune-like silence having wrought a potent 
                  spell.  
                     
                  If I prefer Felicity Palmer in a 1972 radio broadcast of the 
                  Four Medieval Songs this does not deafen me to the spare 
                  passions and careful weighed balances of the version by Peter 
                  Pears and Norbert Brainin. This I have done has the pristine 
                  exhalation of a winter morning’s sunshine-dappled carol. 
                  The Two Carols with oboe and viola have a suitably antiquarian 
                  accent with nice interplay between voices and viola and oboe 
                  and some delightful dancing figuration in Terly Terlow. 
                  Those two instruments are joined by the flute for the Terzetto 
                  in a work woven through and through with Warlockian regret. 
                  The Curlew is not far away in the first of the two movements. 
                  In the second Holst’s cooler neo-classical manner emerges 
                  as in the Fugal Concerto and Fugal Overture. The 
                  Six Canons are beautifully complex and much interwoven 
                  with grace and joy. They sometimes indulge in a nicely varied 
                  and angularly piquant jollity. Notice the analogue hush. Viola 
                  Tunnard’s perfectly judged piano pulse in Evening On 
                  The Moselle is memorable. Good to see her name again and 
                  be reminded of her manifest artistic virtues. In The Evening 
                  Watch is that Ian Partridge as the solo voice. The same 
                  piece is repeated across two of the discs. The Six Choruses 
                  H186 with the ECO mix of sacred and profane jolly and touch 
                  of Moeran’s drinking songs but it not all carousing witness 
                  the serenading a love song. Trudging stoical strings of Intercession. 
                  Piercing Herrmann-like stab of Good Friday - the pierced 
                  side of Christ recalled. March is perhaps a shade too 
                  quick. The walking holidays of Holst and RVW pervade the rhythmic 
                  voices in Good Friday. Before Sleep is calming 
                  and haunts the drowsy and wakeful realms. The subtle harmonic 
                  gouache of The Evening Watch is repeated in Before 
                  Sleep.    
                     
                  The final disc touches on Holst’s passion for things oriental. 
                  Thus we have the delectably rippling Choral Hymns from the 
                  Rig Veda, Op. 26 No. 3 (Third Group) (H99). As Sheherazade 
                  outwitted the calif at some cost to her storytelling resources 
                  so Savitri yet more craftily trounces Death (strange 
                  how he sticks to the bargain) in the 30 minute opera that bears 
                  her name. There’s a fine singing from the three solo voices. 
                  Savitri and her lover Satyavan sound suitably passionate but 
                  ever so cut-crystal English. Baker is velvety of tone and yet 
                  she can sing with an approach towards girlish naivety as in 
                  the final scene. The whole conception instrumental, choral and 
                  solo is nicely judged and the ecstatic mingling of the choir 
                  and Baker’s voice at 1:10 in Loneliness and pain are 
                  ended is a treasure. This work functions as an extended 
                  scena or perfectly balanced miniature opera. Holst here polishes 
                  a rare mood and exotic atmosphere although the singing in this 
                  version reeks of the English choral tradition. The Seven 
                  Partsongs are delicate and ascetically eloquent. These graceful 
                  and light-palated delights are enhanced by minimal instrumental 
                  grace interjections. The soloist is Susan Longfield and she 
                  proves something of a star. She could easily have been another 
                  Felicity Palmer had she had her chance with the Four Medieval 
                  Songs or indeed in Holst’s luxuriant Keats-based Choral 
                  Symphony (review). 
                  The austere lissom hum of The Evening Watch exercises 
                  a powerful spell. It too is from the mid-1920s and now sounds 
                  quite modern. The words for all the pieces are printed in full 
                  in the booklet.  
                     
                  Those Rig Veda songs are captivating. If you would like 
                  to explore further then you might like to be reminded that in 
                  December 1984 Osian Ellis (also the harpist on this disc), the 
                  Royal College of Music Chamber Choir, the Royal Philharmonic 
                  Orchestra all conducted by Sir David Willcocks recorded the 
                  four sets of Hymns. They were issued complete on Unicorn-Kanchana 
                  DKP(CD)9046. That CD was filled out with the Hymn to Dionysus 
                  and The Two Eastern Pictures. It won’t be easy 
                  to track down. Quite apart from the Hymns we also have The 
                  Cloud Messenger on Chandos (review) 
                  and, remaining to be recorded, the grand opera Sita of 
                  which we have heard only the Act III interlude on Lyrita SRCD209 
                  (review). 
                  The same Lyrita also presents the tone poem Indra.  
                     
                  I should add that two of the five discs have been issued previously 
                  as part of the Holst volume of the Decca British Music Collection 
                  (review). 
                   
                     
                  There we have it. A great deal of largely unfamiliar Holst at 
                  bargain price. We also have a revival of his most performed 
                  orchestral piece in a pleasingly disorientating and controversial 
                  reading that ranks with ultima thule readings of Bernstein’s 
                  BBCSO Enigma 
                  and Golovanov’s 
                  Mendelssohn Scherzo. The 1960s Argo originals carry the 
                  standard high and complement Lyrita’s Holst discs on SRCD222 
                  (Adrian Boult) and SRCD223 
                  (Imogen Holst).  
                     
                  Rob Barnett   
                Performance details   
                  4802323  
                  The Planets [57:02] 
                  London Philharmonic Orchestra/Bernard Herrmann  
                  The Perfect Fool [10:40]  
                  Egdon Heath [12:44]  
                  London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult  
                  A Moorside Suite (H173) [14:24]  
                  Grimethorpe Colliery Band/Elgar Howarth  
                  Suite No. 1 in E flat major, Op. 28a (H105) [9:08]  
                  Suite No. 2 in F major, Op. 28b (H106) [10:41]  
                  Eastman Wind Ensemble/Frederick Fennell  
                  St. Paul’s Suite, Op. 29 No. 2 (H118) [12:32]  
                  A Fugal Concerto, Op. 40 No. 2 (H152) [7:23]  
                  Julia Bogorad (flute); Kathryn Greenbank (oboe); Saint Paul 
                  Chamber Orchestra/Christopher Hogwood  
                  rec. Eastman Theater, Rochester, New York, United States, May 
                  1955 (Suites Nos. 1 and 2); Kingsway Hall, London, UK, March 
                  1961 (Egdon Heath, The Perfect Fool), February 1970 (The Planets); 
                  Town Hall, Huddersfield, United Kingdom, June 1976  
                  (Moorside Suite); Ordway Music Theater, Saint Paul, Minnesota, 
                  USA, May 1992 (St. Paul’s Suite, Fugal Concerto).ADD  
                   
                  4802327   
                  Twelve Songs to words by Humbert Wolfe Op. 48 (H174) 
                  [26:11]  
                  Sir Peter Pears, tenor Benjamin Britten (piano);  
                  Ave Maria, for unaccompanied female voices in eight parts 
                  Op. 9b (H49) [4:21]  
                  Three Welsh Folk Songs arr. unaccompanied chorus (H183) 
                  [7:22]  
                  The Song of the Blacksmith arr. unaccompanied male voices 
                  (H136) [1:14]  
                  Two Part-Songs for unaccompanied female voices [3:53] 
                   
                  Two Carols for unaccompanied chorus [2:51]  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  The Hymn of Jesus, Op. 37 (H140) [21:48]  
                  BBC Chorus; BBC Symphony Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult  
                  rec. Kingsway Hall, London, United Kingdom, March 1962 (The 
                  Hymn of Jesus), December 1965 (Humbert Wolfe Songs, Ave Maria, 
                  Three Welsh Folk Songs, The Song of the Blacksmith, Two Part-Songs, 
                  Two Carols). ADD  
                   
                  4802328 
                   Four Songs for Voice and Violin, Op. 35 (H132) [7:25] 
                   
                  Sir Peter Pears (tenor) Norbert Brainin (violin)  
                  This have I done for my true love for unaccompanied voices, 
                  Op. 34 (H128) [5:14]  
                  Jesu, Thou the Virgin-born for unaccompanied voices, 
                  Op. 20b (H82) [3:00]  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  Two Carols, with oboe and viola (H91) [4:19]  
                  Edward Selwyn (oboe); Cecil Aronowitz (viola)  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  Terzetto for flute, oboe and viola (H158) [9:52]  
                  Richard Adeney (flute); Peter Graeme (oboe); Cecil Aronowitz 
                  (viola);  
                  Six Canons (H187) [6:25]  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  Viola Tunnard (piano);  
                  The Evening-Watch, Op. 43 No. 1 (H159) [4:16]  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  Six Choruses, Op. 53 (H186) [17:18]  
                  The Purcell Singers; English Chamber Orchestra/Imogen Holst 
                   
                  rec. Kingsway Hall, London, UK, December 1965 (This have I done 
                  for my true love, Jesu, Thou the Virgin-born, Four Songs for 
                  Voice and Violin, Two Carols, Six Canons, Six Medieval Lyrics, 
                  The Evening-Watch), January 1966 (Terzetto). ADD  
                   
                  4802329   
                  Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda, Op. 26 No. 3 (Third Group) 
                  (H99) [12:33]  
                  Osian Ellis (harp)  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  Sāvitri, Op. 25 (H96) [30:38]  
                  Janet Baker (mezzo) - Sāvitri; Robert Tear (tenor) - Satyavan; 
                  Thomas Hemsley (bass) - Death; The Purcell Singers; English 
                  Chamber Orchestra/Imogen Holst  
                  Seven Part-Songs, Op. 44 (H162) [21:05]  
                  Susan Longfield (solo); The Purcell Singers; English Chamber 
                  Orchestra/Imogen Holst  
                  The Evening-Watch, Op. 43 (H159) [4:19]  
                  The Purcell Singers/Imogen Holst  
                  rec. Kingsway Hall, London, UK, October 1965 (Sāvitri), 
                  November 1965 (Rig Veda). ADD  
                   
                 
                 
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