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Cathedral Brass - Volume II
Charles -Marie WIDOR (1844-1937)
Toccata from Organ Symphony No. 5 (arr. Wright)
[4:04]
John HUGHES (1873-1932)
Guide Me, O Thou Great Redeemer (arr. Wilby)* [4:26]
Karl JENKINS (b. 1944)
Benedictus fromThe Armed Man: A Mass for Peace (arr.
Small) [4:36]
Maurice BEVAN (1921-2006)
There's a Wideness in God's Mercy (arr. Wilby)* [3.02]
William WALTON (1902-1983)
Crown Imperial (arr. Wright) [4:33]
Henry WALFORD DAVIES (1869-1941)
God be in my Head* [1:35]
Albert W KETÈLBEY (1875-1959)
In a Monastery Garden (arr. Wilby)* [4:53]
Léon BOËLLMANN (1862-1897)
Prière à Notre-Dame and Toccata from
Suite Gothique (arr. Ball) [8:04]
William Henry MONK (1823-1889)
Abide with Me (arr. Jenkins and Graham) [2:32]
Henry WALFORD DAVIES
Psalm 121* [2:35]
Hubert PARRY (1848-1918)
I Was Glad (arr. Wilby)* [4:32]
Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
O for the Wings of a Dove (arr. Wilby) [6:06]
Martin NYSTROM
As the Deer Pants for the Water (arr. Wilby)* [3:04]
John GOSS (1800-1880)
Praise My Soul (arr. Childs) [3:30]
Herbert HOWELLS (1892-1983)
All My Hope (arr. Wilby)* [3:38]
Martin SHAW (1875-1958)
Hills of the North, Rejoice (arr. Wilby)* [3:36]
Edward ELGAR (1857-1934)
Nimrod and Finale from Enigma Variations (arr. Ball) [9:15]
*Bristol Cathedral Choir/Mark Lee
Mark Lee, Philip Wilby (organists)
Black Dyke Band/Dr Nicholas J. Childs
rec. 2010, Morley Town Hall; St Teilo Church, Cardiff, 24 January
2011.
Sung texts not included
DOYEN DOYCD244 [75:27]
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My first experience of the Black Dyke Band was via a cover-mount
CD on a hi-fi magazine about twenty years ago. It made an indelible
impression and helped fire my interest in brass music. The band
has a beautifully blended, virtuoso sound that never fails to
impress, whether the music is frankly populist or something
a little more serious. This second volume of Cathedral Brass
is a bit of both, combining arrangements of well-known hymns/songs
of faith and orchestral/organ pieces. The players are joined
by Bristol Cathedral Choir, directed by their organist and Master
of Choristers Mark Lee; the other organist is composer-arranger
Philip Wilby. The band is led by its music director, Nicholas
Childs.
Where better to start than with a pot-boiler; Widor’s
Toccata is played with astonishing agility - and underpinned
by a discreet organ part - setting the pace and standard for
this most entertaining collection. Of the many hymn tunes, John
Hughes’ Guide Me, O Thou Great Redeemer blends
the splendid, sonorous brass sound with a warmly lyrical choir.
As for Philip Wilby’s arrangement of Maurice Bevan’s
There's a Wideness in God's Mercy its simplicity and
breadth is most engaging. Balances are fine, although tuttis
are on the bright side.
One-time Master of the King’s Musick Henry Walford Davies’
God be in my Head has a limpid purity that is well caught
by the recording team. His equally affecting setting of Psalm
121 is slightly marred by a noticeably high level of ambient
noise, although I doubt most listeners would quibble when the
choral and solo singing is as good as this. What a contrast
with Parry’s robust anthem I was Glad, band and
singers joined by a thrilling organ accompaniment. The sweep
and surge of this piece is impressive, and the recording does
full justice to Wilby’s fine arrangement.
Nicholas Childs’ brother Robert penned this lovely, singing
arrangement of John Goss’s Praise My Soul, the King
of Heaven. How wonderfully refined this band is in quiet
passages, and how impassioned in the more expansive episodes;
the recording is full and weighty, with no hint of stress in
the climaxes, both here and in the contemporary Martin Nystrom
setting of As the Deer Pants for the Water. It’s
not a particularly inventive piece but it has its moments, notably
those gentle timp strokes. Howells, who also wrote a setting
of Psalm 42 - more poetically rendered as ‘Like as the
Hart Desireth Waterbrooks’ - is represented in Wilby’s
arrangement of All My Hope on God is Founded. Again there’s
plenty of heft, the organ adding welcome ballast. It is surely
one of the most satisfying items here, those cymbal-capped climaxes
especially well caught.
But the best is yet to come. First is the arrangement of the
Benedictus from Karl Jenkins’ Mass for Peace,
with haunting solos from Zoe Hancock on flügelhorn and
Gary Curtin on euphonium. There’s a heart-stopping purity
to their playing, gently accompanied as they are by the band;
but there’s muscle and sinew too, those sudden drum thuds
both powerful and startling. The other work that stands out
because of its fine solo - Richard Marshall on cornet - is Wilby’s
arrangement of Mendelssohn’s O for the Wings of a Dove
from Hear My Prayer. It’s a sweet tune that can
so easily succumb to cloying piety, but it’s played here
with the utmost sensitivity and good taste. Yet another gem
in a disc liberally studded with sparklers.
And there’s more. My favourite track has to be William
Henry Monk’s Eventide (Abide with Me) in
a gorgeous arrangement - for band alone - by Karl Jenkins and
Peter Graham. It’s one of those unforgettable pieces that
never ceases to work its magic. What a spell it casts here,
the music as serenely autumnal as I’ve ever heard it.
Discretion and good judgment triumph once more, a familiar tune
made all the more affecting by its simplicity of utterance.
All very different from the virtuosic, large-scale arrangements,
the Boëllmann Prayer certainly has its inward moments,
the band discreet and finely calibrated, the Toccata gruff and
grand. What a thrilling noise the band makes in those pounding
tuttis and blazing finale.
There’s no shortage of spectacle in Walton’s royal
crowd-pleaser, Crown Imperial, written for the coronation
of King George VI in 1937. There’s no lack of weight either
thanks to the terrific organ part. The band plays with its usual
fluency and flair. It’s a flamboyant work that can be
overbearing, yet director Childs holds it all together remarkably
well; ditto Wilby’s tub-thumping arrangements of Elgar’s
Nimrod and Finale from Enigma. As ever, articulation
is impressive and detail well preserved, the disc concluding
with a thrilling flourish.
I have yet to hear the first volume in this series, but if it’s
half as good as this one it will be worth acquiring. This is
a well-chosen programme, with plenty of variety in terms of
weight, style and forces deployed. Indeed, it’s surprisingly
easy to listen to this anthology in one sitting, even allowing
for repeats of some tracks along the way. And despite the different
acoustics - and having to splice in the Bristol organ - the
recording team has done an excellent job. The liner-notes are
basic but well laid out. Sung texts are not provided.
Another disc with broad appeal, from one of the best bands in
the business.
Dan Morgan
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