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            Continental Britons - The Émigré 
              Composers 
              CD 1  
              Egon WELLESZ (1885-1974)  
              Octet Op.67 (1948) [30:48]  
              Geistliches Lied (Sacred Song) for medium voice, violin, 
              viola and piano Op.23 (1918/19) [9.29]  
              Kirschblütenlieder (Cherry Blossom Songs) from 
              the Japanese-style poems of Hans Bethge Op.8 (1911) [6:06] (Sehnsucht 
              nach der Nachtigall; Der Blütenzweig; Blütenschnee; 
              Leichtes Spiel; Blüten)  
              Leopold SPINNER (1906-1980)  
              Zwei Kleine Stücke (Two Small Pieces) for violin and 
              piano (1934) [5:22]  
              Berthold GOLDSCHMIDT (1903-1996)  
              Fantasy for oboe, cello and harp (1991) [11.41]  
              Peter GELLHORN (1912-2004)  
              Intermezzo for violin and piano (1937) [4.28]  
              Vilém TAUSKÝ (1910-2004) 
               
              Coventry - A Meditation for string quartet (1941) 
              [8.19]  
              CD 2  
              Hans GÁL (1890-1987)  
              Violin Sonata in B-flat minor Op.17 (1920) [23:59]  
              Fünf Melodien (Five Songs) for medium voice and 
              piano Op.33 (1917-21) [11:59]  
              (Vergängliches; Der Wiesenbach; Vöglein 
              Schwermut; Drei Prinzessinnen; Abend auf dem Fluss) 
               
              Berthold GOLDSCHMIDT (1903-1996)  
              The Old Ships (James Elroy Flecker) (1952) [4.31]  
              Mátyás SEIBER (1905-1960) 
               
              Violin Sonata Op. 17 (1960) [16:37]  
              Franz REIZENSTEIN (1911-1968)  
              Quintet for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and horn (1934) [11:42] 
               
              Karl RANKL (1898-1968)  
              War – eleven songs Op.10 (1939-42) (No. 4 They; No. 
              5 Böhmisches Rekrutenlied) [3:39]  
              Seven Songs for baritone and piano op.6 (1939-42) (No. 6 
              The Whim) [3.39]  
                
              Ensemble Modern, Frankfurt (Dietmar Wiesner (flute); Catherine 
              Milliken (oboe); Roland Diry (clarinet); Karl Ventulett (bassoon); 
              Silke Schurack (horn); Manon Morris (harp); Freya Ritts-Kirby (violin); 
              Thomas Hofer (violin); Susan Knight (viola); Eva Böcker (cello); 
              Bruno Suys (double-bass)) 
              Nurit Pacht (violin); Konstantin Lifschitz (piano) 
              Christian Immler (baritone); Erik Levi (piano) 
              Paul Silverthorne (viola)  
              rec. live, Wigmore Hall, London, June 2002. From a series of concerts 
              sponsored and organised by Andante and the JMI International Forum 
              for Suppressed Music. DDD  
                
              NIMBUS NI 5730/1 [76:46 + 76:38]   
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                  Though this is not a new set, it deserves to be noted that it 
                  still represents a fine, wide-ranging and authoritatively performed 
                  survey of works of émigré European composers who settled in 
                  Britain. Some of the pieces were written subsequent to their 
                  arrival, but equally others were written in their German or 
                  Austrian heyday. None is without interest. All are indicative 
                  of their musical directions at a given moment in their compositional 
                  lives.  
                     
                  If we take the works in disc order we start with Egon Wellesz’s 
                  five-movement Octet of 1948. This is a substantial, imposing 
                  work that immediately impresses through its establishment of 
                  a distinct sense of personality. Changeable, elegant, moody, 
                  and often serious, it’s approachable in the extreme and would 
                  make a good concert partner for the Ferguson Octet. The Geistliches 
                  Lied date from 1918-19 and are really rather lovely examples 
                  of his pared down lyricism, imbuing the songs as well with strong 
                  romanticism. The Cherry Blossom Songs strongly suggest 
                  a sense of French clarity, notably Debussy, though it’s evident 
                  that his Schoenbergian enthusiasms were present too, though 
                  these brief songs, none longer than two minutes, are more prisms 
                  for that influence not full grown examples of it.  
                     
                  Leopold Spinner is probably the least well known of the composers 
                  represented in this two disc box. He studied in Vienna, became 
                  a pupil of Webern and emigrated to England in 1939 where he 
                  later became an editor at Boosey & Hawkes, the music publisher. 
                  His Zwei Kleine Stücke for violin and piano are precisely 
                  that, but whilst contrasting in mood are consonant in ethos, 
                  which is a lightly Schoenbergian one once again and suffused 
                  with a clear intensity. They date from 1934. The most recent 
                  work to be written is Berthold Goldschmidt’s Fantasy for oboe, 
                  cello and harp (1991). It’s written in his habitual late one-movement 
                  form, and doesn’t reveal its secrets easily, though again stylistically 
                  there is a soupçon of a French accent about it. Peter Gellhorn’s 
                  Intermezzo (1937) is very appealing and would make a delightful 
                  encore, not least because of its dancing B section. It was composed 
                  two years after he’d made it to Britain. Czech émigré Vilém 
                  Tauský’s Coventry is ever affecting in its nobility. 
                  A quartet should record it alongside Alan Bush’s Dialectic 
                  to show the different sides of quartet writing in Britain in 
                  the later 1930s and early 1940s.  
                     
                  Hans Gál has begun to receive an increasing amount of attention 
                  on disc. Gratifyingly there are now competing cycles of the 
                  solo piano works, one rather fuller than the other. The works 
                  we have here in this collection are the Violin Sonata of 1920 
                  and Five Songs (1917-21). The sonata is a charmer, very fully 
                  lyrical and appropriately rich in witty badinage in the central 
                  Allegretto. The songs embrace the ballad, nostalgia, and reflective 
                  intimacy in equal measure. Another Violin Sonata comes from 
                  Mátyás Seiber in 1960, but this is a different kind of work 
                  altogether from the genial Gál. Seiber prefers a tauter, more 
                  abrasive sound world whose switch to more elastic melody lines 
                  is brusquer. But he too can spin a fine line, ending with an 
                  evocative elegiac Lento. Franz Reizenstein’s Quintet 
                  dates from 1934, the year he arrived in England and has some 
                  baroque elements. It also shows a strong Hindemith influence, 
                  which is not surprising as he had been a student. Karl Rankl’s 
                  songs show acute perception in word setting with Flatman’s seventeenth 
                  century poem The Whim being especially clever.  
                     
                  At this point I should note that there are two booklets with 
                  this set; extensive and first class notes on the music and the 
                  composers, and also a booklet of texts with translations where 
                  appropriate.  
                     
                  This extremely impressive set is performed with exemplary commitment. 
                  All the performances are outstanding. The recordings are first 
                  class too. Once or twice I wondered about balancing – I felt 
                  the violin was too backward in the Gál sonata for instance – 
                  but it’s a passing affair. Anyone with the slightest interest 
                  in the composers represented can hardly fail to be stirred by 
                  this release.  
                     
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                see also review 
                  by Rob Barnett 
                Related 
                  S&H review  
                   
                     
                 
				
                   
                  
                  
                    
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                
               
             
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