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            Viola Sonatas, Idylls and Bacchanals 
              CD 1 
              Sir John Blackwood McEWEN (1868–1948) 
              Sonata for viola and piano in A minor (1941) [19:45] 
              Sir Arnold BAX (1883–1953) 
              Sonata for viola and piano (1922) [22:29] 
              Sir John Blackwood McEWEN (1868–1948) 
              Improvisations Provençales for violin and piano (1937) [23:58] 
              Breath o’ June for viola and piano (1913) [3:24] 
              CD 2 
              Dame Elizabeth MACONCHY (1907–1994) 
              Sonata for viola and piano (1938) [13:45] 
              Gordon JACOB (1895–1984) 
              Sonatina for viola and piano (1949) [12:33] 
              Alan RAWSTHORNE (1905–1971) 
              Sonata for viola and piano (1937, revised 1953) [15:14] 
              Robin MILFORD (1903–1959) 
              Four Pieces for viola and piano (1935) [8:17] 
              Kenneth LEIGHTON (1929–1988) 
              Fantasia on the name of BACH for viola and piano, Op. 29 (1955) 
              [14:23] 
                
              Louise Williams (viola, violin) 
              David Owen Norris (piano) 
              rec. Turner Sims Concert Hall, Southampton, England, 7-9 April 2011 
              (Bax, McEwen: Breath o’June), 5 January 2012 (McEwen: Improvisations 
              Provençales), 8-10 April 2012 (CD2) 
                
              EM RECORDS EMR CD007-008 [69:37 + 63:13] 
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                  This double set from ‘The Spirit of England’ series on EM Records 
                  is a generous collection of English chamber works for viola 
                  and piano. Actually one of the nine scores is for violin and 
                  piano. Of the seven composers featured Bax is by far the best 
                  known composer. He has done well in the recording studio over 
                  the last few decades but far less well in the concert and recital 
                  hall. In particular Chandos, Naxos, Hyperion and Lyrita have 
                  done sterling work. 
                    
                  The remaining composers on the release in all probability became 
                  victims of fashion falling into neglect. There remains a steady 
                  spark of interest in British composers from the first half of 
                  the twentieth century and one hopes their torch may begin to 
                  burn brighter in years to come. I consider all the music on 
                  this release to be easily accessible, inhabiting a tonal, late-romantic 
                  style of a bygone age. 
                    
                  Hawick-born composer Sir John Blackwood McEwen is best known 
                  today for his Solway Symphony. My introduction to his 
                  music was from hearing three discs forming part of an incomplete 
                  Chandos set of McEwen’s string quartets played by the Chilingirian 
                  Quartet. Associated for many years with the Royal Academy of 
                  Music (RAM) in London McEwen is represented here by three works. 
                    
                  The Sonata for viola and piano in A minor from 1941, 
                  the last decade of McEwen’s life, is cast in four movements. 
                  Most notable is the lengthy opening movement tinged with a melancholy 
                  evocative tolling bell. The writing is variegated with uplifting 
                  episodes of joy. I did notice what felt like minor tuning problems 
                  with the viola especially in the achingly beautiful second movement. 
                  The Allegretto, Scherzo is a light and carefree 
                  romp followed by the extremely brisk and upbeat Finale 
                  suggestive of a vibrant country-dance. 
                    
                  Written in 1937 by McEwen at Cannes on the French Côte d'Azur 
                  the Improvisations Provençales for violin and piano 
                  has six movements, each given a descriptive title in the Provençal 
                  Occitan dialect. This is a substantial score that varies from 
                  the benign rhythms of ‘The Heavy Heart’, to the serious rather 
                  grey and apprehensive world of ‘Oouliveio’, to a rather restrained 
                  folkdance in ‘The Piper’. 
                    
                  Breath o’June for viola and piano, a short single movement 
                  from 1913 was composed whilst staying on the French Atlantic 
                  coast. This is certainly an attractive piece although rather 
                  uneventful in mood. 
                    
                  Bax, like McEwen, was also a pupil at the RAM. A student of 
                  the Gaelic language he felt an extremely strong almost obsessional 
                  connection to Celtic mythology. The three movement Viola 
                  Sonata doesn’t seem to contain any obvious Celtic references. 
                  Composed in the decade after the First World War, a period of 
                  great unrest in Ireland, the work seems more of a farewell to 
                  the idyllic ‘Celtic twilight’ of Bax’s youth. The opening has 
                  an intensely sombre atmosphere with a calmer central passage. 
                  Briskly played, the central movement is weighty with a determined 
                  quality that borders on anger. Similar to the opening movement 
                  the Finale feels prosaic with a dark and discomforting 
                  feeling combined with a strong sense of yearning. 
                    
                  Maconchy although born in England grew up in Ireland. At the 
                  Royal College of Music (RCM) Maconchy studied with Charles Wood 
                  and Vaughan Williams later travelling to Prague for further 
                  tuition. I know Maconchy best for her set of string quartets 
                  that reveal influences of Bartók and Janácek. Here Maconchy 
                  is represented by her three movement Viola Sonata from 
                  1938. After hearing the work several times it certainly deserves 
                  to be heard more often. The brisk and bustling opening Allegro 
                  feels resolute but the pressure eases in a slower central passage. 
                  Full of tension the Lento moderato is followed by a 
                  densely written Presto, Finale full of angry, 
                  agitated writing. 
                    
                  Gordon Jacob was born in 1894 in London becoming a Stanford 
                  pupil at the RCM where he met Vaughan Williams, Holst, Howells, 
                  Bliss, Gurney and Moeran. Jacob’s strong connection with the 
                  RCM continued as he taught there himself for over forty years. 
                  Jacob’s Sonatina for viola and piano is a three movement 
                  score composed in 1949. Fresh and breezy the opening Allegro 
                  giusto feels alive and highly energetic. In the central 
                  slow movement the viola plays a tender melody over a percussive 
                  piano part that together generates a feeling of considerable 
                  tension. Marked Allegro con brio the brisk writing 
                  of the Finale feels bouncy, sprite-like and filled 
                  with energy. 
                    
                  Lancastrian Alan Rawsthorne was a pupil at the Royal Manchester 
                  College of Music also studying for a time in both Poland and 
                  Berlin. Today Rawsthorne is best known for his score to the 
                  1953 film of Nicholas Monsarrat’s wartime novel The Cruel 
                  Sea. Rawsthorne’s four movement Viola Sonata was 
                  introduced in 1937. Then the score was thought lost and was 
                  rediscovered sixteen years later. As I expected from Rawsthorne 
                  this is a weighty and most intriguing score of real quality. 
                  There is a relentless character to the opening Maestoso 
                  - Molto allegro featuring music of a squally, windswept 
                  nature suffused with a strong sense of anxiety. A mad-cap romp, 
                  the Scherzo is reminiscent of a moto perpetuo 
                  and the intensely sombre Adagio feels deliberate and 
                  reminds me of a funeral march. This finely wrought work concludes 
                  with an extremely high spirited Rondo, Finale. 
                    
                  Robin Milford studied at the RCM under Vaughan Williams; Holst 
                  and R.O. Morris. After leaving the RCM the Oxford-born Milford 
                  became a great friend of Gerald Finzi. From my experience Milford 
                  is better known by reputation than by actual performances. Milford’s 
                  score the Four Pieces for viola and piano from 1935 
                  is an attractive work that opens with a light and charming Air. 
                  Following on is the Musettea a traditional French dance 
                  featuring a most attractive melody. The weightier writing of 
                  the Serenade has a far more resolute quality than what 
                  has gone before and the concluding Gavot a traditional 
                  French dance feels lively and almost childlike in nature rather 
                  than courtly. 
                    
                  The final work on the release is by Yorkshireman Kenneth Leighton 
                  who studied at the Queen's College, Oxford. Winning a 
                  Mendelssohn Scholarship, Leighton chose to study in Rome becoming 
                  interested in the Second Viennese School and the atonal music 
                  of Luigi Dallapiccola. Leighton’s most prestigious appointment 
                  was as Reid Professor of Music at the University of Edinburgh. 
                  The Leighton score here is the Fantasia on the name of BACH 
                  for viola and piano from 1955. Cast in a single movement 
                  this has four distinct sections. Marked Adagio sostenuto 
                  the opening consists of intensely mournful writing that reminded 
                  me of the desolate sound world often heard in Shostakovich. 
                  Here the piano part is as prominent as the viola. The Allegro 
                  ritmico feels determined and forceful and is coloured by 
                  a slightly dark quality. Towards the end the music becomes more 
                  frenzied. Marked Lento the intense writing felt a touch 
                  dour. The final section a Fugue is brisk and unyielding, 
                  somewhat headstrong with real forward momentum. 
                    
                  Violist Louise Williams and pianist David Owen Norris are sterling 
                  advocates for this English chamber music repertoire. It is difficult 
                  to find fault with the quality of the playing. These are refined 
                  performances from two accomplished players of highly approachable 
                  music. In the accompanying booklet I found the rather curious 
                  notes sometimes readable, sometimes over-technical. Much more 
                  detailed notes are available on the EM Records website although 
                  I’m unsure why they were not included in the booklet. The sound 
                  quality from the Turner Sims Concert Hall, Southampton is consistently 
                  well recorded with good balance and clarity. English music is 
                  again well served by this disc of music for viola and piano 
                  from EM Records. 
                    
                  Michael Cookson 
                    
                 
                
                
                  
                  
                
                 
             
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