Christopher Gunning is a highly experienced composer, 
      a pupil of Edmund Rubbra and the late Sir Richard Rodney Bennett. His output 
      includes seven symphonies and a number of concertos as well as a good deal 
      of music for TV and films. Chandos have recorded his Third and Fourth Symphonies 
      - a most rewarding disc (
review) 
      - and a selection of his TV and film music (
review) 
      while his First Symphony can be found on Albany (
review). 
      We learn from the booklet that the Discovery label plans to issue a recording 
      of his Fifth Symphony. He has also contributed concert reviews to MusicWeb 
      International Seen and Heard, though his busy schedule of composing and 
      conducting has recently obliged him to take a temporary break from his reviewing 
      activities. 
        
      Two of the three concertos recorded here, those for flute and guitar, were 
      composed for the artists who play them in these première recordings. 
      In his notes the composer relates that he first met Catherine Handley in 
      1989 when her then-husband, Vernon Handley, was recording Gunning’s 
      
Yorkshire Glory, a symphonic portrait of Yorkshire. As a Yorkshireman 
      myself, I’m sorry - and slightly embarrassed - that 
this 
      disc has so far eluded me. In 1989 Gunning wasn’t aware that Catherine 
      Handley is a flautist and a fine musician in her own right so the Concertino 
      didn’t materialise for many years. It was well worth the wait. 
        
      The work is cast, like its companion pieces on this disc, in three movements. 
      The first is light-hearted, as Gunning says, The music is inventive and 
      enjoyable and the flute’s innate agility is well exploited. Though 
      the pace relaxes somewhat in mid-movement most of the music is lively and 
      carefree. The writing for the orchestra is skilful in that the band makes 
      a strong contribution without in any sense overpowering the soloist - this 
      is a characteristic of all three concertos. The central movement is marked 
      ‘Slow and thoughtful’ and in it the composer says he wanted 
      to convey the “timelessness and stillness” of the Welsh mountains. 
      This movement features some beautiful, soulful writing for the solo instrument. 
      Gunning uses the term “pure unadulterated fun” of his finale. 
      It’s a delightful creation - something of a caprice - and by the sounds 
      of it the orchestra joins in the fun with the soloist. 
        
      The Clarinet Concerto is the earliest of the three works and with it Christopher 
      Gunning joins the ranks of the composers who have found a solo clarinet 
      and string orchestra to be an ideal combination. The first movement exploits 
      the clarinet’s ability and propensity to sing. The music is not only 
      lively and attractive but also fluent. The middle movement is marked ‘Very 
      slow’. There’s mellow melancholy, especially in the solo part. 
      In the centre of the movement (3:55 - around 4:20) the tone becomes more 
      impassioned before a reversion to the ruminative style of the opening. The 
      finale is spirited and lively. Sometimes the rhythms have a jazzy inflection. 
      There’s a slightly pensive central episode but for the most part the 
      music is puckish. 
        
      Amongst three most attractive works the one that impressed me the most - 
      albeit by a short head - is the Guitar Concerto. It bears the title 
Requerdos 
      do Mallorca and, as the composer says, a holiday atmosphere pervades 
      the outer movements, though, despite the title, don’t go looking for 
      lots of 
faux-Spanish effects in the music. The first movement is 
      an absolute charmer, not least on account of its light, airy textures. The 
      writing for the solo instrument is consistently attractive and though Gunning 
      has restrained his orchestral palette in deference to the need to balance 
      the gentle sound of the guitar the scoring is still colourful and always 
      full of interest. The composer describes the slow movement as “a kind 
      of slow aria”. The music is mainly very beautiful and restful though 
      things become a bit more animated for a few moments in the middle of the 
      movement, just before the cadenza. Woodwind solos are a prominent feature 
      of the introduction to the finale. Here the music sounds to be fairly moderate 
      in tempo before the soloist initiates a livelier speed. There are allusions 
      to the instrument’s Spanish roots in this movement but this is not 
      overdone. This most engaging finale rounds off a highly entertaining concerto 
      in fine style. 
        
      I’ve focused on the music since I imagine it will be new to most readers. 
      Let me make amends for my neglect of the performers themselves by saying 
      firstly that all three soloists are first class. Obviously, I don’t 
      know the pieces but at every turn the playing sounds assured and highly 
      polished. Above all, each of the soloists sounds to be having fun and relishing 
      the inventive music they’ve been given to play. They are supported 
      by sparkling playing from the RPO and with the composer on the podium it 
      can be safely assumed that the performances are completely authoritative. 
      The recorded sound is excellent throughout and the documentation is very 
      good too. 
        
      This disc is a delight from start to finish. On the evidence of the Third 
      and Fourth Symphonies I’d say that these three impeccably crafted 
      and highly enjoyable concertos represent the less intense side of Christopher 
      Gunning’s art but that statement is not meant in any way to diminish 
      them. This is, above all, music to entertain. I think it’s not without 
      significance that Gunning is a highly successful film and TV composer. If 
      you write music for those media you have to have, amongst other things, 
      the knack of getting the attention of your audience quickly and retaining 
      it. That’s just what these three works achieve. This disc could fairly 
      be described as music for pleasure. 
        
      
John Quinn 
        
      Three impeccably crafted and highly enjoyable concertos: music for pleasure.