Since the mid-2000s Wyastone
Estate Limited have been the holders of an
exclusive licence for the recordings of Lyrita Recorded Edition. The
result has been the release of some 100+ CDs setting out the whole of
the analogue and early digital inheritance of this British music label.
Over a period of some three years Wyastone liberated the Lyrita
catalogue from vinyl purgatory. MusicWeb International has reviewed
each of the resulting CDs.
These two boxed sets offer up no new recordings. Instead they
reassemble largely analogue material from existing Lyrita CDs under a
new generic grouping and issue them in two separately available
packages. Links to the reviews of the discs from which these concertos
come can be accessed through the page links detailed in the contents
listings at the end of this review.
The titles of each box are not be taken entirely literally. British?
That's a given, but not all of the works included were designated as
concertos by their composers. Bridge, Finzi, Foulds, Moeran, Scott,
Ireland, Holst, Rubbra and Hoddinott are represented by pieces that are
not concertos but they are for solo instrument and orchestra: piano in
the case of SRCD2345 and violin or cello in the case of SRCD2346.
The two concerto boxes feature cover photographs in colour of British
pastoral scenes. The design is faithful to the Lyrita style sheet and
is pretty good-looking. Heaven help us, the miniature essays on each
work are printed in a legible font, black on white. Some other
designers please take note!
Dates and locations of recording sessions are not given. Lyrita seem
always to have been reticent about those details. Such as we know can
be found in our reviews of the original issues, links to which appear
in the contents list below. The sound is a model of its kind - Lyrita
were always able to boast glorious sound except in the case of their
brittle mono recordings of solo piano music none of which are to be
found in these sets.
The freshly written liner-notes are by the authoritative and accessible
Paul Conway and run to ten pages in each case. These are not a simple
retread of the original notes by other authors.
Don't write Lyrita off as pedlars of English green-field slosh. There
is provocative variety to be found in each of these issues.
The Piano Concerto box serves up Stanford's least neglected piano
concerto which is both Brahmsian and yet has a dash of Rachmaninov
about it. The Finzi
Eclogue
is a peaceful spiritual essay - it causes no offence and imparts a
blessing as it passes. The Foulds and Bridge pieces are not concertos.
The former is a fantastic display of brilliance of imagination and
technique while the Bridge parallels his own
Oration
- which
is not included in these sets - in its tension and bleak expressive
power. It does have its heroics but they are bitter indeed. The Vaughan
Williams concerto recalls the world of his Fourth Symphony while the
Rawsthorne is softer and more yielding than we may be accustomed to
from this source. The Scott
Poem, with its
roundabout convolutions and folksong game-play, contrasts with the
Busch Piano Concerto. Ireland's
Legend
is another Sussex ancient sorcery, quite different in its subtlety to
the crowd-pleasing romantic heroics of the Moeran Rhapsody, which
plants its confident feet in 1940s film piano concerto pastures; it’s
very enjoyable. The last disc lets us hear again three piano concertos:
early, accessible and not fully characteristic in the case of the
Hoddinott and Berkeley; and fully mature in the case of Williamson’s
joyously clangourous and angular Third Piano Concerto.
As
for the String Concertos these range far and wide. The Coleridge-Taylor
is a treasure - full of Dvořákian melody and incident. The Holst
Invocation
is almost as moody as the Rubbra
Soliloquy, the
dark-clouded atmosphere of which you could cut with a machete. Finzi's
Introit
was salvaged from a disowned Violin Concerto - you can hear the whole
thing on
Chandos
- and it's the best thing in it by a long chalk. The two Holst works
are from his appealingly chattery neo-classical years although the
lovely
Lyric Movement for viola has a yearning
core. Busch's
Cello Concerto is from the other half of the CD that yielded the Piano
Concerto on SRCD2345. The Moeran Violin Concerto has been following me
around this year. I have heard it three times live and several times
recorded. Its touching slow-fast-slow movement scheme is most adroitly
handled by Georgiadis and Handley in what was the work's first
commercial recording from circa 1979. CDs 3 and 4 require stiffened
sinews for the modernistic Violin Concertos by Gerhard, Fricker, Morgan
and Banks. Even the
Serenata Concertante for
violin and
orchestra by Maconchy will not let you off the hook lightly. We end
with a roar and a flourish in Hoddinott's typically titled and
expressed
Nocturnes and Cadenzas for cello and
orchestra from 1969.
These two sets form companions to two similarly conceived and executed
4-CD Lyrita boxed editions issued in 2009 to mark Lyrita's fiftieth
anniversary, which were issued in the same type of double-width jewel
cases (
review).
Those two sampled shorter orchestral works from the Lyrita strong room
and there is some overlap with SRCD2345 and SCD2346. The only
duplication across the two pairs of sets was of Scott's
Early
One Morning, Finzi's
Eclogue and one
movement of the Busch Cello Concerto.
Generosity is the order of the day with the present two boxes. No CD
plays for less than 72:00 while one plays for 79:10. The price point is
attractive and may well make these suitable for the intrepid and
open-minded soul
as Christmas presents, if the original CDs are not already on the
intended receivers' shelves.
Rob Barnett
Contents lists (& links to original reviews)
BRITISH PIANO CONCERTOS
CD 1 [77.20]
Sir
Charles Villiers STANFORD
Piano Concerto No.2 in C minor Op.126 [37.30]
Malcolm Binns (piano)
London Symphony Orchestra
Gerald
FINZI
Eclogue for piano and string orchestra Op.10 [10.33]
Peter Katin (piano)
New Philharmonia Orchestra/Vernon Handley
John
FOULDS
Dynamic Triptych for Piano and Orchestra Op.88 [29.14]
Howard Shelley (piano)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
CD 2 [75.23]
Frank
BRIDGE
Phantasm – Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra [27.24]
Peter Wallfisch (piano)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Nicholas Braithwaite
Ralph
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
Piano Concerto in C [27.42]
Howard Shelley (piano)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
Alan
RAWSTHORNE
Piano Concerto No.1 [20.12]
Malcolm Binns (piano)
London Symphony Orchestra/Nicholas Braithwaite
CD 3 [75.12]
Cyril
SCOTT
Early One Morning – Poem for Piano and Orchestra [14.48]
John Ogdon (piano)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Bernard Herrmann
John
IRELAND
Legend for Piano and Orchestra [12.44]
Eric Parkin (piano)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult
William
BUSCH
Piano Concerto [28.22]
Raphael Wallfisch (cello)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
E
J MOERAN
Rhapsody in F sharp for Piano and Orchestra [19.15]
John McCabe (piano)
New Philharmonia Orchestra/Nicholas Braithwaite
CD 4 [77.34]
Lennox
BERKELEY
Piano Concerto in B flat Op.29 [26.11]
David Wilde (piano)
New Philharmonia Orchestra/Nicholas Braithwaite
Alun
HODDINOTT
Piano Concerto No.1 Op.19 [19.50]
Philip Fowke (piano)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Barry Wordsworth
Malcolm
WILLIAMSON
Piano Concerto No.3 in E flat ** (1962) [32:19]
Malcolm Williamson (piano)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Leonard Dommett
BRITISH STRING CONCERTOS SRCD2346 4 CDs
CD 1 [76.48]
Samuel
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR
Violin Concerto in G minor Op.80 [32.54]
Lorraine McAslan (violin)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Nicholas Braithwaite
Gustav
HOLST
Invocation Op.19 No.2 for cello and orchestra [9.43]
Alexander Baillie (cello)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/David Atherton
Gerald
FINZI
Introit for small orchestra and solo violin Op.6 [9.50]
Rodney Friend (violin)
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult
Gustav
HOLST
Double Concerto for two violins and orchestra Op.49 [14.27]
Emmanuel Hurwitz and Kenneth Sillito (violins)
English Chamber Orchestra/Imogen Holst
Gustav
HOLST
Lyric Movement for Viola and small orchestra [9.54]
Cecil Aronowitz (viola)
English Chamber Orchestra/Imogen Holst
CD 2 [73.22]
William
BUSCH
Cello Concerto [23.28]
Raphael Wallfisch (cello)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
E
J MOERAN
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra [34.44]
John Georgiadis (violin)
London Symphony Orchestra/Vernon Handley
Edmund
RUBBRA
Soliloquy for Cello and Orchestra Op.57 [15.06]
Rohan de Saram (cello)
London Symphony Orchestra/Vernon Handley
CD 3 [79.10]
Roberto
GERHARD
Violin Concerto [23.28]
Yfrah Neaman (violin)
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Colin Davis
Peter
Racine FRICKER
Concerto for Violin and small orchestra Op.11 [23.17]
Yfrah Neaman (violin)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Norman del Mar
Elizabeth
MACONCHY
Serenata Concertante for Violin and orchestra [21.38]
Manoug Parikan (violin)
London Symphony Orchestra/Vernon Handley
CD 4 [73.44]
David
MORGAN
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra [25.46]
Erich Gruenberg (violin)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
Don
BANKS
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra [26.54]
Yfrah Neaman (violin)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Normal del Mar
Alun
HODDINOTT
Nocturnes and Cadenzas for Cello and Orchestra Op.62 (1969) [21.01]
Moray Welsh (cello)
Philharmonia Orchestra/Sir Charles Groves