Simon Debruslais is clearly the master-mind behind this 
    inventive programme of contemporary British trumpet concertos.
    
    When at the University of Oxford Desbruslais came to know the music of Oxford 
    professor Robert Saxton. Saxton composed a piece for trumpet and small orchestra 
    
Psalm : A Song of Ascents, a work that Desbruslais 
    performed with the Oxford Sinfonietta in 2008. At that time he approached 
    Saxton with the proposal that he should write another trumpet concerto. The 
    result materialised some time later when Saxton completed his 
Shakespeare 
    Scenes for trumpet and strings. It's no wonder, then, 
    that Saxton's concertos are given the lion's share in this release.
    
    Both pieces deserve to be better known and when listening to Desbruslais' 
    immaculate performances of these two works one cannot but wonder – again 
    – why music of such quality is so little heard. They are strongly contrasted 
    in mood and intent. As might be implied 
Psalm draws 
    on the composer's Jewish background although without any real or all-too-obvious 
    borrowings from Jewish music — at least as far as I can tell. It is 
    rather a matter of atmosphere as suggested by the different episodes that 
    make up the piece. “The title is used for my piece to illustrate a spiritual 
    journey through various states, the trumpet as a priest-like master of Ceremonies, 
    initiating the musical voyage accompanied by tubular bells, its role that 
    of both announcement and warning”. These words by the composer put things 
    straight as to what happens in the course of the piece. Knowing that 
Shakespeare 
    Scenes was to be first performed in Stratford the composer thought 
    of Shakespeare and thus developed the idea of writing a work about some of 
    the plays. This was without any real programmatic intent so that each of the 
    five movements references episodes in the plays without being truly descriptive. 
    Again it is more of a suggestion of atmosphere and mood. So 
The Magic 
    Wood alludes to 
A Midsummer Night's Dream whereas the 
    second movement 
Falstaff is more like a character sketch of that 
    formidable Shakespeare character. 
The Storm on the Heath is a “depiction 
    of the physical and psychological states of King Lear and his Fool in the 
    driving rain and storm, the trumpet representing the mad monarch, the solo 
    violin his increasingly deranged jester”. The following movement 
Masque 
    does not refer to any particular play but rather to the masque sequences to 
    be found in some of the plays. The last movement, as if counterbalancing the 
    opening one, is entitled 
The Magic Island and like Alwyn's 
    similarly titled tone-poem derives from 
The Tempest.
    
 
    La Primavera composed as recently as 2012 is not 
    John McCabe's first piece for trumpet and orchestra. It was preceded 
    by 
Rainforest II for trumpet and strings completed 
    in 1987 (Dutton Epoch CDLX 7290). 
La Primavera is 
    again a splendid work displaying a remarkable vitality and imagination. I 
    have still to hear an indifferent note of music from this composer. The piece 
    unfolds in three concise movements played without a break. Two notable features 
    have to be singled out. First, in the second movement the trumpet is replaced 
    by a flügelhorn — as in Vaughan Williams' Ninth Symphony but 
    also as played by Miles Davis, another musician whom McCabe much admires. 
    Second, the percussion plays an almost obbligato part and it is even suggested 
    that these instruments be placed at the front of the platform next to, or 
    near, the trumpet soloist. By the way, this superb work is in no way connected 
    to Botticelli's celebrated canvas but rather reflects the “exuberance 
    and vitality of burgeoning new growth”.
    
 
    Up to now Deborah Pritchard's music was known to me through a short 
    piece 
Chanctonbury Ring (2000) featured in a quite 
    fine and interesting NMC release 
The Hoxton Thirteen (
NMC 
    D076) that I reviewed some time ago. I was thus happy to renew acquaintance 
    with her work and to hear a recent piece of hers. Unlike the other works recorded 
    here, 
Skyspace is for piccolo trumpet and strings. 
    In her notes the composer states that she has a synaesthetic approach to composition 
    with much music written in response to visual artworks or, I suppose, to visual 
    stimuli. She goes on to say that “the perceived sky colour has provided 
    the stimulus for the work, it was not her intention to portray physical colour, 
    rather the imagined colour of the mind's eye”. The seven short 
    movements which the composer describes as miniatures — each of them 
    is quite short, the longest one playing for a little over two minutes — 
    again suggest moods in a concise and remarkably telling way. This, again, 
    is a very fine work and I would certainly like to hear more of her music shortly.
    
 
    Desbruslais's immaculate playing and faultless musicality serve all 
    these works well. I do not think that his playing in these works could be 
    bettered although I sincerely wish that these works were avidly seized upon 
    by any adventurous trumpet player. The Orchestra of the Swan's committed 
    support - and that of the two conductors - is also part of the success of 
    this release. Excellent recordings and illuminating notes by the composers 
    are definitely an added asset to this most desirable release.
    
 
    Hubert Culot