This CD presents violin sonatas by two British names fairly
familiar to those who know their British music of the first half of the last
century. Sumsion and Darke were choral and organ practitioners - leaders in
the fields of festival and cathedral. Sumsion made a name in the direction
and shaping of the Three Choirs Festival. He was associated with many English
choral events including Finzi's
Intimations of Immortality
and Howells'
Hymnus Paradisi. Darke was for many years one
of the mover and shakers in London's music world particularly linked
with St Michael's Cornhill. His St Michael's Singers gave an
annual festival that boasted first or early performances of Dyson's
Hierusalem, Howells'
An English Mass and RVW's
A Vision of Aeroplanes. Both Darke and Sumsion wrote substantial
organ music hence the title
Herbert Sumsion's short three-movement Sonata has
a smiling disposition pulled between the tropics of Brahms and Dvorak. The
latter is strongly in play in the final
Allegro. The central
Lento
doloroso takes on a more modern hue - tentative and melancholy but with
impulsive episodes to provide contrast and a sprinkling of confident propulsion.
This is very agreeable music and kindles hopes for revivals of the Sumsion
orchestral works:
Idyll, At Valley Green;
Lerryn;
A
Mountain Tune and
Overture, In the Cotswolds. There are also
other chamber works: a Piano Trio (1931), a Cello Sonata in C minor and a
String Quartet in G major.
The music of
Richard Pantcheff was new to me but on this
showing he is worth monitoring. The Sonata, composed in 2010, is predominantly
a three movement essay in peace and consonance. A sense of calm and 'letting
go' seep into the flesh and bones as you listen. The first movement
has a touch of the Lark in ascent about it or should that be Lark ecstatic?
A contemplative muse lords it unchallenged over this surprising Sonata with
the occasional pastel hint of Finzi, Messiaen or Pärt. The final gurgling
Tarantella recalls Shostakovich among those sometimes unassuming
voices.
In the Pantcheff Duncan Honeybourne plays the Hudlestone Organ, built by the
Swiss firm of Orgelbau Kuhn and installed in 2007.
The
Harold Darke Sonata does not shrink from sumptuous Brahmsian
expression: stirring, majestic and driven. This is a young composer announcing
himself with all the flooding confidence of youth. The
Andante is
memorable for its typically broad and sweet melody (3:27) while the finale
playfully casts off any Teutonic heaviness and moves at times closer to Brahms
friend Dvorak. This makes for a scorchingly satisfying conclusion. Surely
it must be worth recording Darke's
Switzerland Symphony which
is in three movements and dates from 1914. Also in his worklist will be found
an early
Phantasie for piano and orchestra and a
Concert Overture
that was played in May 1918 in Bournemouth. Quite apart from piano and organ
solos, songs and part-songs there are some seemingly substantial pieces for
soloists, choir and orchestra:
The Kingdom of God,
As the Leaves
Fall,
Ye Watchers (1923) and
Ring out, Ye Crystal Spheres
(Milton) (1926).
Thanks to the author of the booklet who introduced me to a new word 'chiasmus'.
You may have to look it up; I certainly had to.
The performances are as satisfying and as confidently magisterial as the recording
quality which never misses a beat in its clarity and strength. We should never
take the redoubtable Rupert Marshall-Luck for granted. Here is a man who continues
to introduce us to works that the years have discarded and trodden down. He
brings them to us not as something fusty and dusty but as precious and joyous.
His work at the EMF in this and previous years (
2013,
2015)
and his many previous discs leave us in no doubt as to his great artistry and
advocacy (
Stanford
and Milford;
Bantock
and Holbrooke;
Bantock,
Coke and Scott,
Walford
Davies;
Gurney
and
Howells).
It's an extraordinary heritage that he is laying down. Duncan Honeybourne
is likewise a very fine and expressive player with a questing inclination
and a good eye and ear for the neglected yet musically rewarding. We know
him from his contributions to the
EMF
as well as his eloquent EM Records CDs of
Moeran
and
Greville
Cooke and we can surely hope to hear more from him.
Rob Barnett