A prolific composer of light orchestral music, Oxford-born Bryan Kelly has
been writing in many different genres since the 1940s. This Heritage release
features some of the music he has composed for orchestral forces, recorded
to celebrate the composer's 80th birthday. Kelly's work is
under-represented in the CD catalogue and this release of his tuneful,
gracious music is very welcome indeed. This is unpretentious, traditional
British light music at its best.
The
Left Bank Suite is a set of Parisienne musical scenes
recalling Kelly's student days in the city. The perky opening prelude is
followed by a comical, French-sounding waltz with dashes of humorous
dissonance. A languorous depiction of the Seine and a Malcolm Arnold-like
Scherzo complete this fun piece.
Epitaph for Peace is one of the
two movements that form
Lest We Forget, written for the Remembrance
Day celebrations. It is a wonderfully poignant elegy for strings with the
composer in a completely different mood to the one we hear in the opening
suite. Barber's famous
Adagio springs to mind but Kelly's work is
no copy. It is worth hearing in its own right.
A Christmas Celebration is a potpourri of Christmas carols set in
five movements. The first four movements are gentle in nature - not serious,
but atmospherically gentle. The setting of
The Holly and the Ivy is
particularly attractive with the melody switching from one instrument to
another through the orchestra and a lovely oboe solo.
O little one
sweet is tenderly played by the strings and solo horn. The last
movement finally brings some sparkle to proceedings.
On Christmas
Night is used in a clever fugue that culminates in an uplifting, joyful
finale.
Concertante Dances is a demanding work for strings and woodwind
with some exposed writing for the wind section. It strays somewhat from the
category of British light music. It is more serious in nature but it is
still an approachable work in six sections. The music is rhythmically varied
and dance-like in character. A special word here for the bassoon in the
third movement but all the wind soloists shine throughout this varied,
quirky, interesting piece. The
Globe Theatre Suite for recorder and
strings was written for one of Kelly's neighbours while he lived in France,
the distinguished flautist Atarah Ben-Tovim. The suite is Elizabethan in
flavour and conjures up the era perfectly. The CD booklet compares Kelly's
modern twist on old themes to the music of Warlock and Poulenc and I have to
agree with this assessment. The soloist is the superb recorder player and
eloquent champion of so many British composers, John Turner.
Nativity Scenes is an orchestration of a work originally written
for organ. It opens in a serious vein on low strings depicting a dark night.
A shepherd boy is heard playing his flute. The second movement is a lively,
optimistic allegro depicting the rush to see the Christ child in Bethlehem.
We then get a short meditation to close the work. The final piece in this
fascinating programme is a cheeky little
Tango - one of the
composer's "sins of youth". The style is reminiscent of the slow movement
from Kelly's
Cuban Suite, once available on Argo in the early
1970s. It brings the CD to a satisfying conclusion.
The orchestral playing is splendid and full of vitality with excellent
solo work and obvious dedication to the music. The recording by producer,
Philip Lane and engineer, Gary Thomas, is close, dry and somewhat
studio-bound. It lacks a little warmth. All in all this is a winner from
Heritage. What about volume 2? Some suggestions:
Cuban Suite,
New Orleans Suite,
Sancho Panza Overture (1969) and
Sinfonia Concertante (1967) all from Kelly's time working with the
Leicestershire Schools Orchestra. It would be good to hear these pieces
again if the scores still exist. For the time being I'm grateful for what we
have been given here.
John Whitmore