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Oboe Classics

Seven Sisters: Chamber Music by British Women
Cecilia McDOWALL (b.1951)
Le Temps Viendra
for oboe/cor anglais, clarinet/bass clarinet and piano (1998) [6:49]
Rosalind ELLICOTT (1857-1924)
Aria
for violin and piano (1891) [5:24]
Jocelyn POOK (b.1960)
Wonderland
arr. for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, violin, viola, cello and piano (2007, 2014) [5:27]
Sally BEAMISH (b.1956)
Songs and Blessings
for oboe, bassoon, viola and piano (1991) [9:27]
Sophia DUSSEK (1775-c. 1830)
Sonata in D, op.1 for violin and piano (1793) [9:46]
Ethel SMYTH (1858-1944)
Sonata in A minor op.5 for cello and piano (1887) [20:38]
Madeleine DRING (1923-1977)
Trio for flute, oboe and piano (1968) [10:27]
Diana Ambache (piano); Anthony Robb (flute); Jeremy Polmear (oboe, cor anglais); Neyire Ashworth (clarinet, bass clarinet); Julie Andrews (bassoon); David Juritz (violin); Louise Williams (viola); Rebecca Knight (cello)
rec. Church of St John the Baptist, Loughton, Essex, 26-28 March 2014
AMBACHE AMB6005 [67:58]

This is a CD full of delights. Naturally, when seven works by seven composers from three major artistic eras are presented on a disc, the listener will have their favourites and I am no different. I will put my cards on the table as the review progresses.

‘Le Temps Viendra’ by Cecilia McDowall is a serious piece. It was inspired by words written by Anne Boleyn into her Book of Hours. The music ‘contemplates [her] premonition of her … death in a suitably haunted manner.’ Whether this is successful, is up to the imagination of the listener. For me it ‘works’ better as an abstract piece. Its interesting and imaginative instrumental sonorities maintain considerable interest.

Rosalind Ellicott’s ‘Aria’ is absolutely beautiful and totally ‘beguiling’. She out-Elgar’s, Elgar with this sad, but ultimately positive piece for violin and piano. It may be technically classified as ‘salon music’ but it pushes the boundaries towards something much more profound. If it were played on Classic FM it would surely become one of the nation’s favourites. It is taken from an album of ‘Six Pieces’ which appeared in 1892. It would be interesting to hear what the other five numbers are like.

I enjoyed Jocelyn Pook’s musical survey from the summit of the world’s highest mountain. Originally composed for the documentary film Remnants of Everest: The 1996 Tragedy, this extract expresses the ‘sense of wonder at the spectacular mountain scene and seeing dawn unfurling on the peaks’. Alas, eight climbers died as a result of a horrendous storm at that time: eleven survived. Pook’s music is straightforward: simple even, in a most positive way. It works well as a stand-alone piece in spite of having been extracted from a wider score. The chamber ensemble is perfectly suited to this music, with some lovely woodwind passages. There is a thoughtful element that hints, but does not major on, the ensuing catastrophe.

I hate to admit it, but Sally Beamish’s ‘Songs and Blessing’ for oboe, bassoon, viola and piano does not move me in the way I feel it should. It is supposedly influenced by the ancient songs and rituals of the Outer Hebrides, celebrating ‘the islander’s sense of God’s immediacy in daily living.’ There are a number of sections in this work and these include ‘The Sowing’, ‘Dance’, ‘Psalm’, ‘Weaving Song’, ‘Blessing’ and ‘Reaping’. The liner-notes point out that there are a few suggestive Scottish ‘snaps’ and an imitation of the bagpipe’s drone. It is an evocative piece that uses an imaginative approach to the small chamber ensemble: in fact listeners will sometimes feel that they are listening to a chamber orchestra rather than a quartet.

Sophia Dussek’s (1775-c.1830) wonderfully poised and elegant Violin Sonata is my main discovery on this CD. Most aspiring pianists will have battled their way through one or more of her husband Jan Ladislav’s (1760-1812) piano sonatas but I guess few will have come across Sophia’s music. Not only was she a composer, but also a singer, pianist and harpist. The present sonata was published in 1793 — the same year as Haydn’s Symphony No. 99. It was written expressly for the forte-piano. The work is dedicated to a certain Miss Cornelia Collins who was possibly a pupil or a patron. The composition is thoroughly enjoyable from the first page to the last. It is urbane music that does not challenge the listeners but keeps them engaged and delighted. The liner-notes point out the ‘singing octaves’ in the first allegro’s codetta anticipate the then six-year-old Franz Schubert so it is forward-looking as well as being a fine summation of the then-contemporary musical style. This is an important Sonata that demands to be well established in the repertoire. A wee bit more biographical information about Sophia Dussek would have been helpful: What was her position and status in London: for example? In fact, she was born in Scotland and latterly ran a music school in Paddington with her second husband. Lots of exploration to do here.

I should have liked Ethel Smyth’s Cello Sonata, yet after two hearings it has not caught my imagination. It is very much in the vernacular of the ‘German romantic language of the day’. Well-written and widely ranging in emotion it is varied in style. I accept that it is probably the major work on this CD, but just does not do it for me.

Madeleine Dring’s Trio for flute, oboe and piano is the most enjoyable thing on this CD. It was composed in 1968 for her husband, the oboist Roger Lord. I was reminded of Poulenc’s Gallic wit and charm in the progress of this music, yet there is a touch of typically English magic about this work that the liner-notes suggest is the musical equivalent of Joyce Grenfell. Diana Ambache writes that the composer was ‘both cheeky and saucy’. A hint of Mozart notwithstanding, this is an original work that displays Dring’s character to a tee. It is interesting to note that The Beatles Magical Mystery Tour was at No.1 in the UK album charts the year that this Trio was written.

I was delighted by the quality of playing on this CD. The liner-notes are excellent, with brief but illuminating biographies of the composers and a few succinct words about the works in question. There are also detailed summaries about each of the performers.

Diane Ambache in her introduction has summed up this CD better than any critic could. She says that ‘these works demonstrate a wide range of expression, encompassing vigour, charm, ardour, fire and delightful playfulness … (the composers are) gutsy, spirited and sometimes cheeky.’

John France
 

 

 



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