Daniel JONES (1912-1993)
 Symphony No.3 (1951) [28:29]
 Symphony No.5 (1958) [39:33]
 BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra/Bryden Thomson
 rec. 1990, BBC studio recording
 Reviewed as downloaded from press preview
 LYRITA SRCD.390 
    [68:03]
	
	I am going to make an assumption, at the outset of this review, that those
    who already know and love Daniel Jones’ music (and who have been collecting
    Lyrita’s series of releases of his music) need only hear that this latest
    release is well up to standard with good BBC sound buffed up for release
    and fine committed performances. For everybody else (which included myself
    before preparing this review), it might be helpful to provide some kind of
    introduction to this fascinating but neglected composer. So brace yourself
    for a distinctly novice guide to the music of Daniel Jones!
 
    I will begin with a highly subjective response. Initially, I struggled a
    little to get a foothold in this densely complex music, where things seemed
    to be going on that I could only dimly grasp. I could understand and
    appreciate the technical and structural aspects of the music but not yet
    why they mattered. A sentence from an article by Kenneth Loveland quoted by
    Paul Conway in his helpful and comprehensive liner notes to this release
    gave me a way in: “The Fifth symphony was written at Jones’s home on the
    outskirts of Swansea high up on the Gower Peninsula in a room looking down
    on Oystermouth Castle and out over Swansea Bay.”
 
    I have never had the pleasure of visiting the Gower peninsula but 
	looking at photographs of it online, something clicked for me in terms of 
	the character of his music. I am not saying that Jones wrote nature music 
	but, in my subjective way, I began to hear something of the character of the 
	landscape in the music, particularly the fifth symphony recorded
    here. Think of the indirect relationship between Sibelius’ symphonies and
    the landscape of Finland and you might get some idea of what I have in
    mind. I do not believe any music is wholly abstract and Jones, based on
    public statements, clearly believed that the most important aspects of his
    symphonies were the feelings they enshrined.
 
    Continuing this subjective line, Jones’ music is not elemental in the way
    Sibelius’ can be but it does have its own quiet grandeur. As I listened, I
    imagined myself exploring the hidden coves of the Gower. This is music that
    most definitely requires repeated and careful listening before it reveals
    its particular pleasures. On the surface, these are sturdy, well-made
    orchestral works of a mostly tonal nature. The reader is, however, encouraged
    to go further.
 
    I won’t rehearse here the facts of Daniel Jones’ life and career but refer
    you to Hubert Culot’s excellent and thorough
    
        profile
    
    here on MusicWeb.
 
    A good place to start would be the second movement of the Fifth symphony, a
    scherzo in all but name. Jones’ orchestration is not flashy or particularly
    innovative but it is done with considerable craft. There is a wry wit here
    that belies the somewhat austere exterior of both works on this disc. This
    sounds rather like a Midsummer Night’s Dream with the darkness left in. It
    teems with inventive ways of developing the material. A more sombre trio
    section adds light and, above all, shade to the return of the scherzo
    material. Continuing my fantasy of the Gower peninsula, I wonder if those
    are its birds I hear in the woodwind writing? If so, the dark heavy brass
    would be its rocks and cliffs.
 
    On the debit side, Jones does have a tendency to turn somewhat
    kapellmeisterisch at times. Both finales tend a little to longwindedness as
    the composer feels the need to work through every last ounce of the
    material’s potential. Related to this, there is little concession to the
    merely entertaining which can feel a little hairshirt at times. But these
    are minor quibbles with so much to enjoy.
 
    Of the two performances on this disc, the Fifth seems to better capture the
    subtle strengths of this music. There are moments of ragged ensemble on
    both but the interpretation of the Third seems somewhat tentative in
    places, as though the performers were still feeling their way in to this
    highly complex music.
 
    The opening movement of the Third is a very fine piece of writing, full of
    mystery, drama and ingenious detail and I felt that it was a little
    under-dramatised here. The Fifth is a more direct score and as a result
    Thomson and his band seem to have assimilated it better in what was,
    presumably, a fairly tight rehearsal schedule. Aside from the enchanting
    scherzo already mentioned, it has a noble, sadly elegiac slow movement. The
    orchestra’s woodwinds are more than a match for the plangent, haunting
    woodwind writing in both symphonies.
 
    Thomson is a sensible and sensitive guide to this music, rather less
    dramatic than in his excellent, underrated Vaughan Williams cycle on Chandos 
	(CHAN9087 -
	
	review - and separately) but again
    I suspect that is a consequence of lack of opportunities to perform this
    music. The paradox here is that without adequate rehearsal time and
    sufficient numbers of performances, performers are going to struggle to
    really grab the listener, but unless they do grab the listener, adequate
    rehearsal time and sufficient numbers of performances will not be
    forthcoming. Recordings like this are a crucial way of breaking out of that
    paradox and Lyrita and ultimately the BBC are to be thanked wholeheartedly
    for taking a risk on this music. As for the listener, there is no risk –
    this music is a real treat!
 
    David McDade
 
Daniel Jones on Lyrita: 
          Symphonies Nos. 1 and 10 SRCD.358 Recording of the Month - review;
          Symphonies Nos. 2 and 11 SRCD.364 - 
	review; 
	
Symphonies Nos. 4, 7 and 8 SRCD.329 -
	
	review; 
Symphonies Nos. 6 and 9; The Country beyond the Stars SRCD.326 -
	
	review -
	
	review; 
Dance Fantasy (with other Welsh dance music) SRCD.334 - 
	review - 
	review - 
	review