Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
    The New Collector’s Edition
    No texts or libretti
    WARNER 9029624537 [30 CDs: 34 hrs]
	
  In the early 2000s EMI brought out a 9-CD Choral, Vocal and Orchestral box that included a third of the Vaughan Williams items that were later to form part of their 30-CD ‘Collector’s Edition’, masterminded by Richard Abram. Now, in time for the composer’s 150th birthday celebrations, comes Warner’s ‘The New Collector’s Edition’, also in a 30-CD box. If you have that earlier box still on your shelves, you’d be entitled to know what Warner, as it now is, has come up with. What makes this the ‘New’ collector’s edition, as distinct from the common or garden ‘Collector’s’ edition? The answer is not very much.
   
  The earlier set was comprehensively and handsomely reviewed by Rob Barnett (review) who gave links to previous reviews of the material in the box, none of which was new, and all of which was part of the EMI-VW recorded legacy. I have listened to the Handley symphonic cycle in full in this incarnation as it’s been years since I last heard it, but I have sampled much of the remainder, dipping into and out of each disc to refresh my memory of recordings I’ve known for a long time and also to listen to those things that I haven’t heard before – which includes the smaller items that have been included in this set that weren’t in the previous one; there are not too many of those, admittedly.
  
  So, think of this review as a signpost to long-established performances and to the fact that Warner is (in effect) reissuing that earlier box. You will also find my reviews of CDs 8 and 9 – Piano Concerto (in the two piano version) and Job, Serenade to Music, The Lark Ascending as well as The Pilgrim’s Progress etc- conducted by Boult (review).
  
  So what additions are there to the old Collector’s edition? On CD13 in the new box there’s the Fantasia on 
	‘Greensleeves’ and the Galop from the Suite for Viola and Small Orchestra, heard here in Watson Forbes’ arrangements and played by Herbert Downes, Osian Ellis and Gerald Moore. On CD16 I’m not aware that the choral version of Linden Lea or Wither’s Rocking Hymn were present on that older box, one sung by the Choir of the New College Oxford and the other by the choir of King’s College, Cambridge; seven minutes in all. On CD22 the older box seems to contain Joy, Shipmate, Joy! and A Clear Midnight though they’re not in the new edition. It’s not always easy to make a direct comparison between the two boxes so my apologies if I have omitted anything.
  
  Everything has pretty much all been released before, sometimes multiply, and effectively in toto over a decade ago. It seems ridiculous to rehash comment. And what more could Warner do, given it has to select from its stable of labels? It has invited Stephen Johnson to write a booklet note. Johnson is a fine writer but he has been given two pages to sum up RVW’s achievement and a man can only do so much in that very limited space. Otherwise, the notes are also in French and German, the remainder taken up with an alphabetical checklist of works with a direction to the relevant CD that contains the music. The 40-page booklet of the older edition has therefore shrunk to 14, half of which is taken up by the works. There are no discographical details other than the original year of production and any subsequent remastering, details that are contained at the bottom of the individual wallets. Performers are, of course, all noted on the back of the wallets.
  
  As for those discs they’re housed in attractive wallet covers with paintings from artists of the period – Charles Corder, Benjamin Williams Leader, Hughes Stanton, and John Everett Millais amongst them. But you’re not going to buy this set for the wallet art, are you?
  
  There have been no new remasterings so far as I’m aware.
  
  I’d forgotten how effectively Handley paced the symphonies or how successful a symphonic set this was. He had all the attributes of his mentor and guide, Boult, but had the Liverpool orchestra playing at the top of its form – better than Boult and his LPO in his mono cycle, in fact – and heard in splendid sound. The sound is something that always set this cycle apart when it was first issued, pro and occasionally contra – the singers being too distant in the Sea Symphony for example (they aren’t too distant in this release, though one singer is far better than the other). For me the Fifth is a slight disappointment, a touch too tight-lipped. I’ll always need Previn.
  
  You get most VW you will want, even Sir John in Love, a negligible work with a great cast (ask yourself, when did you last listen to it all the way through?). Hugh the Drover is a much better work and Charles Groves conducts it marvellously. About The Pilgrim’s Progress I have always been something of an agnostic, but I concede its spiritual power and its command. EMI went a bit gung-ho with the wind machine in Riders to the Sea – it’s a depressing enough narrative without underlining nature’s implacable and relentless force in this way. Meredith Davies directs incisively, though, and there’s fine singing, especially by Helen Watts.
  
  If you want three versions of the Serenade to Music, here they are – the full choral one, the one for 16 vocal soloists and the orchestral version (this last seems to defeat the point). There is only one version of the Tallis Fantasia but thankfully it’s Silvestri’s – gloriously red-bloodied. You’ll have Barbirolli’s anyway. Dives and Lazarus is in the safe, sympathetic hands of David Willcocks, and it’s hardly Warner’s fault that they don’t have access to Marriner’s Decca recording. Flos Campi (Aronowitz/Willcocks) was selected in preference to Handley’s recording with Christopher Balmer, which was part of his symphonic recordings, as it gave renewed airing to that series of recordings Willcocks directed, which included An Oxford Elegy (with the wonderful John Westbrook as speaker) the Mass in G (a must-have account), Hodie and Sancta Civitas.
  
  The chamber music is spearheaded by the venerable but long-lasting virtues of The Music Group of London, who perform the Second Quartet; the First is played by the Britten Quartet. On Wenlock Edge is represented by two versions. Firstly, there is Ian Patridge and The Music Group of London, and second, in the orchestral version, there’s Robert Tear with Rattle and the City of Birmingham. Most listeners would much prefer Partridge, a master of the idiom, as they would Rolfe-Johnson and Willison in Songs of Travel over Thomas Allen – fine as he is – in the orchestral version, again with Rattle. But at least this way you get both. If you’ve never heard Heddle Nash’s Linden Lea you might be happy with Bostridge’s recording here but I have and I’m not.
  
  Is this the best way for Warner to mark the 150th anniversary of the composer’s birth? Or is it better to invest time, labour and money in presenting unusual, overlooked repertoire, such as, for example, Albion has done in releasing, for the first time, the complete folk songs and other material? Which makes a greater claim on your wallet? The canonic recordings or the novelties? The bulk or the niche? Is the answer to keep reissuing the same old items?
  
  When all’s said and done this is a necessary reissue, I suppose, if you want a ‘as much as you can eat’ VW buffet solution and haven’t already got the previous box or possibly the much earlier 9-CD box. However, for its cost cutting booklet and its lack of imagination in exploring beyond its initial remit – and for the ambiguity of its title - I’m going to give it something of a grudging, guarded welcome.
  
  Jonathan Woolf
  
  Previous reviews
  Symphony No 1 ‘A Sea Symphony’ review
  Symphony No 2 ‘A London Symphony’  review
  Symphony No 3 ‘A Pastoral Symphony’ review
  Symphony No 4 review
  Symphony No 5 review
  Symphony No 6 review
  Symphony No 7 ‘Sinfonia antartica’ review
  Symphony No 8 review
  Symphony No 9 review
  Oboe Concerto review
  Partita for double string orchestra review
  Serenade to Music (choral version) review
  Serenade to Music (orchestral version) review
  The Poisoned Kiss - Overture review
  Old King Cole – A Ballet for Orchestra review
  Five Mystical Songs review
  Prelude on an Old Carol Tune review
  The Running Set review
  Prelude: 49th Parallel review
  Sea Songs – March review
  Two Hymn-Tune Preludes review
  Concerto accademico in D minor review
  Three Preludes founded on Welsh Hymn Tunes orch Arnold Foster review
		
  	  Contents
  CD1
  Symphony No 1 ‘A Sea Symphony’
  Joan Rodgers (Soprano), William Shimmell (baritone)
  
  CD2
  Symphony No 2 ‘A London Symphony’
  Symphony No 8 in D minor
  
  CD3
  Symphony No 3 ‘A Pastoral Symphony’
  Symphony No 4 in F minor
  Alison Barlow (soprano)
  
  CD4
  Oboe Concerto in A minor
  Jonathan Small (oboe)
  Symphony No 5 in D major
  
  CD5
  Symphony No 6 in E minor
  Symphony No 9 in E minor
  Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra/Vernon Handley
  
  CD6
  Serenade To Music (Choral version)
  Partita for double string orchestra
  Symphony No 7 ‘Sinfonia antartica’
  Alison Hargan (soprano): Ian Tracey (organ)
  Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir/Vernon Handley
  
  CD7
  The Wasps – Aristophanic Suite
  Prelude and Fugue in C minor
  Piano Concerto in C major
  David Bell (organ): Piers Lane (piano)
  London Philharmonic Orchestra
  Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra (Concerto)
  Vernon Handley
  
  CD8
  Piano Concerto in C major arr two pianos
  Job: A Masque for Dancing
  Vitya Vronsky and Victor Babin (pianos)
  London Philharmonic Orchestra (Concerto)
  London Symphony Orchestra (Job)
  Adrian Boult
  
  CD9
  Serenade to Music
  English Folk Songs – Suite
  Norfolk Rhapsody No 1
  Fantasia on ‘Greensleeves’
  In the Fen Country
  The Lark Ascending
  Norma Burrowes (soprano), Sheila Armstrong (soprano), Marie Hayward (soprano), Susan Longfield (soprano), Alfreda Hodgson (contralto), Shirley Minty (contralto), Meriel Dickinson (contralto), Gloria Jennings (contralto), Ian Partridge (tenor), Bernard Dickerson (tenor), Wynford Evans (tenor), Kenneth Bowen (tenor), Richard Angas (bass), John Noble (bass), John Carol Case (bass), Christopher Keyte (bass)
  Hugh Bean (violin)
  London Philharmonic Orchestra (Serenade)
  London Symphony Orchestra (English Folk Songs, Fantasia on ‘Greensleeves’)
  New Philharmonia Orchestra
  Adrian Boult
  
  CD10
  Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra/Constantin Silvestri
  Sea Songs -March
  English Folk Songs – suite
  Central Band of the RAF/Wing Commander Eric Banks
  Dawn Patrol arr Muir Mathieson
  Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra/Charles Groves
  Concerto grosso
  London Philharmonic Orchestra/Adrian Boult
  Romance in D-flat major for harmonica with strings and piano
  Larry Adler (harmonica)
  BBC Symphony Orchestra/Malcolm Sargent
  Tuba Concerto
  Philip Catelinet (tuba)
  London Symphony Orchestra/John Barbirolli
  
  CD11
  Serenade to Music (orchestral version)
  The Poisoned Kiss -Overture
  Old King Cole – A Ballet for Orchestra
  Five Mystical Songs
  Prelude on an Old Carol Tune
  The Running Set
  Prelude: 49th Parallel
  Sea Songs – March
  Stephen Roberts (baritone)
  Sinfonia Chorus/Northern Sinfonia of England/Richard Hickox
  
  CD12
  Variations for Orchestra orch Gordon Jacob
  Two Hymn-Tune Preludes
  Concerto accademico, in D minor
  Three Preludes founded on Welsh Hymn Tunes orch Arnold Foster
  String Quartet No 1 in G minor
  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra (Variations)
  Northern Sinfonia of England
  Richard Hickox
  Britten Quartet
  
  CD13
  Violin Sonata in A minor
  Phantasy Quintet
  String Quartet No 2,
  Six Studies in English Folk Song, for cello and piano
  Music Group of London
  Fantasia on ‘Greensleeves’ arr. Watson Forbes
  Suite for Viola and Small Orchestra arr Watson Forbes
  Herbert Downes (viola): Osian Ellis (harp): Gerald Moore (piano)
  
  CD14
  Toward the Unknown Region
  Dona nobis pacem
  Fantasia (quasi variazione) on the Old 104th Psalm Tune
  Sheila Armstrong (soprano): John Carol Case (baritone)
  Peter Katin (piano)
  London Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra/Adrian Boult
  Magnificat
  Helen Watts (soprano): Christopher Hyde-Smith (flute)
  Ambrosian Singers/Orchestra Nova of London/Meredith Davies
  
  CD15
  An Oxford Elegy
  John Westbrook (speaker); Jacques Orchestra
  Whitsunday Hymn
  Robin Doveton (tenor)
  Flos Campi
  Flos campi suite
  Cecil Aronowitz (viola)/Jacques Orchestra
  Sancta Civitas
  Ian Patridge (tenor): John Shirley Quirk (baritone)/Bach Choir/Kings College Cambridge, London Symphony Orchestra
  David Willcocks
  
  CD16
  Five Tudor Portraits
  Benedicite
  Five variants of 'Dives and Lazarus
  Linden Lea
  Wither’s Rocking Rhythm
  Elizabeth Bainbridge (contralto)/John Carol Case (baritone)/Bach Choir/ New Philharmonia Orchestra
  Heather Harper (soprano)/London Symphony Orchestra
  Jacques Orchestra
  David Willcocks
  Choir of New College Oxford/Edward Higginbotham
  Choir of King’s College, Cambridge/Stephen Cleobury
  
  CD17
  Hodie
  Fantasia on Christmas Carols (version with strings & organ)
  John Barrow (baritone)/Choir of Guildford Cathedral/String Orchestra/Barry Rose
  Janet Baker (mezzo soprano)/Richard Lewis (tenor)/John Shirley-Quirk (baritone)
  Bach Choir/London Symphony Orchestra/David Willcocks
  
  CD18
  Fantasia on Christmas Carols (version with full orchestra)
  In Windsor Forest
  Songs of travel
  On Wenlock Edge
  Stephen Roberts (baritone)/London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra/Richard Hickox
  Bach Choir/Jacques Orchestra/David Willcocks
  Bournemouth Symphony Chorus and Orchestra/Norman Del Mar
  Thomas Allen (baritone)
  Robert Tear (tenor)
  City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/Simon Rattle
  
  CD19
  Mass in G minor
  All People that on Earth Do Dwell
  O taste and see
  Te Deum in G
  For all the saints
  Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn tunes
  The Truth from Above
  O little town of Bethlehem
  Joseph and Mary
  And all in the morning
  Alleluya, sing to Jesus
  Come down, o Love divine
  All people that on earth do dwell
  Choir of King’s College, Cambridge/David Willcocks
  English Chamber Orchestra/Bournemouth Sinfonietta
  Martin Neary, Russell Burgess, Philip Moore, Philip Ledger, Stephen Cleobury
  
  CD20
  Four Hymns
  Merciless Beauty
  Ten Blake Songs
  The Water Mill
  The New Ghost
  On Wenlock Edge
  Jennifer Partridge (piano)
  Ian Partridge (tenor)/Music Group of London
  
  CD21
  The House of Life
  Songs of Travel
  Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor)/David Willison (piano)
  
  CD22
  Songs with piano, choral folksong arrangements - Various Artists
  
  CD23
  Folksong Arrangements; East Anglia, Wessex, Carols, France, Newfoundland, Voice and Violin, A Song of Thanksgiving
  Robert Tear (tenor)/Hugh Bean (violin)/Philip Ledger (piano)
  Betty Dolemore (soprano)/Robert Speaight (speaker)/London Philharmonic Orchestra/Adrian Boult
  
  CD24
  Epithalamion
  Riders to the Sea
  Stephen Roberts (baritone)/Bach Choir/London Philharmonic Orchestra/David Willcocks
  Norma Burrowes/Margaret Price/Helen Watts/Benjamin Luxon/Pauline Stevens/Ambrosian Singers/Orchestra Nova of London/Meredith Davies
  
  CD25 and 26
  Hugh the Drover
  Robert Tear/Sheila Armstrong/Michael Rippon/Robert Lloyd/Choristers of St Paul's Cathedral/Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Charles Groves
  
  CD27 and 28
  Sir John in Love
  Felicity Palmer/Robert Tear/Robert Lloyd/Helen Watts/New Philharmonia Orchestra/Meredith Davies
  
  CD 29 and 30
  The Pilgrim's Progress and rehearsal sequence
  Ian Partridge/John Shirley-Quirk/Jean Temperley/John Noble/London Philharmonic Choir/London Philharmonic Orchestra/Adrian Boult