I have just had the pleasure of reviewing Lloyd-Jones' excellent recording
	  of 'Job' recently and now this outstandingly well-prepared version from Denmark's
	  outstanding Classico label has come along. I have read Gramophone's dispiriting
	  and disenchantingly snobbish review of the disc and can happily report to
	  have been confounded and mystified by that eminent magazine's slur on such
	  profoundly beautiful music making. You can sense that immediately from the
	  expansive Introduction where Bostock forces a clear hand over his admirably
	  alert players from Munich. The same depth of thought continues in 'Satan's
	  Dance of Triumph' and the sublime 'Dance of Job's Comforters'. It is also
	  so heartening to note the passionate conviction that the Munich players throw
	  into the score, a reminiscence of the Vienna premiere in the 30's with Arnold
	  Rose' dedicating extraordinary time to rehearse the violin part. This series
	  continues to establish British music on the continental map and let's hope
	  it will continue. An earth shattering Epilogue confirms what is a tremendous
	  interpretation and that should be ranked amongst the aforementioned 1938
	  Boult, his remake for Decca in the 50's and Vernon Handley's outstanding
	  version on EMI CFP. The couplings make the disc even more attractive as it
	  is. Thomas Hardy had a special place in RVW's affections and his music for
	  'The Mayor of Casterbridge' BBC dramatization is a marvelous combination
	  of old tunes with the good old English pastoral nostalgia. The delightful
	  'Variations on an Old Carol Tune' is also deft and beautifully orchestrated
	  by Gordon Jacob and makes a refreshing end to the disc. Notes and photographs
	  are rather excellent with some rare snaps from the Lewis Foreman collection.
	  This has now become the ideal 'Job' recording to have. Well done Classico!
	  
	  Reviewer
	  
	  Gerald Fenech
	  
	  Performance: 
	  
	  
	  Sound: 
	  
	  
	  This recording (and work) has produced a very mixed
	  response in the press and on our own web-site. Below is a complation of our
	  previous (Jan99) reviews of this disc. LM
	  
	  Job has attracted quite a few recordings over the last thirty years. There
	  are two Boults, Hickox, Handley and another for Collins. The Handley is the
	  one which I admire most for its gravity and steady splendour. The work itself
	  has elements of the pastoral and of the apocalyptic.
	  
	  The present recording is a worthy alternative to the Handley and an antidote
	  to the big and beefy accounts found among the competition. The sound of the
	  orchestra is lean and strong, pliant and cleanly poetic. Listen to the classic
	  rural poesy of tracks 5 and 12 echoing track 1.
	  
	  The slow motion decay (2:50) of Satan's Dance of Triumph [4] with its
	  foreshadowing of Scott of the Antarctic is imaginatively handled. Also I
	  was struck by the Transatlantic shades of Roy Harris striding placidly through
	  the pages of the Saraband of the Sons of God.
	  
	  Even the different sound of the orchestra can do nothing for what I have
	  always found to be the insufferable Dance of Job's Comforters [7] and the
	  rum-ti-tum jollity of the Galliard [10] but this is no fault of the orchestra
	  or conductor. I also have difficulty with the Roy Harris 4th symphony in
	  some of its more gauche prairie cowboy songs.
	  
	  The Lark Ascending meditation of the Introduction and Elihu's Dance are glowingly
	  handled by the orchestra's concert-master ([1] [7]). If you cannot get enough
	  of the Lark, Finzi's Introit or Harrison's Bredon Hill (rumoured to have
	  been recorded by Lyrita for later release) then do explore Job.
	  
	  The Pavane of the Sons of Morning is one of VW's noblest conceptions winding
	  and unwinding in elegant, diaphanous and vulnerable beauty. It is very much
	  out of the same cloth as the similarly yearning tunes from the fourth symphony
	  and the sixth. The Altar Dance is less a dance than a reflection in meditation
	  - a dance in slow sea-swelling motion.
	  
	  The Carol Tune Prelude [13] was written as part of VW's music for a BBC Radio
	  dramatisation of Thomas Hardy's novel 'The Mayor of Casterbridge'. It is
	  elevated music suffused with the tragedy and rural mysticism of Hardy's powerful
	  story. This is, I believe, a world premiere recording. It is by no means
	  as slight as the title might suggest and there are some surprising touches
	  (4:28)
	  
	  The Variations were orchestrated by Gordon Jacob from a brass band original.
	  Jacob had previously done a similar job for another VW work, the Old English
	  Folk Song Suite. The Variations recorded here are rather inconsequential.
	  All the VW hallmarks are there but with exception of one moment of quiet
	  enlightenment at 10:02 this is not a work which attracts repeat listenings.
	  They have been recorded previously on EMI (either Hickox or Handley). This
	  is only their second outing in orchestral format in recent times.
	  
	  The anonymous notes are good and extensive(although they would have benefited
	  from more proof-reading) . Like the other volumes in the series they give
	  a track by track and second by second outline of the music which enables
	  you to follow the 'plot' with considerable ease.
	  
	  The notes are in English and German with a good choice of photographs. The
	  cover design (by Dan Eggen) is outstanding. Recording quality is fine, open
	  and lively.
	  
	  This is the second in a sequence of ten volumes planned by the Danish company
	  ClassicO. The series will adopt a consistent approach to design and planning.
	  The intention is that each disc will feature at least one world premiere
	  recording. The artists here will be used throughout the series which should
	  be complete by the end of 2000.
	  
	  To date ClassicO have issued three volumes. The first included Gordon Jacob's
	  second symphony. The third has as its centre-piece Bax's Sixth symphony with
	  Tintagel and Overture to Adventure. ClassicO have already recorded Arthur
	  Butterworth's Fourth Symphony and Ruth Gipps' Second. There are further exciting
	  offerings in prospect. Withcompanies such as Lyrita presently dormant it
	  is a delight to find that British music is finding a new additional champion.
	  
	  This volume is recommended not only as part of a series but as a valuable
	  alternative viewpoint on Job. It also offers the Hardyesque Prelude on an
	  Old Carol Tune which I believe is a recording premiere.
	  
	  Reviewer
	  
	  Rob Barnett
	  
	  
	  
	  and another view from David Wright
	  
	  I have always been somewhat ambivalent about Vaughan Williams
	  Job and for many reasons. I wonder whether the subject is suitable
	  for dance since Biblical subjects in themselves and by their very nature
	  have a reverential and spiritual dimension quite at odds with dance which
	  is predominantly a secular activity. Job was a perfect man that escheweth
	  evil, a righteous man and his involvement in dance is as ridiculous
	  as William the Conqueror flying a B52. While there is evident skill in classical
	  dance it is a difficult medium to convey a story unless there is an accompanying
	  narrative. As this work is based on William Blakes Illustrations
	  from the book of Job one can readily accept the fictionalisation and
	  disembowelling of the story and the disregarding of its morality. Blake was
	  both a remarkable and strange man. And, I fear, that Vaughan Williams has
	  been influenced to both parody and ridicule one of the oldest books in the
	  world but, perhaps, it suited Vaughan Williams agnosticism.
	  
	  I cannot imagine the Sons of God dancing minuets, sarabandes, galliards or
	  pavanes. Bearing in mind that Jobs comforters were a morose bunch I cannot
	  visualise them dancing and not to an alto saxophone.
	  
	  Yet another worrying factor is that the music, lovely as it often is, is
	  hopelessly out of character with the story. After 40 years, I have yet to
	  be musically menaced by Satan, experience the grief of Job or the judgemental
	  hypocrisy of his comforters in this score.
	  
	  As an untitled piece it would fare better. Much of the music is beautiful
	  but it often meanders into melodic nullity and, occasionally, it is mawkish.
	  
	  I hesitate to say such things because I believe that Vaughan Williams is,
	  without doubt, our finest British composer in the tonal tradition.
	  
	  I would like to recommend this disc since, like many others, I applaud
	  Classicos excellent project in recording British works. But I believe
	  that Sir Adrian Boults performance with the LPO is the definitive version
	  and it has the advantage of a glorious English sound and a polished
	  refinement. That is not to discredit the Munich orchestra or their performance
	  which is very good but not quite in the same league as Boults.
	  
	  The old carol tune is On Christmas Night the Joy-Bells Ring a melody
	  that also appears in the 1912 Fantasia on Christmas Carols.
	  
	  By far the most interesting work is the Variations for Brass Band
	  of 1956 orchestrated by Gordon Jacob which was premièred by Sir Adrian
	  Boult in January 1960. A theme in C major is followed by eleven variations
	  including an alla polacca, a fugato, a profound adagio in A flat and a chorale.
	  
	  The joy of this piece is the welcome reminder that Gordon Jacob was an
	  unsurpassed orchestrator as well as a very gifted composer in his own right.
	  
	  Although I have reservations about Job, let it not deter you from
	  investigating this disc. Douglas Bostock brings out interesting detail to
	  great effect ... but, as for me, I will remain with Sir Adrian Boults
	  superb performance of a curious piece.
	  
	  
	  Reviewer
	  
	  David Wright
	  
	  Performances 
	  
	  Recording 
	  
	  Addendum submitted by Raymond Clarke
	  
	  The following letter by Vaughan Williams was written in 1952 and is reproduced
	  in full in The Works of Ralph Vaughan Williams, by Michael Kennedy (Oxford
	  University Press, second edition, 1980, pages 315-316):
	  
	  "I am amazed to hear that some...have taken exception to the beautiful words
	  of Holst's Tomorrow shall be my Dancing Day, apparently on the grounds...that
	  dancing and religion are something apart...
	  
	  I had hoped that the killjoy and lugubrious view of religion which once obtained
	  was now happily dead, but I fear there are still some people who have a degraded
	  view of the dance and connect it only with high kicking and jazz, but the
	  dance in its highest manifestations shares with music, poetry and painting,
	  one of the greatest means of expression of the very highest of human aspirations.
	  The dance has always been connected with religious fervour - that is, orderly
	  and rhythmical movement surcharged with emotion.
	  
	  What are the great Church ceremonies but a sublimation of the dance? What
	  about the 150th Psalm, 'Praise Him with the timbrel and dances'? Surely Bunyan's
	  Pilgrim's Progress is full of the highest religious fervour and he makes
	  Mr. Ready-to-Halt celebrate his deliverance by dancing. One of the most beautiful
	  books of the Apocrypha, the Gospel of Nicodemus, contains in The Hymn of
	  Jesus an apotheosis of the dance, 'Divine Grace is dancing, dance ye
	  therefore'...
	  
	  Yours sincerely,
	      
 R. Vaughan Williams 
          
The 
            ClassicO British Symphonic Collection