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ELIZABETHAN SERENADE
The Best of British Light Music

Various orchestras and conductors
NAXOS 8.553515 (from Marco Polo recordings originally issued in 1996)
[78.21]
Crotchet
 

1. Coates: By The Sleepy Lagoon - Slovak PO/Andrew Penny
2. Curzon: Robin Hood Ste: March Of The Bowmen - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper
3. Ketelbey: Bells Across The Meadows - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper
4. Ellis: Coronation Scot - RTE Concert Orch/Ernest Tomlinson
5. Wood: Sketch Of A Dandy - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper
6. Farnon: The Westminster Waltz - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper
7. Duncan: Little Ste: March - Slovak PO/Andrew Penny
8. Binge: Sailing By - Slovak RSO/Ernest Tomlinson
9. Benjamin: Jamaican Rumba - RTE Concert Orch/Ernest Tomlinson
10. Coates: London Ste: Knightsbridge March - Czecho-Slovak RSOAdrian Leaper
11. Ketelbey: In A Monastery Garden - Slovak Phil Male Chor/Adrian Leaper
12. Tomlinson: Little Serenade - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Ernest Tomlinson
13. Wood: Roses Of Picardy - Slovak RSO/Ernest Tomlinson
14. White: Puffin' Billy - RTE Concert Orch/Ernest Tomlinson
15. Binge: Elizabethan Serenade - Slovak RSO/Ernest Tomlinso
16. German: Tom Jones Waltz - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper
17. Collins: Vanity Fair - RTE Concert Orch/Ernest Tomlinson
18. Mayerl: Marigold - Slovak RSO/Gary Carpenter
19. Ketelbey: In A Persian Market - Slovak Phil Male Chor/Adrian Leaper
20. Coates: The Dam Busters March - Czecho-Slovak RSO/Adrian Leaper

The term 'light music' defies definition. It's rather like 'class' or 'Englishness' - words we constantly use but whose meaning we are hard-pressed to pinpoint. Among this disc's 20 tracks is, for instance, Eric Coates' The Dam Busters, but no one would regard, say, Walton's Crown Imperial as 'light'. Similarly, if Ketèlbey's In a Persian Market qualifies as 'light', why not Rawsthorne's Street Corner Overture?

Be that as it may, the disc constitutes an impressive survey of the field, featuring the works of no fewer than 14 composers. Personally, I could have done without Binge's tedious Elizabethan Serenade and Collins' somewhat anaemic Vanity Fair, but most of the rest are fine specimens of the genre. Performance standards are generally sound, though the playing of the RTE Concert Orchestra is more polished than that of their Czecho/Slovak counterparts.

The approach to these pieces of the three conductors involved - Ernest Tomlinson, Adrian Leaper and Andrew Penny - is however often questionable. All three seem to want to invest the music with a gravitas it does not warrant. My notes are littered with the words 'stodgy', 'too slow' 'dreary'. (Coates's Sleepy Lagoon is positively constipated). Notable exceptions to this lack of sparkle are the March from Duncan's Little Suite, Mayerl's Marigold and Ellis's Coronation Scot which are all vividly characterised.

Two incidentals. Ketèlbey's In a Monastery Garden is taken at such a funereal tempo that one can't help suspecting that it's a deliberate send-up (and the extraordinary sound of the 'bird song' resembles nothing so much as the escape of hissing steam). And, as a member of a 'palm court' orchestra I have played Haydn Wood's Roses of Picardy scores of times, but the opening grand introduction (complete with mini-cadenza for violin) was new to me.

Despite these reservations, this disc can be warmly recommended to anyone who will find this stream of familiar tunes as comfortable as a pair of favourite old slippers.

Adrian Smith

Performance

Sound


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