Dubois was a
name new to me. He was born in the Tarn
département in France. He studied
in Paris with Milhaud. His 1963 Concerto
Italien is convulsively active,
sparkling, not specially jazzy, a little
Stravinskian but not a stranger to romantic
inclination (tr.1 2.38), full of gentle
sustained melancholy in the andante,
brilliant yet transparent in the active
chuckling Rondo.
The Roy Harris is
also in three movements. Its style is
weightily epic yet topped off by brilliant
rhetoric. His trademark transitions
from dramatic declamation to whispered
string gesture and rapid insistent thunderous
repartee are much in evidence. The feeling
for wide open spaces and something minatory
and catastrophic can be heard in the
central Theme and Variations but
delicacy and gentle musing intervenes
to provide the balm (tr.5 3.42). Much
is made of antiphonal dialogue, monolithic
statement, sparkling decoration and
urgency. Those who warm to Harris’s
symphonic manner and his matchless way
with percussion and brass will not want
to miss the outstanding final movement.
Perhaps you have been won over by the
Naxos CD of symphonies 7 and 9. If so
do not miss this. The orchestra and
soloists immerse themselves without
a tentative moment.
Pierce and Jonas are
likely to be well known to many collectors
but their names may not be quite as
familiar, at least to UK collectors,
as those of Victor Vronsky and Vitya
Babin. In the 1960s Vronsky and Babin
recorded the Vaughan Williams two piano
concerto with Boult for EMI. They were
the dedicatees of the Benjamin
suite which is in eight movements. Pierce
was introduced to the Benjamin when
studying with Babin at the Cleveland
Institute in 1968. This is Benjamin
at his lightest, sometimes kitschy and
sometimes sentimental (He piped so sweet)
as he can be in the gorgeous but stylistically
alien oboe concerto arrangements. The
airy chatter of Fill the Bowl might
almost be for harpsichords. The whirl
of the village green, dizzy dances,
brimming glasses, a wink and a skip
can all be heard in this unpretentious
music which stands very distant from
Benjamin’s Symphony, Violin Concerto,
Ballade and Viola Sonata.
The admirable notes
are by Eric Salzman. Vivid recording
quality and outstanding playing by the
Bratislava orchestra, especially in
the Harris, make this a most attractive
disc in which the mood chart moves at
the lightest from the Benjamin to the
Dubois and onwards to the tragic-epic
tread of the symphonic Harris.
The disc is rather short on playing
time but this is forgivable with such
rare repertoire.
Rob Barnett