Helps was a composition 
                student of Sessions and also a very 
                able pianist who worked with such as 
                Copland, Rudolf Kolisch and Isidore 
                Cohen, amongst many. Active as a teacher 
                in University of South Florida and San 
                Francisco Conservatory, he continued 
                to propagate chamber and solo literature 
                and made numerous recordings. He gave 
                solo memorial concerts for Sessions 
                and a solo recital at Town Hall, New 
                York – which gives one an appreciation 
                of his standing as an executant. As 
                a pendant he had a particular affection 
                and admiration for the music of John 
                Ireland and indeed this disc ends evocatively 
                with an example of Helps playing the 
                English composer’s The Darkened Valley. 
              
 
              
Shall We Dance 
                (1994) fuses impressionism with a layered 
                density and grows to an impassioned 
                climax; the composer noted that it embedded 
                a waltz written by Mischa Levitzki, 
                one that he heard his mother play often. 
                There’s a similar sense of allusiveness 
                and power in the five-movement Piano 
                Quartet written three years later. The 
                sketch provided by Helps gives an indication 
                of the summoned moods (Radiance, Intimacy 
                and a humorous coda titled Players’ 
                Gossip). It’s certainly true that the 
                elliptical piano writing gives way to 
                increased insistence in the opening 
                movement and one notable feature is 
                the role for the oratorical solo piano, 
                which opens the fourth movement solo 
                until joined some time later by his 
                string confreres. Perhaps the most immediately 
                striking however are the Postlude for 
                horn, violin and piano and the Nocturne 
                for string quartet. The former is intense 
                with some frantic high register writing 
                and an implacable sounding horn. The 
                latter is more sepulchral and forms 
                part of the central panel of a Serenade. 
                Once more one can hear Helps’ fondness 
                for high register writing – especially 
                for the violin – and his well crafted 
                control of sonority. The Ireland is 
                a wistful tribute from one composer 
                to another. 
              
 
              
The performances are 
                thoroughly committed. Rising star, Dutch 
                fiddler Janine Jansen is here and Daniel 
                Blumenthal takes on the piano parts 
                with great conviction. His Krenek, elsewhere, 
                is equally successful. The recording 
                balance is good, the notes a fusion 
                of those by the composer and the cellist 
                here, Frank Dodge. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                 
              
 
              
John 
                Ireland