AVAILABILITY 
                www.divine-art.com 
              
This is another of 
                The Divine Art’s intriguing delves into 
                the repertoire. All are first recordings 
                and repay interest. Leighton’s Prelude, 
                Hymn and Toccata was written in 1987 
                and embeds, pretty well unrecognisably, 
                Abide With Me in the central movement. 
                The opening movement employs double-dotting 
                heavily and the effect of this, the 
                vaguely DSCH effect it promotes and 
                the ensuing bell grounds are all highly 
                evocative. In the disguised hymnal of 
                the second movement it is the intense 
                oscillation, quiet and intense, that 
                gives it a distinctive drive. The close, 
                meanwhile, is elliptical and still. 
                The palate is cleansed in the last movement 
                – syncopated and with some jazzy lines 
                tracing through it. Though Leighton’s 
                work is one of strong intensity the 
                bulk of pieces here are actually by 
                Anthony Hedges. His Three Explorations 
                (2002), which gives the disc its title, 
                are representative of his best work 
                in its sense of romanticism deliberately 
                constrained by means of formal concision. 
                The slow second movement for example 
                is an extremely fine piece of composition 
                in its seemingly improvised compression 
                and the finale (Flowing) is full of 
                triumphant drive. 
              
 
              
His 1974 Sonata is 
                in three movements and though, as Hedges 
                makes clear in his notes, it’s not cast 
                in traditional sonata form his structural 
                acuity and sense of emotive pull are 
                such that we always feel that we know 
                where we are. The free flowing second 
                movement hints at March themes and baroque 
                features amidst the veil of Scriabin’s 
                influence and the finale is one that 
                immediately lightens the texture whilst 
                simultaneously – and triumphantly – 
                reconciling earlier themes in powerful 
                proximity. A stirring and notable work, 
                this. His Five Aphorisms are brief and 
                incisive pieces; the second is flecked 
                with treble sonorities and the fourth, 
                a Lento, contrasts static chords with 
                perkier motifs and is entertainingly 
                mobile. 
              
 
              
The Japanese Suite 
                of Holst is here in the arrangement 
                by Berlin-born Vally Lasker, who joined 
                the staff of St Paul’s Girls’ School 
                in 1907 and stayed for fifty-five years. 
                She was also an exceptional help to 
                Holst, who was Director of Music there 
                from 1905 until his death, not least 
                as occasional amanuensis. The separate 
                piano parts of the suite are in Lasker’s 
                hand though it’s conjectural whether 
                these parts were copied from Holst’s 
                own two-piano score (as with the Planets) 
                but, in any case, no such score has 
                survived. The Dance of the Marionette 
                is genuinely aerial and balletic and 
                the Dance under the Cherry Tree has, 
                by contrast, the formal allusiveness 
                of a haiku. But it’s the Prelude (Song 
                of the Fishermen) that touches the deepest 
                nerve – a really beautiful folk song, 
                full of the most plangent delicacy. 
                Appropriately we also have Stevenson’s 
                Two Chinese Folk-Songs of which the 
                Song of the Crab-fisher is ebullience 
                itself, full of life. 
              
 
              
The excellence of the 
                recording serves only to enhance this 
                production, which has the advantage 
                of authoritative notes (especially from 
                Hedges and Stevenson). There are significant 
                things here – not always easily prised 
                open, it’s true, but all the more valuable 
                for that very reason. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf