The newly invented 
                saxophone made an immediate appeal to 
                composers of paraphrases, fantasies, 
                concertante show pieces, conservatoire 
                test works and the like. It fitted in 
                with the established primacy of French 
                wind playing and gave a versatile novelty 
                to the genre. This disc salutes those 
                imperatives in fine style. No-one could 
                really elevate, with any convincing 
                seriousness, the essentially decorative 
                nature of the music or its appeal to 
                anything other than the more fluid and 
                superficial genres – but what these 
                works set out to do they do well and 
                with technical accomplishment. 
              
 
              
Jules Demersseman strikes 
                me as the most accomplished overall 
                of these composers. He’d been a fellow 
                student of Adolphe Sax in Brussels and 
                was in fact two years older than the 
                innovator. Not only did he compose for 
                the instrument very early but also he 
                wrote for a range of instruments, not 
                just the expected alto. The Fantasie 
                sur un thème original 
                begins with a dramatic flourish 
                and explores register changes in a way 
                familiar from Conservatoire Flute and 
                Clarinet test pieces. There’s splendid 
                virtuosity here and plenty of opportunities 
                to flaunt some sportive runs. His two 
                Solos are for baritone and tenor saxophones 
                – the Second is a competition "tester" 
                – with opportunities for the soloist 
                to impress first with legato phrasing 
                (not easy on a baritone unless you’re 
                a Harry Carney or Joe Temperley) and 
                then with the rhythmic élan and 
                rhythmic dexterity of the final section. 
                The other pieces generally conform to 
                the expected models – transcriptions 
                from Savari on themes from Freischütz, 
                vivacious variations from Genin (his 
                Spanishry is typically cod but really 
                winning) and little genre works such 
                as Singelée’s Caprice and Fantasie 
                – the first named of which is a lyric 
                piece that tests breath control to the 
                utmost. Both incidentally are played 
                by Delangle on a soprano. The same composer’s 
                Concerto (for tenor) is effectively 
                elegant and melodious and Chic’s Solo 
                shows off a nice fanfare flourish of 
                an opening. 
              
The Delangles play 
                with panache and adroit techniques with 
                Claude covering the range of saxes – 
                soprano, alto, tenor and baritone – 
                with aplomb and a consonant tone. One 
                can sense the excitement with which 
                these minor composers – bandsmen, performers, 
                teachers – seized the opportunity to 
                write for the new instrument and some 
                of that vigour still clings to these 
                versatile performances. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf