Catherine Bott and 
                David Owen Norris achieve a commendable 
                feat in bringing off with complete proficiency 
                and virtuosity such a remarkably diverse 
                and multifarious a compilation. "A 
                Celebration of London in song", 
                London Pride encapsulates various facets 
                of the capital with a programme based 
                around geographical locations. It is 
                a rarity for Hyperion, recorded live 
                from the Spitalfields Festival in 2002. 
                It ranges from the eighteenth century, 
                with Boyce, to the present day with 
                Jonathan Dove's lyrical and beguiling 
                Five Am'rous sighs; from musicals 
                to English solo song. Bott tailors her 
                voice brilliantly to suit a disparate 
                assortment of works. In this context, 
                seemingly strange juxtapositions of 
                Georgian ballads, Noel Coward numbers, 
                music hall classics and contemporary 
                song-cycles actually work. With a rich 
                and luscious tone, Bott is delicately 
                sensitive in Gershwin, ingeniously adroit 
                in Swann and Grenfell's Joyful noise, 
                and scintillatingly piquant as the lady 
                in Wimbledon Idyll, Norris providing 
                hilariously astute repartee as the umpire. 
                The infamous They’re changing guard 
                at Buckingham Palace is resurrected. 
                William Walton gets a look-in with the 
                well-known Rhyme from his song 
                cycle A song for the Lord Mayor's 
                table. Bott puts her own spin on 
                two very different classics: Sweet 
                Thames flow softly, beloved of folk 
                music circles, and A nightingale 
                sang in Berkeley Square. 
              
 
              
Accurately described 
                by Catherine Bott as a polymath, Norris's 
                role in this CD extends beyond accompanist 
                to composer (Big Ben Blues), 
                and musicologist. He also contributes 
                as singer in Mayfair Merry-go-round, 
                the accompaniment of which he has reconstructed 
                after an improvisation by Billy Mayerl. 
                As swift to adapt as Bott, his playing 
                is exemplary, combining an easy manner 
                with the inimitable discretion and vivacious 
                sparkle that exemplifies his characteristic 
                style. In his biographical notes, he 
                regrets that he is not a better singer, 
                yet here his charming, unpretentiously 
                sexy voice epitomises the spirit of 
                this collection. 
              
 
              
I cannot recommend 
                this disc highly enough. It positively 
                radiates intelligence and wit in performances 
                of consummate musicianship. A truly 
                delightful gallimaufry! 
              
 
                Em Marshall