Naxos has done itself a disservice in 
                featuring the familiar Pomp and Circumstance 
                marches on the box and in the blurb. 
                Intrepid collectors mightn't think to 
                check out the remainder of the program 
                and that’s where the real interest lies. 
              
 
              
Ominous brass calls 
                get the Coronation March, commissioned 
                for the coronation of George V in 1911, 
                off to an uncharacteristically grim, 
                portentous start. The music soon settles 
                into the sort of affirmative whirling 
                flourishes later adopted by Walton and 
                Bliss for their own occasional pieces. 
                We don't frequently hear anything from 
                the cantata Caractacus or the 
                incidental music for Moore and Yeats' 
                play Grania and Diarmid; the 
                funeral march from the latter is particularly 
                striking, its peculiar half-tints suggestive 
                - as Keith Anderson notes in the booklet 
                - of the Celtic twilight. And Polonia, 
                written for a 1915 concert in aid of 
                the Polish Victims' Relief Fund, is 
                a find. Elgar described it as a "symphonic 
                prelude", but it's really a compact, 
                gripping tone-poem, making a far greater 
                impact, to my mind, than the discursive 
                Falstaff - admired though the 
                latter is in many quarters. The other 
                pieces, if less distinctive, are appealing 
                make-weights. 
              
 
              
Three cheers for the 
                repertoire, then; but only two for the 
                performances. The program, like some 
                real concerts, takes a while to build 
                a head of steam; were the selections 
                recorded in order? The ceremonial splendor 
                of the first two works exposes the tonal 
                shortcomings of the understaffed New 
                Zealand Symphony string sections: too 
                many passages sound unduly subdued, 
                though the eerie woodwind blends of 
                the Grania and Diarmid selection 
                are nicely realized. It doesn't help 
                that James Judd, on this outing at least, 
                suffers from the Leonard Slatkin Disease, 
                in which the strings don't carry full 
                tonal weight from note to note, thus 
                sapping their sonority of interest and 
                life. Interpretatively, the conductor 
                rather botches the Pomp and Circumstance 
                set, setting skittish, unstable tempi, 
                imposing arbitrary unmarked holds, and 
                passing a fair amount of nervous, approximate 
                execution. 
              
 
              
To my surprise, the 
                following performances improved exponentially. 
                The brass chording that introduces and 
                dominates the Caractacus march 
                sounds splendid: firmly grounded, pillowy 
                in tone, well-balanced, and resplendently 
                recorded in the bargain. In the trio 
                section, the woodwinds manage to suggest 
                delicacy and solemnity at once. And 
                Polonia gets precisely the rhythmic 
                alertness and logical phrase shaping 
                that's missing elsewhere. With its lovely 
                poignant woodwind soli and full-throated 
                tuttis, it's the highlight of 
                the disc. 
              
 
              
A small cavil: a number 
                of the pauses between tracks are chintzy, 
                as if the producers were afraid of exceeding 
                the disc's space limits. Still, at Naxos 
                prices, you can buy this for the latter 
                half of the program. I'd look elsewhere 
                for Pomp and Circumstance, however: 
                Norman Del Mar's colorful, vibrant accounts 
                - on a Polydor LP or a Deutsche Grammophon 
                CD - are well worth seeking out. 
              
Stephen Francis 
                Vasta   
              
see also review 
                by Patrick Waller