Chetham’s Music School 
                in Manchester has long been a major 
                component of the city’s musical scene 
                and has sent some impressive performers 
                into the world, including the pianist 
                Murray Maclachlan, who now heads Chetham’s 
                keyboard department. The school is also 
                well-known for its choir. Since 2000 
                the school has sponsored an International 
                Summer School and Festival for pianists, 
                which has includes recitals by members 
                of its keyboard department and by the 
                Faculty of the Summer School. In 2004 
                and 2005 Martin Roscoe was a Faculty 
                member and recitalist. 
              
 
              
Martin Roscoe is most 
                familiar to CD collectors for his many 
                performances on different labels of 
                the music of Dohnanyi, Pärt and 
                George Lloyd. He is also known for several 
                entries in Hyperion’s series of The 
                Romantic Piano Concerto. In this recital 
                he adheres pretty firmly to the Romantic 
                repertoire, performing standards by 
                Chopin and Schumann, and only entering 
                the twentieth century with the Ballade 
                of the contemporary British composer 
                Robert Keeley. 
              
 
              
To start with the most 
                modern piece, Robert Keeley’s Ballade 
                made a very good impression. As mentioned 
                above, it was influenced in form by 
                the Chopin Ballades. Like them the basic 
                material is put through a variety of 
                contrasts and convolutions and one constantly 
                experiences finger-work and legato playing 
                that owe a lot to Chopin. But this is 
                also a modern piece cast in a fairly 
                conservative idiom with some impressionism 
                thrown in. Roscoe plays it with great 
                sympathy and also with a lot of excitement. 
                As Keeley is also prominent as a keyboardist, 
                one can imagine him writing a very exciting 
                two-piano work for himself and Martin 
                Roscoe to perform. 
              
 
              
In the aforementioned 
                Chopin Ballade No.1 Roscoe is less exciting. 
                The quick sections are played in true 
                virtuoso fashion, but are too methodical. 
                The slower, central section is better 
                handled and Roscoe masterfully plays 
                the return to the faster tempo. Roscoe 
                shows the same disability in the Schumann 
                Kreisleriana. As is well known, each 
                of these musical self-portraits has 
                a fast and a slow section. Roscoe plays 
                the slow sections both poetically and 
                with technical ability, but the faster 
                sections again are too by-the-book: 
                technically correct, but not very moving. 
              
 
              
This CD is a recording 
                of an actual recital very competently 
                recorded by Jim Pattison of Dunelm. 
                The notes are quite good. There are 
                many recordings of Kreisleriana and 
                the Chopin Ballade. This recital would 
                make a good back-up version of these 
                pieces. But it’s true selling point 
                is the Keeley Ballade. 
              
William Kreindler 
                 
              
see also review 
                by Ian Milnes