Roderick Williams is 
                well-known as a brilliant and passionate 
                advocate of English music. His recordings 
                on Naxos - not least his excellent Finzi 
                disc in the English Song Series review 
                and Vaughan Williams’ evocative Willow 
                Wood review 
                - have all been of the greatest calibre, 
                with sensitive, expressive singing. 
                This fourteenth disc in the Naxos English 
                Song Series is no exception. 
              
 
              
Williams’ voice is 
                warm, and gloriously resonant and assured, 
                with a gorgeous, rich, dark timbre. 
                He sings with confidence and with fantastic 
                enunciation – one really can hear every 
                single word. 
              
 
              
The Vagabond 
                opens the disc – presenting the singer 
                with a wonderful spring in his step, 
                and good plodding footsteps in the accompaniment. 
                In fact, throughout the disc Burnside 
                proves a most sympathetic and adroit 
                accompanist, for instance providing 
                supple, nimble and beautifully flowing 
                accompaniment in Let beauty awake. 
                Williams’ voice suits this repertoire 
                down to the ground – absolutely perfect 
                in Wither must I wander and suitably 
                tender in The infinite shining heavens. 
                He invests the opening of his exceptional 
                rendition of Youth and love with 
                magical tranquillity, incredible clarity 
                and searing beauty of voice that would 
                make it worth purchasing the disc for 
                this song alone! Bright is the ring 
                of words is spacious, bold 
                and well paced. In I have trod the 
                upward and the downward slope, a 
                barely-concealed sorrow and wisdom, 
                and a heaviness of age and experience 
                shine through Williams’ convincing expression 
                of the words. 
              
 
              
The House of Life 
                follows, with delightfully poignant 
                and poetic renditions of Love–sight, 
                Love’s Last Gift and Silent 
                Noon (the latter song with perfect 
                vibrato), and an exceptionally lyrical 
                and beautiful Love’s Minstrels. 
              
 
              
Linden Lea is 
                always a challenge, given the huge number 
                of excellent – and classic – versions. 
                Yet Williams certainly holds his own 
                here. He takes the song at a good pace 
                and is remarkably relaxed and unconcerned, 
                with the result that the song flows 
                naturally, without sounding at all rushed 
                or forced. There are no histrionics, 
                no misplaced passions, just a refreshing 
                sense of space and ease - "Let 
                other folk", for example, is merely 
                confident, joyful and free, and not 
                belted out as with some singers. 
              
 
              
The lovely Four 
                Poems by Fredegond Shove are - The 
                Water Mill apart - generally less 
                well-known, but their neglect in favour 
                of other works is unjustified. Williams 
                captures the ghostly mood of Motion 
                and Stillness perfectly, creating 
                a mesmeric stillness at the end of the 
                song. The lovely Four Nights 
                is sensitively sung, and The New 
                Ghost is performed with haunting 
                intensity, Williams’ resonant voice 
                full of melancholic urgency. 
              
 
              
I was tremendously 
                impressed by this disc, which exceeded 
                the very high expectations I had entertained. 
                The singing is outstanding – deeply 
                intelligent, powerful and highly-charged. 
                Some may find that Williams employs 
                a little too much vibrato in the songs 
                for their taste. This is not, however, 
                a concern that troubles me in the slightest. 
                The accompaniment is of the highest 
                standard, and the songs are given astoundingly 
                beautiful performances. I cannot recommend 
                this disc highly enough. 
              
Em Marshall  
              
See also review 
                by Anne Ozorio (December Bargain 
                of the Month)