The bargain price Alwyn-Naxos series continues 
                  to impress. The Lyrita discs are still available if you know 
                  where to look (Harold Moores) and there is Hickox’s Chandos 
                  set, available at reduced price and full of Chandos’s accustomed 
                  sonic glory. This entrant, led by David Lloyd-Jones, couples 
                  the first and third symphonies. If you’ve heard Barbirolli’s 
                  BBC Maida Vale studio broadcast of No. 1, made in 1952, you 
                  will know that the conductor who first performed it takes the 
                  symphony at a quicker clip than Lloyd-Jones, though not always 
                  by much. It’s really only the finale where we see a decided 
                  divergence with JB slashing through it in 9.16 to Lloyd-Jones’s 
                  10.38. That Dutton-Barbirolli Society CD is coupled with the 
                  Second Symphony and is strongly recommended to interested parties 
                  – it was Alwyn who arranged for the recordings to be made and 
                  a good job too as the BBC, as too often, failed to keep it.
                The First is a liberating 
                  work, full of colour and vigour and tremendous vitality. From 
                  its tense and powerful adagio opening it evokes a simmering 
                  Scandinavian half-light and sports an allegro section in the 
                  first movement of warm lyric impress. The second movement, a 
                  pulsating Allegro, gives us some unlikely sounding Dvořákian 
                  wind piping, VW string cantilever and Holstian (Planets) rhythmic 
                  stamp.  The warm and unfolding Adagio is judged just right – 
                  horns open and close – and the finale immediately bursts out 
                  into extrovert colour and builds itself up to an unshakeable 
                  and unstoppable climax. I’ve not heard the composer’s own performance 
                  of this though at Naxos’s tempting price this newcomer should 
                  not be spurned.
                The Third is another 
                  work that reminds us how much Alwyn was taken by Holst. It’s 
                  cast in three movements and opens with determined, stentorian 
                  brass writing and driving percussion. There’s little immediately 
                  appealing about this drama and its agitation and terse tension 
                  is a mark of Alwyns’s superb compression of mood. Listen to 
                  the basses as they drive the second movement – or to the agitation 
                  that runs like a seam throughout, those marshalling trumpet 
                  calls adding dynamism and alarm. The finale opens with a Holstian 
                  march (Mars) of implacable drive before the seeming resolution 
                  of calming string and horn solos from 8’ onwards. The end comes 
                  as an almost half-hearted roar, a bellow that never quite convinces. 
                
                The sound is, as 
                  I’ve found with the entire series thus far, really first rate 
                  and captures an immense amount of detail. The notes are up there 
                  as well and the performances are detailed, thorough and strong.
                Jonathan Woolf
                see also Review 
                  by Rob Barnett
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