Roger Marsh is too 
                little known as a significant composer. 
                NMC are all the more to be thanked for 
                releasing this major work and for having 
                done so without the acoustic flaws sometimes 
                associated with the label. 
              
Marsh is one of several 
                professors at York University and this 
                work was recorded there over a period 
                of two years while he completed the 
                whole cycle. It has little to do with 
                Schoenberg’s famed settings in which 
                the composer tackled only 21 of the 
                whole set of fifty ‘Rondels bergamasques’. 
              
Schoenberg set Otto 
                Hartleben’s German translations from 
                the original French - Giraud was Belgian. 
                He did this, I think, without reading 
                the texts carefully enough. His priority 
                in 1912 was to launch Sprechstimme. 
                Around him Europe was cracking up and 
                he, as a Jew, wanted to make an expressionist 
                statement. 
              
We often forget that 
                Austria-Hungary had been decaying long 
                before Sarajevo sparked a war. Anti-Semitism 
                as well as anti-Magyar ideas were rife 
                and oppressive in Vienna, so if Schoenberg 
                didn’t show respect for Giraud I think 
                we can perhaps understand. He was seen 
                as a minor Belgian poet: shades of ‘famous 
                Belgian’ jokes. 
              
Roger Marsh gets inside 
                the poems - dense Symbolist stuff - 
                as successfully as he penetrates James 
                Joyce. I should like to see his scholarship 
                in that area recognised separately from 
                his Joyce musical settings. ‘Finnegan’s 
                Wake’ is massively dense and Marsh’s 
                Joyce writings have solved a few problems 
                for me … and I’m an Irish resident with 
                dual nationality. 
              
Alas Marsh’s remarkable 
                ‘Not a Soul but Ourselves’ (1977) from 
                ‘Finnegan’s Wake’ is unavailable after 
                a brief release on Wergo. I have the 
                world premiere on tape and when Roger 
                and Electric Phoenix asked me not to 
                play it on BBC or RTE radio I was sent 
                a copy of the Wergo by an EP member 
                at a silly price. 
              
Marsh’s music needs 
                hearing because it’s expertly made with 
                performers and listeners in mind but 
                it is far more than just expertly put 
                together. I see Roger Marsh as a very 
                important composer – although to get 
                the best out his music one needs some 
                experience and a sharp ear for precision. 
                He cannot be ‘pigeon-holed’ and that’s 
                why we need more. 
              
The older David Bedford 
                (older by 12 years) is another top-quality 
                English composer who has a release on 
                NMC. Both composers have an utterly 
                amazing insight into literature and 
                musical education but are ignored at 
                home. 
              
Trying to explain Marsh’s 
                double NMC would waste my time and that 
                of readers. Some music, especially with 
                a text and narrator, just needs to be 
                heard. The excellent notes describe 
                how this essential recording happened. 
              
I would, however, draw 
                attention to track 17 on CD2 when Marsh 
                uses chord structures very like those 
                in Stravinsky’s ‘Symphony of Psalms’. 
                They are punctuated by drum and bass 
                activity and then return to the ambivalent 
                integrity of Stravinsky. 
              
The abiding clarity 
                of voices against selected instruments 
                returns in track 28 where Marsh is seemingly 
                attracted back to late Stravinsky. This 
                communicates with the sort of tight 
                spareness beloved of the Old Man in 
                his swan-song CBS recordings. 
              
Where Marsh really 
                scores with his extremely precise allocation 
                of very clear French and English settings 
                across several ensembles lies in the 
                lifting of Giraud’s poems from minor 
                status to what they truly are. The imagery 
                is well ahead of its time, even including 
                some rather brutal ideas. He was less 
                of a fey ‘Symboliste’ than the 
                mainstream of Valéry, Mallarmé 
                and Verlaine and far closer to the Surrealists 
                and Apollinaire. There are linkages 
                also to Maeterlinck in his mixture of 
                imagination and references. 
              
This is very much Marsh 
                territory. He doesn’t like to wander 
                through perfumed fog so what we hear 
                is a treat of sheer sound as well as 
                being an intellectual challenge. This 
                is a challenge we should accept and 
                demand more Marsh releases. We should 
                as also try to get hold of his earlier 
                recordings from California and the important 
                ‘Not a Soul But Ourselves’ held by the 
                Polygram empire. 
              
The NMC engineers here 
                get things just right except for the 
                ‘Chopin’ track which is too quiet - 
                recorded earlier than the rest. A glitch 
                of this sort is trivial when the overall 
                performance and the work itself is so 
                important. 
              
Value for money is 
                100% because who knows much about Albert 
                Giraud except for the asides we read 
                in relation to Schoenberg’s Hartleben 
                translations? Here we get the whole 
                cycle of poems. Marsh has that rare 
                talent for a composer of being incisively 
                gifted with complex texts. Avoid the 
                high prices of ‘imported’ copies and 
                buy from your local record shop, NMC 
                or MWI. If you do you will hear important 
                music and encounter a remarkable set 
                of poems. These are coupled with quite 
                brilliant insert notes of a quality 
                such as we seldom see. 
              
I usually have a whinge 
                in my reviews but this NMC double has 
                zipped my cynicism. I have admired Marsh’s 
                music for many years. I recommend this 
                release to all who have intellectual 
                curiosity and who love great music of 
                our time. 
              
Like David Bedford, 
                Roger Marsh loves literature and structure. 
                He also has a rock-solid musical grounding 
                in a special British tradition which 
                we are in danger of losing unless great 
                music of this calibre is actually heard 
                and not locked away from us. 
              
Buy and enjoy this 
                marvellous, honest music then see if 
                you want to hear more. If so, there 
                are Marsh recordings in existence that 
                merit liberation. This NMC release is 
                Marsh in top form but there is much 
                else recorded and hidden – as with other 
                very important composers. I hope that 
                a free and welcoming response to this 
                disc will go some way towards breaking 
                the tyranny. All tyranny is ugly but 
                the corporate sort which produces cultural 
                deprivation is worse by far. 
              
Just listen, read the 
                poems on your third hearing and be grateful 
                that we still have original composers 
                and firms like NMC to buck the trend. 
              
A sheer feast with 
                dreams left over. Marsh shows the greatness 
                of Giraud’s haunting images. 
              
Stephen Hall 
                
                
                Detailed track-listing 
                CD1 
                1. Hilliard Ensemble/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part One: 1 Théâtre 
                2. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 2 Décor 
                
                3. Red Byrd/Juice/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part One: 3 Pierrot Dandy 
                4. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 4 Déconvenue 
                
                5. Anna Maria Friman, soprano/John Potter, 
                tenor/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part One: 
                5 Lune au lavoir 
                6. Richard Wistreich, bass/Juice/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 6 La Serenade 
                de Pierrot 
                7. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 7 Cuisine 
                lyrique 
                8. Juice/Omar Sharhyar, beatbox/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 8 Arlequinade 
                
                9. Hilliard Ensemble/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part One: 9 Pierrot polaire 
                10. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 10 A Colombine 
                11. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 11 Arlequin 
                12. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 12 Les nuages 
                
                13. Hilliard Ensemble/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part One: 13 A mon cousin de Bergame 
                
                14. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 14 Pierrot Voleur 
                15. Juice/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 15 Spleen 
                16. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 16 Ivresse de lune 
                17. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 17 Chanson de la potence 
                18. Linda Hirst, mezzo-soprano/Joe Marsh, 
                narrator - Part One: 18 Suicide 
                19. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 19 Papillons 
                noirs 
                20. Juice/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                One: 20 Coucher de soleil 
                21. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 21 Lune 
                malade 
                22. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part One: 22 Absinthe 
                
                CD 2 
                1. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 1 Mendiante 
                de têtes 
                2. Juice/Naomi Morse, violin/Tim Smedley, 
                cello/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 
                2 Décollation 
                3. Juice/Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, 
                conductor/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                Two: 3 Rouge et blanc 
                4. Matthew Collins, Junko Matsuda, Simon 
                Green, Alex Shepherd - piano/Joe Marsh, 
                narrator - Part Two: 4 Valse de Chopin 
                
                5. Juice/Matthew Collins, organ/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 5 L’église 
                
                6. Matthew Long, tenor/Ebor Singers/Paul 
                Gameson, conductor/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 6 Evocation 
                7. Ebor Singers/Matthew Collins, organ/Paul 
                Gameson, conductor/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 7 Messe rouge 
                8. Matthew Long, Chris O’Gorman - tenor/Ebor 
                Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 8 Les croix 
                
                9. Linda Hirst, mezzo-soprano/Joe Marsh, 
                narrator - Part Two: 9 Supplique 
                10. Juice/Christian Mason, violin/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 10 Violon 
                de lune 
                11. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 11 Les cigognes 
                
                12. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 12 Nostalgie 
                
                13. Matthew Long, tenor/Ebor Singers/Paul 
                Gameson, conductor/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 13 Parfums de Bergame 
                14. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 14 Départ 
                de Pierrot 
                15. Red Byrd/Juice/Anna Myatt, soprano/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 15 Pantomime 
                
                16. Red Byrd/Juice/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 16 Brosseur de Lune 
                17. Juice/Omar Sharhyar, beatbox/Ebor 
                Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 17 L’alphabet 
                
                18. Red Byrd/Joe Marsh, narrator - Part 
                Two: 18 Blancheurs sacrées 
                19. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 19 Poussière 
                rose 
                20. Red Byrd/Juice/Anna Myatt, soprano/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 20 Parodie 
                
                21. Red Byrd/Anna Maria Friman, soprano/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 21 Lune 
                moqueuse 
                22. Helena Daffern, solo/Ebor Singers/Paul 
                Gameson, conductor/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 22 La Lanterne 
                23. Red Byrd/Juice/Anna Myatt, soprano/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 23 Pierrot 
                cruel 
                24. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 24 Décor 
                
                25. Red Byrd/Juice/Joe Marsh, narrator 
                - Part Two: 25 Le miroir 
                26. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 26 Souper 
                sur l’eau 
                27. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 27 L’escalier 
                
                28. Ebor Singers/Paul Gameson, conductor/Joe 
                Marsh, narrator - Part Two: 28 Cristal 
                de Bohême