In every month’s tranche
of Lyritas we get a mix of recordings
first issued on LP as well as others
never previously released in any format.
The symphony and concerto here are completely
new to the catalogue. They have been
sitting on the shelf since the early
1990s. The suite was a filler on the
Lyrita Recorded Edition LP SRCS 78 alongside
Cooke’s Symphony No. 3 in D which now
seems beached and high and dry in the
absence of a suitable coupling. Lyrita
may yet surprise us.
The limber Hindemithian
Concerto in D for strings is
athletically sprung and in the finale
has surely drunk deep of the dazzle
and effervescence of Tippett’s Concerto
for Double String Orchestra. You
must hear this especially under Braithwaite’s
powerfully winged direction. The solo
voices in the first movement recalled
Hindemith’s Schwanendreher viola
concerto.
From just the year
before comes the four movement First
Symphony. In its first movement it is
Tippett again who is recalled while
in the second it alternates between
Cooke’s maitre, the scherzo of
the Walton First Symphony and the Rawsthorne
Symphonic Studies. The Lento
slowly echoes with that Rawsthorne reference
but the reminiscence is lent a most
magical majesty. This occasionally looks
in a most unaccustomed direction – towards
those grand wheeling Handelian gestures
in Finzi’s Grand Toccata and Fugue
and in the Cello Concerto.
The finale is gripping
and teeming with rhythmic bubbles. It
is not without poetry either as you
will hear from the pp horns at
6:33. This is to be contrasted with
the barked out majesty of the grand
finale.
From the Jabez and
the Devil music we hear a suite
of eight very varied movements crackling
with Stravinskian invention and engagement.
It’s all most brilliantly
recorded and performed and well annotated.
Rob Barnett
see also review
by John France
Lyrita
Catalogue