This represents a cannily 
                put together collection. This is the 
                first ever issue of these versions of 
                the North American Square Dance Suite 
                and the Symphony. They have been 
                ‘in the can’ since the early 1990s. 
                The Overture was issued in the early 
                1970s on Lyrita LP SRCS 47 alongside 
                other ‘Lyrita Lollipops’ by Delius, 
                Walton and Bliss. Cotillon derives 
                from a 1980s Lyrita LP: SRCS 115. Both 
                the overture and Cotillon can 
                also be heard on a mixed Australian 
                light music collection on ABC. 
              
 
              
Benjamin was Australian 
                but spent most of his life in the UK 
                with the odd sojourn in the USA. Lyrita 
                are renowned for their attention to 
                neglected British music yet here they 
                are with the second recording of the 
                Benjamin symphony. It’s not out of order. 
                Benjamin was an adopted Brit and his 
                creativity and career were bound up 
                with the life of the British Isles. 
              
 
              
The disc also serves 
                to point up two aspects of Benjamin’s 
                music: the light and the serious. He 
                wrote many light pieces amongst which 
                the most famous are the Jamaican 
                Rumba and San Domingo recently 
                featured with other light pieces on 
                ABC Classics. On the other hand he produced 
                a steady flow of serious works including 
                operas, concertos for violin and piano, 
                a Ballade for strings and this Symphony. 
              
 
              
Myer Fredman's version 
                of the Overture to an Italian Comedy 
                with the RPO is a ‘Lyrita lollipop’ 
                from an early 1970s LP. Joseph Post 
                on an even earlier ABC CD directs a 
                performance with rougher edges. It lacks 
                the zip of the Lyrita and for that matter 
                of the vintage Frederick Stock/Chicago 
                version on Biddulph. The work explores 
                territory familiar from Barber's School 
                for Scandal overture and two overtures 
                by Benjamin's friend, Bax: the peppy 
                Work in Progress and Overture 
                to a Picaresque Comedy. It is no 
                surprise to hear that the Benjamin used 
                this as an overture to his own opera 
                Prima Donna. 
              
 
              
From effervescence 
                to neo-classicism: Cotillon is 
                based not too tightly on original eighteenth 
                century dances. You will know what to 
                expect if you are familiar with Moeran's 
                Serenade, Rubbra's Farnaby 
                Improvisations, the outer movements 
                of Finzi's violin concerto and the full 
                orchestral version of Warlock's Capriol 
                Suite. There’s a dab of Pulcinella 
                here and a touch of tenderness there. 
                Patrick Thomas in his ABC recording 
                is more successful than Del Mar in conveying 
                the sheer zest of this work. The North 
                American Square Dance suite – no 
                doubt recalling his West Coast Pacific 
                years - is a playful charmer although 
                its fizz is in some cases a little lacking 
                in bubble. 
              
 
              
The Symphony had its 
                first commercially issued recording 
                courtesy of Marco Polo. This was 8.223764. 
                Dedicated to RVW, this work was a product 
                of Benjamin’s Vancouver and Oregon years, 
                written during the summer holidays of 
                1943, 1944 and 1945. He said that it 
                was intended: "to mirror the feelings 
                - the despairs and hopes - of the times 
                in which I live." It is a classic 
                war symphony that in the present recording 
                can at last stand fully tall. 
              
 
              
My expectations were 
                high having first discovered this deeply 
                impressive piece through a tape of fragmentary 
                acetates of a truly electrifying performance 
                (BBCSO/Boult) cutting through the primitive 
                1940s recording. The symphony itself 
                is heavy with dark clouds, drama, grimness 
                and heroism lit with an occasionally 
                light-hearted spirit. It has something 
                of the atmosphere of Walton’s First 
                and VW 4, 5 - a work for which Benjamin 
                had the highest regard - and 6. One 
                might loosely associate this work also 
                with the Hubert Clifford Symphony (Chandos), 
                the Bernard Herrmann Symphony (Unicorn; 
                Koch), the Arnell Third (Dutton) and 
                the Alwyn First (Lyrita, Chandos, Naxos, 
                Dutton). 
              
 
              
The Marco Polo sound 
                for Lyndon-Gee conveys a natural concert 
                hall effect with plenty of impact. I 
                would have preferred though a greater 
                emphasis on the strings, but, that very 
                minor quibble aside, this was a satisfying 
                recording. 
              
 
              
Wordsworth’s version 
                has more choking gravitas and sturdily 
                emphasised tension – as dark a performance 
                as I have heard. Mind you my comparison 
                pool is not large: from the Boult-conducted 
                (or is it Benjamin or Barbirolli?) fragmented 
                acetates to the 1980s broadcast by Patrick 
                Thomas with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. 
                The massively effective expansive gait 
                of the Lyrita version contrasts with 
                Lyndon-Gee’s headlong ardour. Wordsworth’s 
                approach works consistently most especially 
                in the broad Adagio Appassionato 
                third movement with its cauldron of 
                the emotions. Other works’ influence 
                can be heard including in the first 
                movement: the Tallis Fantasia (11:30 
                in I) and the Roy Harris symphonies 
                of the early 1940s – stigmata also carried 
                in John Veale’s wonderful First Symphony. 
                The Benjamin symphony is a most potently 
                charged work. That sturdy chant-undertow 
                theme opens the work with a tidal surge. 
                It also acts in various forms as an 
                irresistible instigator-hortator throughout 
                – a truly inspired idea. The finale 
                is one of rhythmic splendour and brilliance 
                albeit in dark gemstone hues. True to 
                symphonic majesty-tragedy the undertow 
                theme returns to crown the proceedings. 
              
 
              
Benjamin’s light and 
                serious sides are here generously represented 
                in vivid performances and with superlative 
                recording qualities to match. 
              
Rob Barnett  
              
The 
                Lyrita Catalogue