Unlike most of Lyrita’s 
                2007 issues this one is derived from 
                recordings of performances that have 
                never previously been available in any 
                form. In this it can be grouped with 
                January’s Coates-Wordsworth disc SRCD.213 
                and the Holst Whitman SRCD.210, 
                February’s Arthur Benjamin Symphony 
                SRCD.314 and March’s Arnold Cooke Symphony 
                No. 1 SRCD.203. More to come including 
                some new Sterndale Bennett overtures, 
                Coleridge Taylor’s violin concerto, 
                Julius Harrison’s Bredon Hill and 
                the William Busch concertos. 
              
 
              
Unlike a number of 
                the truly new Lyrita discs the present 
                recordings made some thirteen years 
                ago have not – with the exception of 
                the Arnold - been pipped at the post. 
              
 
              
The French horn is 
                the most romantic instrument in the 
                brass family; not that it does not have 
                other facets: buffoon and hero are in 
                there too. Its bloom, its range, its 
                supple agility in the right hands and 
                its warmth - all contribute to the image. 
                British composers have been quick to 
                capitalise on the instrument. Examples 
                of concertos, sonatas and ensemble pieces 
                for the instrument are plentiful. This 
                valuable anthology draws on that heritage 
                and largely from the bountiful 1950s. 
                A decade later and various horn concertos 
                by British composers were plumbing the 
                deeps of dodecaphony and atonality but 
                the present concertos are stalwarts 
                who naturally looked to the springs 
                of tonality and melody. 
              
 
              
David Pyatt makes the 
                most of his opportunities. These are 
                not works for shrinking lilies and he 
                is assertively recorded with a potent 
                sound image catching every nuance of 
                horn tone. 
              
 
              
The disc opens with 
                the Jacob concerto which instantly 
                refutes any suggestions that this phenomenally 
                industrious composer was a purveyor 
                only of gebrauchsmusik. There 
                are said to be nineteen concertos in 
                total. Of the ones I have heard a number 
                fall into this romantic category which 
                in this case slots neatly into the blended 
                Moeran-RVW style. The First Viola Concerto 
                is also deeply moving. The present three 
                movement work is a delight with the 
                first chatteringly vigorous with chansonnier 
                asides, the second ruminative in a faintly 
                bleached Sibelian way and the finale 
                rollicking and explosive without being 
                at all beery. 
              
 
              
This makes a persuasive 
                prelude to the appearance in April 2007 
                of SRCD.315 with Gordon Jacob’s two 
                war-time Symphonies in recordings by 
                LPO/Barry Wordsworth. Comparisons will 
                then need to be made with a ClassicO 
                CD of Symphony No. 2. 
              
 
              
The Arnold was 
                written for Dennis Brain and is stylistically 
                more personal – a definite identity 
                profile is asserted. David Pyatt’s horn 
                is given unmistakable prominence and 
                the playing and artistry stands up well 
                to the unflinchingly close focus. The 
                horn tone is in fruity and forwardly 
                full bloom. A second movement Andantino 
                Grazioso has those sinuously slalom 
                slides in the strings as well as a characteristically 
                romantic Pavane-style lament of a tune 
                – in fact the Ravel Pavane could 
                easily have been part of the inspiration. 
                There’s plenty of competition for Pyatt 
                but nothing untoward especially as the 
                no other CD offers such a coupling or 
                anything like it. There’s Alan Civil 
                on a long deleted composer-conducted 
                radio broadcast (3 March 1969, 75th 
                Birthday release - BBC Radio Classics 
                1 565691817) where his sound is squat, 
                moist and fruity as it is in his late-1980s 
                re-recording for EMI 0946 3 70563 2 
                5. Richard Watkins in the Decca Universal 
                Arnold Edition box on 4765343 is a shade 
                drier of tone than Civil or Pyatt. 
              
 
              
Like the other three 
                horn concertos here the York Bowen 
                is in three movements. Bowen was 
                a student of the Royal Academy which 
                found more in the Russian Nationalist 
                and French schools than the students 
                of the RCM. Bowen’s swooning romanticism 
                is most effective and clearly sincere. 
                The Tchaikovskian manner may be familiar 
                but the inspiration is genuine and most 
                eloquent and there are high spirits 
                such as we know from the bubbling Strauss 
                Horn Concerto in the finale. 
              
 
              
The Gipps 
                is a known and very poetic work. 
                It had been revived by the BBC in a 
                studio performance by Frank Lloyd with 
                the BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra conducted 
                by George Tzipine. The broadcast took 
                place on 20 January 1983. Both the Moeran 
                and RVW haunt the pastoral pages of 
                the first movement and the central movement 
                is blithe blown by warm sweet-breathed 
                zephyrs. The finale is vigorous, chattery 
                and delightfully ingratiating. 
              
 
              
It’s also well worth 
                looking out Gipps’ Symphony No. 2 on 
                ClassicO. 
                Such a pity that Lyrita did not offer 
                John Pritchard the chance to record 
                Gipps’ Fourth Symphony when he was active 
                recording Rawsthorne for them with the 
                LPO. He was one of the few conductors 
                other than Gipps who was prepared to 
                tackle the Gipps symphonies and he did 
                so with the BBCSO in May 1983 for her 
                Fourth Symphony. It is way past time 
                that we had a complete cycle of her 
                concertos and symphonies. 
              
 
              
Vinter’s name is not 
                widely known in classical circles. He 
                was born at Peaslake, near Guildford 
                in Surrey on 4 May 1909. He began his 
                musical education as a chorister at 
                Lincoln Cathedral then attended the 
                Royal Military School of Music at Kneller 
                Hall and the Royal Academy where he 
                was appointed professor (bassoon) in 
                1938. He joined the BBC Military Band 
                in 1930 and served as a bassoonist in 
                the BBC Wireless Military Band and the 
                LPO. He enlisted in RAF in 1940 as member 
                of the RAF Central Band and from 1941 
                to 1945 he became Bandmaster, Flying 
                Training Command. Released from RAF 
                in November 1945, he formed the International 
                Light Orchestra. He succeeded Rae Jenkins 
                as Conductor of the BBC Midland Light 
                Orchestra based at Birmingham in 1946 
                and guest conducted with various European 
                radio orchestras. He was well respected 
                in the field of light music and was 
                also an authority on folk music. His 
                works include forty original compositions 
                spanning opera through to film music, 
                and about two hundred arrangements. 
                Perhaps the finest of the works is the 
                powerful and dramatic cantata The 
                Trumpets drawing on trumpet references 
                in the Bible. The movements are Blazon, 
                Destruction, Dedication and 
                Revelation. The work has been 
                commercially recorded twice. The first 
                came from HMV in November 1966 with 
                Owen Brannigan and the All Star Brass 
                conducted by the composer. Pye recorded 
                it in March 1969 conducted by Geoffrey 
                Brand with Michael Langdon and the Black 
                Dyke Mills. The work receives performances 
                still and in the 1980s it was conducted 
                by Maurice Handford. Vinter's recreations 
                included country life and natural history. 
                He spent his last years at St. Mabyn, 
                Trethevy, Tintagel, Cornwall where he 
                died on 10 October 1969. 
              
 
              
Quite apart from a 
                single opera of which I have no details 
                there are the ballet: Krakov Legend 
                (1965), the Concertino for clarinet 
                and orchestra; Spring Carol, 
                Symphonic Suite for piano and orchestra; 
                Concerto Burlando for saxophone 
                and orchestra (1964); Piaculum for 
                soprano and orchestra (1963). Among 
                the orchestral works: Suite, Latin 
                America; Celtic Lilt; Divertimento 
                for string orchestra; Tularecito 
                (Little Frog); Overture, 
                Mr Knowall (1960); Grecian 
                Impressions (1962); Overture, The 
                Tearaway (1963); Brazilian Rhapsody 
                (1965); Overture, To A New Venture 
                (1965); English Rhapsody (1965); 
                Fête Basque (1965); Little 
                Island Rhapsody; Suite, New Lamps 
                for Old. He was much better known 
                in the brass band world and the following 
                brass band works should be noted: The 
                Dover Coach; Salute to Youth; 
                TUC Centenary March; Vizcaya; 
                Symphony of Marches (1963); Rhapsody, 
                Simon Called Peter (1963); Variation 
                on a Ninth (1964, National championship, 
                GUS Footwear/Stanley Boddington); Triumphant 
                Rhapsody (1965, National championship, 
                Fairey Band/Leonard Lamb); John O'Gaunt 
                (1968, British Open Championship, 
                Black Dyke Mills/Geoffrey Brand) James 
                Cook, Circumnavigator (1969, first 
                perf. British Open Championship 1974, 
                Black Dyke Mills/Roy Newsome); Spectrum 
                (1969, British Open Championship, 
                Grimethorpe Colliery/George Thompson). 
                For small brass ensembles there are 
                an Elegy and Rondo for brass 
                quartet; Fancy's Knell for brass 
                quartet; Alla Burlesca for brass 
                quartet; 
              
 
              
Gilbert Vinter’s poetic 
                lollipop Hunter’s Moon was 
                written while the composer was in Torquay 
                as a member of the wartime Torquay Municipal 
                Orchestra. It was originally to have 
                been called Diana of the Chase but 
                this title was felt to be too ponderous. 
                The work was premiered by John Burden 
                – for whom it was written - in Torquay 
                in 1942. It’s a compact and mercurial 
                work. The chase can be fairly sedate 
                at times. A harp-underpinned romantic 
                interlude allows time for revelling 
                in reflection before a Delian sigh takes 
                us back to the humorously determined 
                march. If not half-cut we know from 
                the juicy virtuosic slides that the 
                Tam-Beckus hero-player has had a drop 
                or two. The stuff of Classic FM and 
                only 6:22. Let’s have some more Vinter. 
                How about that Concerto Burlando? 
              
 
              
The very full and fluent 
                notes are by British music doyen Lewis 
                Foreman – always very good value. 
              
Rob Barnett  
From Jeffrey Davis (Bulletin Board):-
Have just been reading this very informative review of British Horn Concertos on Lyrita, in which Rob mentions Ruth Gipps Symphony No 4. Through a kindly contact via this Bulletin Board I have a copy of John Pritchard performing this with the BBC SO, although the work, as far as I know, has never been released on LP or CD. Frankly, the work is stunning - a wonderfully life-affirming and inspiriting score. All the works by this composer that I have been heard have been great (ie Symphony No 2 on Classico) but Symphony No 4 is, by all accounts, her masterpiece. I find myself playing it over and over again. Dutton are you listening? As Rob said, we need a complete cycle of symphonic works by this fine and largely unknown composer.
              
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