This is the third CD 
                to be released dedicated exclusively 
                to the music of Philip Grange, a fact 
                that is all the more pleasing given 
                that until 1999 Grange’s music was inexplicably 
                unrepresented in the catalogue. 
              
 
              
That first release 
                on the Black Box label, "Dark Labyrinth" 
                was followed in 2006 by Metier’s "Darkness 
                Visible". Between them these 
                two discs feature works spanning over 
                twenty years of Grange’s career with 
                the latter including Cimmerian Nocturne 
                of 1978, the work that first put Grange’s 
                name on the musical map at the tender 
                age of twenty two. 
              
 
              
Campion’s newest offering 
                includes another early piece that made 
                a significant impression at the time 
                of its Huddersfield Festival premiere 
                in 1983. Like Cimmerian Nocturne, 
                The Kingdom of Bones is a remarkably 
                accomplished work for a composer who 
                was still only in his mid-twenties. 
                The work’s conception goes back further, 
                its slow gestation over a period of 
                six years being the result of a gradually 
                evolving consideration of both text 
                and architecture and placing it as contemporaneous 
                in thought if not final realisation 
                with Cimmerian Nocturne. The 
                composer’s intention in The Kingdom 
                of Bones was to tackle the issue 
                of nuclear holocaust. The metaphorical 
                imagery evoked by texts relating the 
                tale of a mother and her baby in the 
                context of a plague-ravaged country 
                is further darkened by Grange’s use 
                of the Russian language and the mezzo-soprano 
                voice, here sung with striking intensity 
                by Linda Hirst. The work falls into 
                six sections, at the centre of which 
                is a pivotal instrumental interlude 
                that builds ominously to a nightmarish 
                climax. Grange underpins the structure 
                of the work with the tolling of bells 
                at several key points. In line with 
                its music-theatre origins the result 
                is one of powerful emotion and drama, 
                further aided by the 1984 BBC recording 
                which is every bit as vivid as this 
                reviewer recalls when it was first broadcast 
                twenty-three years ago. 
              
 
              
The 1993 recording 
                of Lowry Dreamscape is another 
                BBC recording, this time drawn from 
                a broadcast that originally formed part 
                of the highlights of that year’s BBC 
                Festival of Brass. Sadly the band that 
                premiered the work on that occasion, 
                the Bristol-based Sun Life Band, is 
                no longer in existence; a great shame 
                given the evident commitment of the 
                band’s playing under Roy Newsome. The 
                connection between L.S. Lowry and the 
                strong brass band tradition in the North-West 
                was one that presented itself to the 
                composer quickly. The title of the work 
                is drawn from Lowry’s own reference 
                to many of his paintings as "dreamscapes". 
                It is in the substantial central section 
                of the work that Grange embodies the 
                essence of Lowry’s paintings, the "apocalypse 
                of grime" that emanated from the 
                artist’s industrial landscapes. The 
                faster music is framed by austere flügel 
                horn solos reflecting the contrasting 
                personal resonances of the painter’s 
                sense of artistic isolation. 
              
 
              
Designed to be performed 
                either individually or together the 
                two contrasting pieces that comprise 
                Diptych could indeed stand alone 
                perfectly well. The references to Sky-Maze 
                with Song Shards that increasingly 
                surface in Daedalus’s Lament 
                do however lend a certain unity to the 
                pairing, despite the very different 
                atmospheres that permeate each piece. 
                In Sky-Maze, inspired by the 
                swooping and diving of birds in flight, 
                Grange places much of the writing in 
                the upper reaches of the instrument’s 
                registers creating often beguiling sounds 
                of captivating movement and beauty. 
                The darker tones of the cor anglais 
                are finely suited to Daedalus’s lamentations 
                for the loss of his son. In both cases 
                the performances by Okeanos are beautifully 
                shaped, in music that displays a differing 
                aspect of Grange’s considerable musical 
                imagination. 
              
 
              
Likewise the performance 
                of the demanding Concerto for Clarinet 
                Radical and Symphonic Wind Band 
                is one of impressive facility from the 
                young forces of the National Youth Wind 
                Ensemble and soloist Sarah Williamson. 
                The work’s Chinese sub-title translates 
                as "ever growing, never stopping", 
                an apt description for a concerto that 
                seems continuously to gather energy 
                along its considerable twenty-one minute 
                path. The "radical" role of 
                the clarinet sees the soloist veer from 
                the part of protagonist to suppressor 
                around half way through, the latter 
                directly inspired by the memorable television 
                images of a lone student blocking the 
                path of tanks in Tianamen Square. Ultimately 
                the music disintegrates, with shards 
                of the earlier fast music falling away 
                to the lonely voice of the clarinet. 
              
 
              
Since 2001 Grange has 
                been employed as Professor of Composition 
                at the University of Manchester and 
                the Campion label’s Manchester connections 
                continue to provide an admirable recorded 
                platform for a good number of composers 
                active both in and around Manchester 
                as well as the North-West generally. 
                In the case of Philip Grange the BBC 
                archive has proved to be a fruitful 
                source of material and it is good to 
                have the two excellent archive recordings 
                of The Kingdom of Bones and Lowry 
                Dreamscape released into the public 
                domain. 
              
 
              
All in all the four 
                challenging yet highly contrasting works 
                on this enterprising CD amply demonstrate 
                the fertile and richly coloured imagination 
                of a composer whose work is at last 
                receiving the recorded recognition it 
                deserves. 
              
 
              
Christopher Thomas