Though a prolific composer, 
                Hoddinott has been far from fortunate 
                in his representation by the record 
                companies, so the current CD, part of 
                Lyrita’s attempt to redress the balance, 
                is very welcome. None of these concertos 
                is currently available anywhere else, 
                which makes my task of reviewing easier 
                – no comparisons to make – but is a 
                sad reflection on the neglect of this 
                composer. With four concertos, all dating 
                from the first twenty years of his creative 
                career, this disc makes a useful supplement 
                to the two Hoddinott CDs already released 
                by Lyrita. 
              
SRCD331 offers Symphonies 
                2, 3 and 5 and SRCD332 contains Dives 
                and Lazarus, the Viola Concertino, Nocturnes 
                and Cadenzas and the Sinfonia Fidei. 
                Reviews of the former by Colin 
                Clarke and of the latter by Hubert 
                Culot and Colin 
                Clarke were extremely appreciative. 
              
I should say at the 
                outset that I am equally appreciative 
                of the merits of the current CD. Though 
                recorded at various times, the standard 
                of performance and recording is consistently 
                high. The Clarinet and Harp Concertos 
                were recorded in 1971 by Decca, who 
                also recorded the Second Piano Concerto 
                in 1973, all in the Kingsway Hall. One 
                1970s reviewer, à propos 
                of their LSO/Kertész Dvořak Symphonies, 
                I think, asserted that Decca’s Kingsway 
                Hall recordings sounded as if they had 
                been made in a zinc tank. The aforesaid 
                metal does not seem to have touched 
                these well-remastered recordings, which 
                hardly sound inferior to the 
                1996 DDD recording of the First Piano 
                Concerto. 
              
The performance of 
                the Clarinet Concerto is all that could 
                be wished for. This is an attractive 
                work; its performance at the Cheltenham 
                Festival in 1954 marked the beginning 
                of general interest in Hoddinott’s music. 
                That first performance was given by 
                Gervase de Peyer, who is also the soloist 
                here. His version of the Mozart Clarinet 
                Concerto long held the field alongside 
                Jack Brymer’s and the Double Decca which 
                contains it (466 247 2) and the Eloquence 
                CD containing his Mozart, Spohr and 
                Weber concertos (a bargain on 476 7404) 
                are still highly recommendable. (Brymer’s 
                version, coupled with the Bassoon Concerto 
                and ‘Jupiter’ Symphony under Beecham 
                is deservedly a ‘Great Recording’ on 
                EMI 5 67596 2) de Peyer’s playing here 
                is of the same high quality; the slow 
                movement, marked arioso, is especially 
                entrancing. No comparisons available, 
                of course, but it is hard to image anything 
                here being bettered. 
              
The Harp Concerto is 
                equally delightful; the performance 
                and recording of this piece are equally 
                delectable. Osian Ellis was the work’s 
                dedicatee and, again, it is hard to 
                imagine a better performance. Whereas 
                the harp would have been able to compete 
                (just) with an orchestra in Mozart’s 
                time – and even he coupled it with the 
                solo flute, which he is said to have 
                disliked – it would be lost against 
                the background of a full modern orchestra. 
                Hoddinott solves the problem by having 
                harp and orchestra conduct a dialogue 
                with each other. ‘Dialogue’ is actually 
                the title of the first movement; here 
                and in the other movements, ‘Improvisation’ 
                and ‘Fantasy’, the solo instrument is 
                never allowed to get out of its depth. 
              
The Clarinet and Harp 
                Concertos are extremely colourful and 
                there is nothing in them to deter even 
                the most determined advocates of tuneful 
                music. In both of these 1972 Decca recordings 
                the LSO and David Atherton lend very 
                sympathetic support. 
              
The First Piano Concerto 
                appears in a more recent (1996) recording 
                made by Lyrita themselves. The two piano 
                concertos are tougher, less ‘tuneful’ 
                than the earlier works but, again, there 
                is little here to annoy those who dislike 
                the more angular manifestations of modern 
                classical music. (I include myself in 
                this category.) 
              
The First Concerto 
                opens with what might almost be mood-music 
                from a film, mildly dissonant at times, 
                even strident, before a more lyrical 
                theme is developed. The presto 
                second movement, which follows without 
                a break, is a little more angular but 
                even at its menacing and exciting climax 
                there is nothing to upset all but the 
                most conservative listeners. The dream-like 
                lento and an energetic finale 
                round off a work which is less easy 
                to like than the Clarinet and Harp Concertos 
                but repays repeated hearings. Again 
                here soloist and orchestra give fine 
                performances which should win friends 
                for the work and the DDD recording is 
                demonstration-worthy. 
              
The Second Concerto, 
                which followed hard on the heels of 
                the first and was revised in 1969, is 
                again re-mastered from a Decca Kingsway 
                Hall recording, from 1973. Whereas the 
                First Concerto was in four movements, 
                Hoddinott here reverts to the more traditional 
                three. The quietly lyrical opening introduces 
                a work which is slightly easier to engage 
                with than the First Concerto. The reflective 
                adagio is particularly beautiful, 
                even at its ff climax. Yet again 
                the authoritative performance and the 
                recording, which is hardly dated in 
                the slightest, offer the best possible 
                opportunity to get to know a work which, 
                I am sure, will repay repeated hearings 
                as much as the First Concerto. 
              
The conductor, Andrew 
                Davis, has, of course, since gone on 
                to give us many fine recordings of better-known 
                20th-century British music. 
                Some of these, such as his Elgar Enigma 
                Variations (Apex 0927 41371 2: NB 
                the number in the Penguin Guide is incorrect) 
                and Falstaff (Apex 2564 62200 
                2) and his Vaughan Williams Sixth Symphony 
                (Apex 0927 49584 2), can stand against 
                all comers especially at their new budget 
                price. Here there are no rival versions 
                to contend with, but the end result 
                is just as creditable. The pianist Martin 
                Jones is equally first-rate in this 
                concerto. Many of his recordings for 
                Nimbus, unavailable since the demise 
                of that company, are now becoming available 
                again. Most recently his CD of the music 
                of Hans Gál received very favourable 
                reviews. 
              
Anyone wishing to sample 
                mid-twentieth-century music which is 
                a little more avant-garde than 
                Vaughan Williams or Walton but still 
                colourful and approachable, especially 
                at second or subsequent hearing, should 
                try this CD. The music is easier to 
                engage with, for example, than the Malcolm 
                Williamson concertos on another Lyrita 
                CD which I recently reviewed. 
              
The notes in the booklet, 
                by Michael Oliver, revised by Lewis 
                Foreman, are informative and helpful. 
              
The one problem which 
                I experienced with this CD was that 
                one of my decks failed to read the TOC 
                and refused to play the disc. Three 
                others did agree to play it, one reluctantly, 
                having first identified it as a CDR 
                rather than a commercial CD. I have 
                not had this problem with any other 
                Lyrita CDs, so I hope that it is a fluke 
                limited to my review copy. 
              
So far so good, but 
                there is still a great deal of music 
                by Hoddinott, of later provenance than 
                that on these three Lyrita CDs, waiting 
                to be recorded. (His complete works 
                are listed here 
                on Musicweb.) I certainly second Colin 
                Clarke’s call for a reappraisal of Hoddinott. 
                Perhaps Lyrita will put us even more 
                in their debt. Or Chandos with the BBC 
                National Orchestra of Hoddinott’s native 
                Wales. Failing that, I note that Naxos, 
                otherwise an able advocate of British 
                music, have nothing by Hoddinott in 
                their current catalogue – surely they 
                will want to put that right. Are there 
                any more Decca recordings out there 
                waiting to be reissued? 
              
Brian Wilson