Here are two grandly 
                proportioned and lavishly stated American 
                symphonies. They are expressed in serious 
                but by no means glum language. Each 
                is in five movements and each follows 
                the schema of the Ordinary of the Roman 
                Catholic Mass. They are for orchestra 
                alone. 
              
 
              
In spirit these works 
                link with Rubbra, Vaughan Williams, 
                Martinů 
                and Hovhaness. Loosely grouped they 
                can be seen as companions to Creston's 
                Third Symphony and Hanson's Fourth which 
                also follow, more or less closely, the 
                Requiem pattern. 
              
 
              
Flagello's Missa 
                Sinfonica arcs from a sturdily Rubbra-like 
                Kyrie with echoes of the aspirational 
                pilgrimage of Hanson's Sixth Symphony 
                to a plunging and catchily playful Gloria 
                soon lost in romantic wonderment 
                (4:26). The statuesque Credo 
                is earnestly reflective, somewhat in 
                the spirit of Vaughan Williams but with 
                a more overtly romantic sensibility. 
                Then comes the sparkling Sanctus 
                with its rhythmic vigour paralleling 
                that of the Gloria but with a 
                curvaceous grand melodic underpinning 
                that bridges, with a natural continuity 
                of pulse, to the Agnus Dei finale. 
                This is romantic (3:20) but firm as 
                the roots of the mountain and enduringly 
                memorable for its lyrical heft and clamantly 
                grasped majesty. The final fade recalls 
                the confident abnegation of Vaughan 
                Williams 5 and Rubbra 4. 
              
 
              
Arnold Rosner's 
                Fifth Symphony has practically the 
                same movement structure and names. As 
                we know from the frugal catalogue of 
                his works on record Rosner's music is 
                serious, shot through with light, borne 
                up by melody and ever distant from triviality. 
                The neo-modal accents cannot help but 
                become entangled in a redolence of Vaughan 
                Williams - especially his Fifth Symphony, 
                Pilgrims Progress and Tallis 
                Fantasia. Hovhaness is also within 
                hailing distance. Try the start of the 
                Credo with its shades of the 
                Armenian-American composer's various 
                meditative-invocatory works for solo 
                brass instrument and orchestra. There 
                is also a spirit of Tudor dance which 
                no doubt links with Rosner’s opera The 
                Chronicle of Nine (1984). 
                In the Agnus Dei the language 
                bows in endearment towards Nielsen (symphonies 
                5 and 3) and to Vaughan Williams (symphonies 
                5, 8, 9). Its climax streams through 
                the heavens, suffusing the firmament 
                with an extended and sustained orison. 
                This work represents a peaceful blessing 
                bestowed on a cruel world. This is in 
                contrast to the Flagello which keeps 
                a Barber-like emotional turmoil in its 
                tread. Rosner should be treasured as 
                much as Ronald Stevenson whose Ben 
                Dorain has recently been premiered 
                in Glasgow. Let’s hope he is performed 
                more often than has to date been Stevenson’s 
                fate. 
              
 
              
Make it your business 
                to hear these symphonies. If you have 
                any affection for the crudely drawn 
                comparison works I have given will find 
                these symphonies rewarding miracles 
                of melodic expression. 
              
 
              
The notes are confided 
                to us by Walter 
                Simmons and Arnold Rosner. John 
                McLaughlin Williams and his orchestra 
                took trouble over four days in Kiev 
                to give us concentrated, communicative 
                and not careful accounts of these emotionally 
                imposing works. 
              
Rob Barnett  
                
              
                Other Flagello Reviews on MusicWeb 
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classRev/2001/Jan01/flagello.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2006/July06/Flagello_8559296.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/May01/flagello1.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/May01/flagello2.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2007/Dec07/flagello_AR00362.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2004/May04/Flagello1.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2006/Aug06/flagello_8559296.htm 
                
                Other Rosner Reviews on MusicWeb 
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/June01/Rosner3.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2002/Dec02/dello_joio_hovhaness_rosner.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/Nov01/Modern_Masters_III.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/Feb03/rosner.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/June01/rosner2.htm 
                
                http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2001/June01/Rosner1.htm