There are two ways to obtain these Chandos recordings of Bax’s 
                Symphonic Variations and Winter Legends as mp3 downloads. 
                Alternatively, they are available together on a 2-CD set for the 
                price of one mid-price recording. In fact, if you wish to purchase 
                the reissued coupling, you would be better going for it in CD 
                format (CHAN10209X) – it’s actually much cheaper than the mp3 
                at £7.99 for the 2-CD set from Chandos’s own theclassicalshop, 
                even less from some suppliers, against £6 per CD for the 
                mp3. Better value as a 320kbps mp3 download from classicsonline 
                at £9.98, but that’s still dearer than the CDs. The cheapest way 
                to obtain the mp3 version of CHAN10209 is from emusic – 12 tracks 
                of whatever monthly total you sign up for. 
              
The 2-CD reissue is actually very short value – 
                  hence the reduced price for the CDs – since the two shorter 
                  works have been relocated to other volumes: Morning Song 
                  is now coupled with the Violin and Cello Concertos on CHAN10154X, 
                  Saga Fragment with Four Songs and several orchestral 
                  pieces on CHAN10159X. 
                
              
For reasons which I have explained in my reviews 
                of the Violin and Cello Concertos, I prefer these concertante 
                works in their original couplings, the Violin Concerto on CHAN9003 
                and the Cello Concerto on CHAN8494, still available as mp3s, though 
                not on CD. The Four Songs with which Saga Fragment 
                is now coupled are far from being my favourite Bax works for reasons 
                given in my review of their original coupling with the Seventh 
                Symphony. Together with what seems to me the logical pairings 
                of concertante works with piano, you have my reasons for preferring 
                the couplings on CHAN8484 and 8516 (as detailed below), especially 
                as the inspiration for Winter Legends and Saga Fragment 
                is so similar.  
              
Windows Explorer reports that the files from CHAN8484 
                  and 8516 are at 192kbps, whereas the newer downloads are at 
                  320kbps, but that need be no serious handicap, especially when 
                  the newer coupling offers such very short value. Even at the 
                  lower bit-rate, the sound is very acceptable, though keener 
                  ears may prefer the CD or the newer downloads. 
                
Bax devotees will not expect virtuoso display in 
                  the Symphonic Variations, though newcomers may be looking 
                  for something more in the mould of César Franck’s piece of that 
                  name. The Bax work is more thoughtful, more discursive, more 
                  episodic – and, yes, if you are looking for something sharper 
                  and more focused, rambling. It takes six variations and an intermezzo, 
                  lasting almost 50 minutes to explore a number of themes, only 
                  loosely connected with each other – Youth, Nocturne, Strife, 
                  The Temple, Play, Enchantment and Triumph. It pre-dates the 
                  period when Bax’s inspiration was in full stride. For all that, 
                  it is well worth hearing and you are hardly likely to hear it 
                  better performed than here – in fact, I believe that this is 
                  the only available recording. You would be well advised to take 
                  advantage of Chandos’s offer to join the tracks of the Variations, 
                  to avoid brief drop-outs in music which is continuous across 
                  the tracks. 
                
Morning Song, commissioned for the 21st Birthday 
                  of Princess Elizabeth, is an attractive shorter piece, which 
                  also receives a sympathetic performance, ideally coupled with 
                  the Variations. Never one to settle anywhere for long, 
                  Bax was at the time living in one room above the bar in a pub 
                  in Sussex, hence the sub-title. 
                
I was very happy, too, with the performance of 
                  Winter Legends until I read RB’s review 
                  of the recording with Harriet Cohen and Clarence Raybould on 
                  the Dutton label (CDBP9751). Cohen was, of course the only begetter 
                  of the work and there are grounds for regarding her interpretation 
                  as authoritative. RB notes that this performance pulls no punches 
                  and is more exciting and abandoned than Fingerhut. To some extent 
                  the considerable difference in playing time (Cohen’s 39:39 against 
                  Fingerhut’s 43:19) is due to the restoration of several passages 
                  previously cut, but it may also explain that last 5% which I 
                  felt this Chandos recording was missing. 
                
Normally I favour Bryden Thomson’s leisurely tempi 
                  in Bax, giving the listener plenty of time to view the scenery, 
                  but Winter Legends is the exception to the rule: this 
                  is scenery which we probably want to move through a little faster. 
                  I guess the Cohen version, for all its sub-fusc off-air recording 
                  quality, provides that little bit extra that I’m looking for 
                  in a work which hitherto has almost (but not quite) convinced 
                  me of its worth. It’s definitely on my shopping list. 
                
I don’t wish to make too much of the shortcomings 
                  of the Fingerhut version, however. In general the performance 
                  supports those who see the work as quasi-symphonic – powerful 
                  music in the three-movement-plus-epilogue manner of all the 
                  numbered symphonies, dating from between the Third and Fourth 
                  of these. Unlike their recordings of the symphonies, Chandos 
                  track the epilogue separately. 
                
Saga Fragment is an orchestration of a movement from 
                  a Piano Quartet but it sounds anything but cobbled together. 
                  Fingerhut’s account is very convincing – if anything the most 
                  convincing of her performances of any of these four works; given 
                  that she offers the only available recording of this work and 
                  the only modern recording of the Legends, my recommendation 
                  of CHAN8484 is therefore only very slightly muted. 
                
The notes by Lewis Foreman are excellent and the 
                  recording, in any format, very good. If you have already made 
                  the acquaintance of Bax’s symphonies, these recordings – whichever 
                  format you choose – could well be an ideal next step. 
                
              
I’ve been listening to and writing about a good 
                deal of Bax and Buxtehude recently – two very different composers, 
                but I’ve yet to become sated with either.
              
Brian 
                Wilson
              
Additional 
                options discussed:
                
                Sir Arnold BAX (1883-1953) 
                Symphonic 
                Variations for 
                Piano and Orchestra (1917-19) [49:34] 
                Morning 
                Song (Maytime 
                in Sussex) (1947) [8:09] 
                
 
                Margaret Fingerhut (piano) 
                London Philharmonic Orchestra/Bryden 
                Thomson 
                rec. 
                All Saints’ Church, Tooting, London, 7-8 January 1987. DDD. 
                
 
                CHANDOS mp3 CHAN8516 
 
                [57:52] 
                
                Sir Arnold BAX (1883-1953) 
                Winter 
                Legends for 
                Piano and Orchestra (1929) [43:19] 
                Saga 
                Fragment for 
                Piano and Small Orchestra (1922, orch.1933) [11:13] 
                
 
                Margaret Fingerhut (piano) 
                London Philharmonic Orchestra/Bryden 
                Thomson 
                rec. 
                All Saints’ Church, Tooting, London, 3-4 April 1986. DDD. 
                
 
                CHANDOS mp3 CHAN8484 
 
                [54:38]