CD 1 [78:12]
The Lark Ascending [14:42]
Hugh Bean (violin); New Philharmonia
Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult
Linden Lea (words by William
Barnes) [2:50]
Dame Janet Baker (mezzo-soprano); Gerald
Moore (piano)
Fantasia on Greensleeves [4:40]
Sinfonia of London/Sir John Barbirolli
Silent Noon [4:16]
Ian Bostridge (tenor); Julius Drake
(piano)
English Folk Song Suite (orch.
Gordon Jacob) [8:46]
London Symphony Orchestra/Sir Adrian
Boult
The Vagabond (from
Songs of
Travel) [3:07]
Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor); David
Willison (piano)
Serenade to Music (original version
with 16 soloists) [13:13]
Norma Burrowes; Sheila Armstrong; Susan
Longfield; Marie Hayward (soprano);
Alfreda Hodgson; Gloria Jennings; Shirley
Minty; Meriel Dickinson (contralto);
Ian Partridge; Bernard Dickerson; Wynford
Evans; Kenneth Bowen (tenor); Richard
Angas; John Carol Case; John Noble;
Christopher Keyte (bass); London Philharmonic
Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult
On Wenlock Edge [3:49]
Ian Partridge (tenor)/Music Group of
London
Rhosymedre [3:57]
Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields/Sir
Neville Marriner
The Call (
Five Mystical Songs)
[2:07]
John Shirley-Quirk (baritone)/English
Chamber Orchestra/Sir David Willcocks
Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
[16:13]
Sinfonia of London/Sir John Barbirolli
CD 2 [77:28]
The Wasps Overture [10:09]
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian
Boult
Loch Lomond [3:42]
Ca' the Yowes [5:09]
Ian Partridge (tenor); London Madrigal
Singers/Christopher Bishop
Five Variants of ‘Dives and Lazarus'
[11:23]
Jacques Orchestra/Sir David Willcocks
O Taste and See [1:40]
James Lancelot (organ); Ivan Sharpe
(treble); Winchester Cathedral Choir/Martin
Neary
Job – Pavane of the Sons of Morning
[2:11]
London Symphony Orchestra/Sir Adrian
Boult
Bushes and Briars [3:00]
Wassail Song [2:42]
Baccholian Singers of London
For all the saints (
Sine nomine)
[5:07]
John Scott Whiteley (organ); York Minster
Choir/Philip Moore
The truth sent from above [2:06]
Choir of King’s College/Cambridge/David
Willcocks
O Little town of Bethlehem (
Forest
Green) [3:29]
Choir of King’s College/Cambridge/Sir
Philip Ledger
The Lamb [2:13]
Ian Partridge (tenor); Janet Craxton
(oboe)
Scherzo from Symphony No. 7 '
Sinfonia
antartica' [5:29]
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian
Boult
Orpheus With His Lute (first
setting) [3:15]
David Daniels (counter-tenor); Martin
Katz (piano)
Mass in G minor – Kyrie [3:55]
John Eaton (treble)/Nigel Perrin (alto)/Robin
Doveton (tenor); David van Asch (bass)
Choir of King’s College/Cambridge/Sir
David Willcocks
The blessed Son of God [2:34]
Bach Choir/Sir David Willcocks
Come down/O Love divine (trans.
R. F. Littledale – v.4 arr. Williamson)
[3:40]
Thomas Williamson (organ)
All people that on earth do dwell
- (William Kethe – Louis Bourgeois
arr. RVW; version for brass ensemble
and organ by Roy Douglas) [4:55]
Benjamin Bayl (organ); Choir of King’s
College/Cambridge/Stephen Cleobury
To commemorate the
50th anniversary of Vaughan
Williams’ death this year EMI have
released a 30-CD set of his "Masterworks";
a comprehensive introduction to his
body of work. If you don’t want to
stretch that far, however, then this
2-CD collection will do very nicely
indeed.
If any label was
to do a retrospective of Vaughan Williams’
work then it is wholly appropriate
that it should be EMI. Their archive
contains an unrivalled collection
of recordings that have come to be
seen as definitive, and in many cases
are the only recordings of that work.
They have plundered their treasury
to provide a superb compendium here.
It all begins with Hugh Bean’s classic
account of The Lark Ascending
which evokes the still timelessness
of a summer’s day under Boult’s expert
direction. Boult is also on call for
his classic Serenade to Music
with a top collection of soloists
who suggest happy memories of a bygone
era, quite fitting in the light of
this work’s origins. Boult’s set of
symphonies is also used to provide
the movement from the Sinfonia
Antartica as is his Job
from the same 1970s set. The other
major orchestral contributions come
from Sir John Barbirolli whose justly
famous accounts of Greensleeves
and the Tallis Fantasia
are given here. His spellbinding Tallis
Fantasia is the most marvellous
account of the work I have come across:
the performances elicited from each
constituent group blend into a marvellous
whole, helped by the splendid EMI
sound which places you in the centre
of what feels like a vast acoustic
surrounded by the participants. If
you don’t have this recording then
buying this set is worth it for this
track alone.
EMI stalwart David
Willcocks turns up happily often too.
He conducts the Jacques Orchestra
in a marvellously sonorous Dives
and Lazarus. He conducts many
sung items too, including the magical
opening of the G Minor Mass and one
of the Five Mystical Songs.
The hymns are marvellously and professionally
sung, though not with too much polish,
which is important for congregational
pieces. The solo singing from English
legends like Janet Baker and John
Shirley-Quirk is most welcome and
the various folksongs are treated
like the excellent music they are.
Even David Daniels gives a marvellous
other-worldly feel to Orpheus with
his Lute.
With performances
like this all collected together for
the first time, this set is a guaranteed
winner. It would be easy to complain
about some omissions, but that would
be churlish in light of the riches
on offer here. Every aspect of Vaughan
Williams’ output is represented -
except the concertos and operas -
and it’s impossible to imagine a better
introduction to the marvellous diversity
of his work. After this it would be
fitting to explore the heavier repertoire
such as the symphonies, but this forms
an excellent springboard.
Simon Thompson