I am not a great enthusiast of historical recordings. I guess 
                it goes back to my teenage years when it was the latest release 
                from the Beatles that mattered and not one of the ‘square’ hits 
                from five years previously. However things change. In the same 
                way that virtually every note performed by the ‘Fab Four’ is available 
                on CD – bootleg or ‘official’ - the classical world too is concerned 
                to preserve its heritage. But the question I ask about any historical 
                recording is ‘Why do I want to buy this CD as opposed to a more 
                recent and presumably more technically perfect recording?’ Moreover, 
                with this Collins disc all the tracks were ‘laid down’ when I 
                was either a couple of years old or not even thought of – so there 
                is little sentimental attraction here. In the present case the 
                answer is twofold. Firstly, the programme of this CD is a near 
                perfect introduction to the pleasures of British music - counting 
                Grainger as an honorary countryman - and secondly, the performance 
                of some of these works is eye-opening to say the least.
                  
Let’s launch with a brief resume of the 
                    conductor’s life and achievements. Anthony Collins was born 
                    in 1893 and studied both violin and composition at the Royal 
                    College of Music. He was to start his career as an orchestral 
                    player.  Between 1926 and 1936 he was the principal violist 
                    with the London Symphony and Covent Garden Orchestras. In 
                    1939 Collins went to Hollywood to further his composing career. 
                    Whilst there he wrote over twenty scores for RKO Pictures 
                    including the 1940 version of  Swiss Family Robinson.  
                    However, with the onset of war he returned to England, gave 
                    many concerts, and made a number of recordings. Collins died 
                    in 1963.
                  
He is probably 
                    best remembered today for his magisterial and one-time definitive 
                    Sibelius cycle. However, many listeners will surely know his 
                    attractive piece of ‘light’ music Vanity Fair. Only 
                    recently Dutton Recordings issued a fine retrospective of 
                    his compositions that reveals a considerable talent that had 
                    been largely forgotten.  And there is more to discover – Collins 
                    apparently wrote four symphonies and two violin concertos!
                  
All of the works 
                    on this CD could be regarded as both potboilers and major 
                    or minor masterpieces. Only a couple of these pieces are regularly 
                    played on Classic FM – but it is fair to say that at least 
                    three of these numbers regularly turn up on any compilation 
                    of English Music.
                  
Sullivan is obviously 
                    best known for his collaboration with W.S. Gilbert, but in 
                    recent years his achievement as a composer in his own right 
                    has largely been re-established. However, The Overture 
                    di ballo, which was written for the 1870 Birmingham Festival, 
                    is almost a conspectus of Sullivan’s style that was to come 
                    finally to fruition the following year when the first of the 
                    Savoy Operas, Thespis, was heard in London. The Overture 
                    simply sparkles – it is a true gem, and Collins gives one 
                    of the best performances of this piece that I have heard. 
                    Great stuff!
                  
2008 is the centenary 
                    of the first performance of Henry Balfour Gardiner’s Symphony 
                    No.2 in D major. However this score has been lost. Nowadays, 
                    alas, the composer is largely remembered for two works: the 
                    present Shepherd Fennel’s Dance and his Overture 
                    to a Comedy.  The Shepherd’s Dance is based on 
                    a short story by Thomas Hardy. Yet this work has none of the 
                    depressing characteristics often associated with this author. 
                    In fact it became, for a space, a Proms favourite.
                  
Balfour Gardiner 
                    was one of the Frankfurt Group of composers, which also included 
                    Cyril Scott, Norman O’Neill, Roger Quilter and Percy Aldridge 
                    Grainger. Shepherd’s Hey is a short, but quite amazing, 
                    miniature - especially in Collins’ rendering. It was based 
                    on the folk tune ‘The Keel Row’ and incidentally, the 
                    score was dedicated to Edvard Grieg. It is certainly a piece 
                    to ‘chase away care’.
                  
The Fantasia 
                    on a Theme by Thomas Tallis requires little introduction 
                    to readers of these pages. In fact, it is one of the great 
                    masterworks of the Twentieth Century and probably the finest 
                    essay in string writing in British music. There are some eighty-two 
                    recordings of this work shown to be available on the Arkiv 
                    database. Therefore, it is not easy to compare. However, I 
                    listened to Collins’ version of this piece twice for this 
                    review. There is definitely something magical and moving here 
                    that I have not quite heard before in this work. And this 
                    is even allowing for the half-century plus years that have 
                    passed since it was first recorded. Perhaps it is this version 
                    that best explains to me what so impressed the young Herbert 
                    Howells all those years ago at the Three Choirs Festival. 
                    It is like a paean of praise for, and a meditation on, the 
                    soil of the West Country and it sons.
                  
The Fantasia 
                    on Greensleeves is ubiquitous, with regular outings on 
                    Classic FM and over a 180 recordings presently available.  
                    In 1913, RVW had spent time in Stratford-upon-Avon arranging 
                    music for some of Shakespeare’s plays – including The Merry 
                    Wives of Windsor. For this play, he used the melody that 
                    is believed to have been written by King Henry VIII, Greensleeves.  
                    Vaughan Williams used the tune again in his great opera Sir 
                    John in Love – at the point where Falstaff roars out “Let 
                    the sky rain potatoes, let it thunder to the tune of ‘Greensleeves.’” 
                    The actual piece that is performed on this disc and worldwide 
                    was adapted, with the composer’s consent, by Ralph Greaves 
                    in 1934.
                  
For me, the Delius 
                    pieces are old friends. I recall an old LP from the 1950s 
                    that I found somewhere - probably the school music library. 
                    It was Collins version of The Walk to Paradise Garden 
                    and The Song of Summer with which I first discovered 
                    Delius. And I guess that it is this sound-scape that I have 
                    carried with me in my musical mind ever since: it is my touchstone 
                    for all subsequent recordings that I have heard of these pieces. 
                    In fact it was not until a wee while after hearing these recordings 
                    that I discovered the wonderful Tommy Beecham records. Yet 
                    even these did not usurp what I had heard of Collins and the 
                    LSO.
                  
I have never managed 
                    to get into the opera, A Village Romeo and Juliet. 
                    Yet I have long loved the ‘intermezzo’ from that work in its 
                    orchestral guise. I suppose as a lovelorn teenager I used 
                    to listen to this music as a palliative to my moods and emotions 
                    as I struggled with the unrequited love of ‘Sylvia’. Yet some 
                    35 years on, this music still has the power to move me, although 
                    somehow I tend to set the musical ‘landscape’ in the English 
                    countryside rather than that of the Swiss Alps.
                  
The Song of 
                    Summer is one of the pieces that Delius’s amanuensis, 
                    Eric Fenby, helped set down on manuscript paper. And it is 
                    surely a well-known tale that the elder composer asked the 
                    young Fenby to imagine the view from the sea-cliffs of Yorkshire 
                    on a hot summer’s day. To my ear this is one of the best ‘landscape’ 
                    tone-poems in the literature and certainly deserves its place 
                    in many an anthology of English music. Collins version is 
                    totally convincing, in both its intimate moments and the huge, 
                    almost overpowering climaxes. 
                  
This is a fine 
                    CD that would make a good introduction to English music for 
                    anyone who had yet to make that step. The sound is not perfect 
                    – but yet again I am just a little younger than these recordings 
                    and neither am I! However, what makes it a fantastic disc 
                    is the sheer beauty of the sound, the attention to detail 
                    and the depth of engendered emotion – especially in the Delius.
                  
John France