This
                        is a feast in terms of both the music and the performances,
                        and I must waste no time in strongly recommending the
                        purchase of this set. It contains playing of astonishing
                        musicianship in both established masterworks and some
                        fascinating rarities. There are interesting notes by
                        Stephen Pettit from which I derive the biographical information
                        in this review and which set the various recordings in
                        the context of Dennis Brain’s career.
                      
                       
                      
                      The
                        first disc includes several of his earliest solo recordings.
                        He had been playing since he was a teenager with the
                        BBC Symphony Orchestra where his father, Aubrey Brain,
                        was principal horn. He was in the RAF Band during the
                        war but his first solo recording was made in 1943 when
                        he was 22. This is the first item here – Mozart’s Fourth
                        Horn Concerto - and it may be something of a surprise
                        if you have known and loved his later recording (also
                        included here). Putting it simply, whereas this early
                        recording is certainly adequate technically and is always
                        musical in its approach, it lacks the individuality and
                        subtlety of the later performance. Partly this may be
                        a result of what can only be described as a very rough
                        accompaniment by the Hallé Orchestra of that time. His
                        next recording – the Beethoven Sonata with Denis Matthews
                        and only some seven months later – was much more musically
                        confident and interesting to the listener, and from then
                        on it was success after success for this recordings in
                        musical terms. The earlier versions of the Second Mozart
                        Concerto with the Philharmonia and Walter Susskind and
                        of the First Richard Strauss Concerto with the same orchestra
                        and Alceo Galliera are not significantly inferior to
                        the later and better known versions. This set would indeed
                        be worth having at the kind of prices at which it has
                        been advertised just for the latter, but in fact they
                        are by no means the main interest here.
                                             
                      
                      I
                        would suggest that this lies in the chamber works, in
                        particular the Mozart Piano and Wind Quintet with Colin
                        Horsley as a superbly individual pianist, the Lennox
                        Berkeley Trio, again with Colin Horsley, and the Gordon
                        Jacob Sextet. Why the latter is not frequently performed
                        with the Poulenc Sextet is a mystery. It is an immediately
                        impressive piece which reveals more at each hearing.
                        For me it is the highlight of the set, although the Hindemith
                        Concerto conducted by the composer runs it close.
                                             
                      
                      As
                        well as all these wonderful and important works there
                        are also a variety of short works and curiosities. The
                        latter include an unaccompanied performance of Siegfried’s
                        horn call and part of Leopold Mozart’s Concerto for hosepipe,
                        played at one of the Hoffnung concerts. Interesting to
                        hear once, and they only take up a fraction of the contents
                        of the discs. There are several short works for wind
                        alone, to which I have found myself returning over and
                        over again out of pleasure at the sheer musicianship
                        displayed, and examples of his work as a member of the
                        Philharmonia Orchestra. Cantelli’s delightfully spontaneous
                        sounding performance of Mozart’s Musical Joke thoroughly
                        deserves its place as does the first movement of Haydn’s
                        Hornsignal Symphony – what a pity that the rest was not
                        recorded at that time.
                                             
                      
                      Inevitably
                        none of these recordings is under 51 years old as Dennis
                        Brain died in a car crash in September 1957, but the
                        sound is generally good apart from the first recording
                        of the Mozart Fourth Concerto which is boxy and somewhat
                        coarse. I have listened repeatedly with increasing pleasure
                        to this set which is irresistible for its sheer musical
                        pleasure.
                                             
                      
                        
John Sheppard
                        Details
                      Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
                      1. Horn Concerto No. 1 in D K412 [8:23]
                      2,3. 
                      Horn
                            Concerto No. 2 in E flat K417 [2 versions – 13:00;
                            13:48]
                            4. 
                      Horn Concerto No. 3 in E flat K447 [15:45];
                            (5, 6) 
                            5,6. 
                      Horn Concerto No. 4 in E flat K495 [2 versions – 16:49;
                            16:02]
                            7. 
                      Quintet for piano and wind in E flat
                            K452 [23:00]
                            8. 
                      Eine Musikalischer Spass K522 [19:23];
                            (9) 
                            9.
                      Divertimento in B flat K270 (arr. Anthony Baines)
                            [8:52]; (10) 
                            10. 
                      Divertimento in E flat K289 (Minuet
                            and
                            Adagio only) [5:52]
                      Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949) (11, 12) 
                      11,12.
                      Horn Concerto
                            No. 1 in Eb [2 versions – 14:56; 15:17]
                            13. 
                      Horn
                            Concerto No. 2 in E flat [18:16]
                      Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
                      14.
                      Horn Sonata in F Op 7 [14:25]
                      Richard WAGNER (1813-1883)
                      15.
                      Siegfried’s
                      Horn Call [1:25]
                      Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
                      16.
                            Adagio and Allegro in A flat Op 70 [8:15]
                      Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
                      17.
                      Nocturne from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” Op 61 [6:58]
                      Paul HINDEMITH (1895-1963)
                      18. Horn Concerto [14:56]
                      Lennox BERKELEY (1903-1989)
                      19.
                            Trio for violin, horn and piano [26:22]
                      Carl Ditters von DITTERSDORF (1739-1799)
                      20.
                            Partita in D (Minuet and Trio only) [2:46]
                      Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
                      21.
                            Symphony No. 31 in D (“Hornsignal”) (first movement
                            only) [3:40]
                      Jacques IBERT (1890-1962)
                      22. Trois Pièces Brèves
                            [7:05]
                      Gordon JACOB (1895-1984)
                      23.
                            Sextet for wind [20:45]
                      Paul DUKAS (1865-1935)
                      24.
                            Villanelle [6:10]
                      Leopold MOZART (1719-1787)
                      25.
                            Concerto for hosepipe and strings (Finale only) [1:41]
                          
                          Performers                      
                      Dennis Brain (horn & hosepipe) (1-25)
                      Hallé Orchestra
                            (3): Philharmonia Orchestra (1-4,6,8,12,13,17,18):
                            London Baroque Ensemble ((20); Unnamed Orchestra
  (21); Morley College Symphony Orchestra (25)
  Sir Malcolm Sargent (conductor)
  (3): Lawrence Turner (conductor) (3): Alceo Galliera (conductor) (11); Paul Kletzki
  (conductor) (17); Herbert von Karajan (conductor) (1,2,4,6); Wolfgang Sawallisch
  (conductor) (12,13); Paul Hindemith (conductor) (18); Guido Cantelli (conductor)
  (8); Karl Haas (conductor) (20); Sir Jack Westrup (conductor) (21); Norman del
  Mar (conductor) (25)
  Denis Matthews (piano) (14); Gerald Moore (piano) (16,24);
  Colin Horsley (piano) (7,19); Dennis Brain Ensemble (7,9,10,22,23); Manoug Parikian
  (violin) (19)