February,
2009 , Download Roundup - Brian Wilson
This month and in coming months two strands
will run through my choices:
·
The
four composers whose anniversaries occur in 2009 – Purcell
(b.1659), Handel (d.1759), Haydn (d.1809) and Mendelssohn
(b.1809)
·
Recordings
made by those two major recent losses, Vernon Handley and
Richard Hickox.
My Download of
the Month celebrates one of the four anniversarians, since
it is the new Chandos recording of Purcell’s Dido
and Æneas with Sarah Connolly, Gerald Finley, Lucy Crowe
and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment co-directed
by Elizabeth Kenny and Stephen Devine (CHAN0757 – CD,
mp3 and lossless downloads). This is now the third version
on this label, joining earlier recordings by Andrew Parrott
(CHAN0521 or CHAN8306) and Richard Hickox (CHAN0586).
All three are available on CD and as lossless or mp3 downloads
and all have their virtues – I couldn’t be without Emma Kirkby
on the Parrott recording, or Maria Ewing on the Hickox – but
the new recording is the one to go for, not least for the
restoration of ‘missing’ parts from Purcell’s other works
and the fact that it has had a long gestation in public performances
– you may have heard the Radio 3 broadcast of one of these
in 2007.
For all the qualities of these Chandos
recordings, however, if you’re looking for the least expensive
recommendable online version of Dido and Æneas, look
no further than the Erato version conducted by William Christie,
available from amazon.co.uk in 256k mp3 sound for a mere £2.79.
The new Dido was
going to be my unchallenged Download of the Month until Gimell
released the latest in the Tallis Scholars’ series of recordings
of Josquin des Pres. This new CD of the Masses Malheur
me bat and Fortuna Desperata has really left me
sitting on the fence – Gimell think it may be their best recording
yet, and they may well be right – so I’m going to have to
stay in that uncomfortable position and award joint honours
this month. How am I going to choose my Recordings of the
Year when there are so many candidates already? CDGIM042
will be on sale on CD in March, but it’s already available
to download in mp3, CD quality and Studio Master versions
and one track, the Gloria from Missa Fortuna Desperata,
is available free for a limited period. I plan to post a
more detailed review of this recording closer to its CD issue.
I owe Gimell an apology for a serious mistake:
misled by a well-known Guide, I stated in a review
of Duarte Lôbo’s 8-part Requiem on Helios (Masterpieces
of Portuguese Polyphony, CDH55138) that CDGIM205
contained the same 8-part Requiem and CDGIM028 the other,
6-part Requiem. Both recordings are, in fact, of the 6-part
work and, thus, neither competes with the Helios. CDGIM205
offers a two-for-one set of the Lôbo, Cardoso and Victoria
Requiems, plus music by Alonso Lobo, and CDGIM028 has
the same recording of the Lôbo coupled with the same composer’s
Missa Vox clamantis. Both are available to download
from the Gimell website; I can vouch for the high quality
of the CD-equivalent wma version. To make further amends,
I intend to provide a more detailed regular MusicWeb review
of these two recordings.
An error of two-fingered typing on my part
led to Gimell also making available the 2-for-1 set of Byrd’s
Three Masses and the Great Service (CDGIM208).
I’ve referred to this recording in my review
of Nimbus’s Christ Church recordings of the Masses, but I’m
glad to sing its praises again here, albeit briefly, and to
vouch for the quality of Gimell’s wma download.
My strong recommendation of the Tallis
Scholars’ new recording of Josquin and of their earlier
recording of his Missa sine nomine and Missa ad
fugam (CDGIM039 – see review)
is in no way diminished by my also recommending an eMusic
download of his Stabat Mater and Motets (La Chapelle
Royale/Philippe Herreweghe on Harmonia Mundi HMC90 1243,
7 tracks in very acceptable mp3 sound).
Returning to the
combination of Purcell and Richard Hickox, his version of
The Indian Queen is available from Universal’s
classicsandjazz for £7.90 in wma and mp3 formats (475 052
2). With Emma Kirkby, Catherine Bott and the Academy of
Ancient Music, this is well-nigh irresistible, but I did manage
to resist it (just) in favour of the version from Linn (CKD035)
– Tessa Bonner, Catherine Bott (again) and a small chamber
ensemble directed from the violin by Catherine Mackintosh.
The mp3 (320k) is competitive with the Hickox at £8; it costs
a little more for the wma version (£10) but I give that lossless
version a slight edge. Both are worth the extra in comparison
with the Naxos version from classicsonline (8.553752, at £4.99),
though I own the CD version of the Naxos recording for the
sake of Daniel Purcell’s Masque of Hymen, a coupling
which extends the playing time beyond the other contenders.
With 42 tracks, I really can’t see much point in downloading
this from eMusic – it will take almost all your monthly allocation
and cost you twice as much as the 320k download from classicsonline.
Richard Hickox’s
final legacy comes in the form of Volume 1 of the recordings
of Holst which he was working on at the time of his
death. The Ballet Music from The Perfect Fool is the
main attraction, performed here as well as on Boult’s classic
Decca recording and accompanied by The Golden Goose,
The Lure and the complete Morning of the Year
(Chandos SACD CHSA5069 and lossless or mp3 downloads).
I may be slightly less convinced by some of the music than
Rob Barnett – see review
– but I agree that it’s the finest (new) Holst recording for
years and I very much enjoyed hearing it in the lossless wma
version, which leaves nothing to be desired unless you must
have SACD. Neither The Lure nor Morning of the
Year is anywhere near as immediate in appeal as The
Perfect Fool, but I expect them to grow on me.
Two of the items
on the new Hickox recording are duplicated on Lyrita SRCD.209
– The Lure and five dances from The Morning of the
Year but, as this David Atherton recording also contains
excellent performances of some other little-known Holst works,
A Winter Idyll, Indra, Song of the Night
and Invocation and can be obtained from eMusic for
the cost of 8 tracks (less than £2 on the standard tariff)
I feel justified in recommending both. No notes, but reviews
by Colin
Clarke and Paul
Shoemaker will help to remedy the defect. A second set
of performances of The Lure and the dances from Morning
of the Year can only be helpful if, like me, you need
to let them grow on you. I actually slightly preferred Atherton’s
sprightlier delivery of The Lure and the mp3 recording
is more than adequate at bit-rates ranging from 178k to 320k.
Those who know Holst only by The Planets
will be better served by an earlier Hickox recording for Chandos,
of St Paul’s Suite, Brook Green Suite, Double
Concerto and A Fugal Concerto (CHAN9270,
lossless and mp3.)
As I was drawing
together the thread of this roundup, my colleague John Quinn’s
review of Volume 17 of Sir John Eliot Gardiner’s Bach Cantata
Pilgrimage was posted – four cantatas for New Year’s Day
and two for the following Sunday on Soli Deo Gloria SDG150.
I refer you to that review
with just two comments – that I enjoyed the set just as much
as JQ and that it’s available in very acceptable 320k sound
from classicsonline. No notes or texts but the relevant extracts
from Gardiner’s journal are available online from the SDG
website and there are many sites which offer the texts.
I referred last month to a number of classic
recordings available from classiconline.com’s Naxos Historical
Archive. I plan to return to this very valuable archive in
future months; meanwhile Rob Barnett, the Musicweb classical
editor has posted a review
of four albums with more to come – watch out for these:
9.80698 Hovhaness – Symphony
No.9 ‘St Vartan’ – MGM Orchestra/Carlos Surinach (R) 1956
9.80676 Lousadzak; Shatakh;
Achtamar & Tzaikerk – Maro Ajemian (piano),
etc., with the Manhattan Chamber Orchestra/Alan Hovhaness
(R) 1950
9.80130: The Flowering Peach; Is
There Survival (from King Vahaken) & Orbit
No.1 – Chamber Ensemble/Alan Hovhaness (R) 1955
9.80351: Sibelius – En Saga,
Pohjola’s Daughter, The Oceanides and
Tapiola – Philadelphia Orchestra/Eugene Ormandy
(R) 1995.
The sound is inevitably
dated and the playing-time restricted – 42 minutes the longest
– but the ear adjusts sufficiently to enjoy the performances:
they sound as good as or better than those Ace of Clubs and
Golden Guinea LPs of the late 1950s from which I got to know
much of the basic repertoire. I’d recommend trying the St
Vartan Symphony first, my pick of the batch; it’s some
time since I’d heard this work and it knocked me off my seat
all over again – imagine a precursor of such minimalists as
Adams and Glass combined with the ethereal quality of Roy
Harris’s Third Symphony. There are no notes, but you’ll find
an excellent analysis of the symphony in Rob Barnett’s review
of Hovhaness’s own 1974 recording on the Crystal label, the
only other currently available version to the best of my knowledge.
There’s also a slightly fuller analysis on the Hovhaness web site. This is,
as RB puts it, music to discover and enjoy – and at £1.99
per disc, inexpensively obtained.
The Flowering Peach music is a suite
from Hovhaness’s incidental music for a Broadway play on the
theme of Noah’s Ark. Like St Vartan, it comes from
a 1955 MGM recording; the two other pieces make fine couplings
and, with Hovhaness at the helm, the performances are authoritative.
Lousadzak, meaning ‘dawn of light’ is a small-scale
piano concerto, inspired by a strange murmuring effect which
the visionary painter Hermon diGiovanno reported hearing in
a visionary state. Of all Hovhaness’s music here, it probably
had the most effect on the minimalists; it’s the main item
on another interesting programme.
Eugene Ormandy conducts the Philadelphia
Orchestra in a comparatively lengthy programme of Sibelius
from 1955 – 54 minutes was good going for an early LP. It
offers an excellent series of performances in sound which
is still more than acceptable – I’m not sure that it isn’t
stereo, unless I’m imagining the spatial separation.
If it’s more
modern recordings of Sibelius that you’re looking for,
classicsonline also offer all the recent Naxos series. Rob
Barnett thought the most recent coupling of less well-known
works – Night Ride and Sunrise, Belshazzar’s
Feast and excerpts from Kuolema (8.570763)
‘nicely done with atmosphere and hushed tension’ – see review.
I have heard more exciting accounts of Night Ride (Horst
Stein on Decca, for example) but this CD is certainly worth
£4.99 of anyone’s money and the 320k transfer is more than
acceptable. At the time of writing Passionato were offering
five Naxos 320k downloads for £20, which works out slightly
more cheaply, but the offer may have finished by the time
that this review goes online. At twelve tracks, the eMusic
version would also work out less expensively, but their bit-rate
tends to be variable and it’s best to stay with classicsonline
for Naxos and reserve your monthly eMusic allocation for recordings
not available elsewhere.
A second historical batch includes another
Ormandy recording of Sibelius, this time of the Lemminkäinen
Suite (also known as Four Legends). Only The
Swan of Tuonela is well known but the other three movements
also offer some fine music. Ormandy’s Sibelius is always
idiomatic and well worth hearing and this transfer is also
well made. Though presumably mastered from an LP original,
I heard only the very faintest trace of surface noise, even
on headphones. (9.80350) There’s also a Jensen recording
of the Suite, but that performance is better heard on an Eloquence
CD (442 9487 – see review).
The sound of the Ormandy recording is more
than bearable (especially for 1951) but if you specifically
want the Lemminkäinen Suite in a modern recording,
Ormandy’s own remake was recently available on EMI Encore
at budget price (3 88679 2 – see review:
sadly, it appears to have been deleted, but still available
to download from Amazon.co.uk or iTunes); otherwise classicsonline
can offer you the Naxos recording by the Iceland SO/Petri
Sakari, coupled with the Karelia Suite and Finlandia
in idiomatic performances, well recorded on 8.554265.
I prefer to stay
with classicsonline for their own Naxos recordings, but this
CD also comes in very decent 320k mp3 sound from passionato.com
and may also be had from theclassicalshop, eMusic and Amazon.co.uk.
Ormandy is more urgent in every movement except The Swan
of Tuonela, which he places second and Sakari third; Sakari’s
9:13 here against Ormandy’s 9:46 looks too hurried on paper,
but in actuality it works well. (Jensen at 7:38 surely is
too hurried; Ormandy’s remake comes in at 9:07). This whole
Naxos recording is “beautifully engineered and magnificently
played, ... a must for those who are about to dip into this
composer’s unique soundworld [it] also would not demerit a
seasoned Sibelian’s collection” – see review.
Gibson on Chandos is also good, but Sakari is preferable.
Finally, on Historical Archive, I was much
less impressed by another, much thinner-sounding 1955 recording,
of Quincy Porter’s Symphony No.1, Concerto
Concertante and Dance in 3-time, performed by André
Terrasse and Jean-Leon Cohen (pianos) with the Colonne Concerts
Orchestra and conducted by the composer. A playing time of
50:32 did not compensate for the failure of the music to grab
my attention. (9.80674)
Rob Barnett has recently
reviewed the reissue on CHAN10235X of Vernon Handley’s
accounts of Moeran’s Serenade, Nocturne, Rhapsodies
1 and 2 and In the Mountain Country, so all I need
do is to refer you to that review
of what he declared to be “a unique collection performed with
apposite sensitivity. The essential supplement to the Symphony
and Concertos all fully and regally represented on Chandos”.
The wma recording is excellent and, as usual, there is a less
expensive mp3 alternative.
Moeran’s Violin Concerto
and Cello Concerto in splendid performances by Lydia
Mordkovich/Ulster SO/Handley and Raphael Wallfisch/Bournemouth
Sinfonietta/Norman del Mar, coupled with evocative renderings
of Lonely Waters and Whythorne’s Shadow on CHAN10168X
also come in an excellent wma transfer: “Two well-matched
concertos superbly performed and recorded all at an affordable
price” – see review.
If you’re happy with mp3 sound, don’t opt for the same coupling
on the Chandos Enchant label (CHAN7078, at £6); the
mp3 version of CHAN10168 costs a pound less at £4.99.
When he knew that
I was planning to include some Vernon Handley downloads, Rob
Barnett included with his own shortlist the advice to look
at his performances of music other than 20th-century
British. You might not regard his versions of Brahms’
Serenade No.1 and St Antoni Variations with
the Ulster Orchestra as top of their respective trees, but
the Serenade tree is not very high and I don’t think anyone
would feel short-changed by this version. (CHAN8612,
full price, in lossless or mp3 versions). I could try to
claim a link with anniversarian Haydn except, of course, that
the St Antoni Chorale, on which the Variations
are based, is no longer ascribed to him. Those who just want
these Variations will find Handley’s performance more
economically on Romantic Favourites, coupled with Tchaikovsky’s
Romeo and Juliet, Dvořák’s Carnival
Overture and Grieg Peer Gynt Suite No.1
(CHAN6680 – the lossless version is, for once, the
same price as the mp3, at £4.99; the CD is actually 11p cheaper
at £4.88).
Several of Handley’s Classics for Pleasure
recordings would be at or near the top of the tree for most
of us and several of them are currently on offer for £3.99
from passionato.com. His Brahms and Bruch Violin
Concertos with Tasmin Little (5 74941 2),
Elgar Second Symphony/Sea Pictures (5 75306
2) and Vaughan Williams Sinfonia Antartica/Serenade
to Music (5 75313 2) are all personal favourites.
If they’re still on offer at this reduced price, go for them
– but don’t dream of paying £7.99 for them if they’ve reverted
to that price – the CD equivalents would be cheaper.
Some brief mentions, on some of which I
hope to expand next month:
There are several collections similar to
Linn’s Music from the Time of Columbus (CKD007)
but this disc of performances by Catherine Bott and the New
London Consort/Philip Pickett is one of the best – download
in CD-quality or mp3 from Linn’s website.
William Byrd Cantiones Sacræ,
mostly from the third (1591) collection, with a few from the
second (1589), on Chandos Chaconne CHAN0733, sung by
the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, directed by Richard
Marlow reminds us that there are other choirs at both ancient
universities to rival King’s – mixed choirs at that, in the
case of this recording, available in lossless and mp3 sound
from theclassicalshop.net. The latest recording from another
mixed choir, that of Queen’s College, Oxford, which I have
recently enjoyed hearing on CD (Cæli Porta, Guild GMCD7323)
had not yet been made available for download when I checked,
but their earlier recordings are available from theclassicalshop.net,
including its immediate predecessor, also of Music from
17th-century Portugal (GMCD7296) for
a mere £4.99.
I must admit that I still slightly prefer
boys’ voices in this music, especially when the results are
as good as those on New College, Oxford’s recordings for CRD,
available from eMusic. They offer selections from all three
books of Byrd’s Cantiones Sacræ – eleven items from
the 1575 collection on CRD3492, nine from the 1589
book on CRD3420, and eleven from 1591 on CRD3439.
The 1591 recording overlaps to quite an extent with the Chandos,
but there is very little overlap between that set and the
CRD 1589 collection. These Byrd recordings make a wonderful
‘where next’ after the music on CDGIM208 to which I’ve
referred above – and don’t forget the recording of his Second
Service on Harmonia Mundi HMU90 7440 with
Magdalen College Choir and Fretwork under Bill Ives – MG’s
Recording of the Month a year ago: see review
– 17 tracks in very acceptable mp3 from eMusic.
Three items from the 1591 collection also
appear alongside music from the 1605 Gradualia on Hyperion
CDA67568 (Volume 10 of the superb complete Byrd edition
by The Cardinall’s Musick/Andrew Carwood) available from iTunes
in 256k mp3 format. Two of their earlier volumes, on the
ASV label, are also available from iTunes but I was surprised
to see that they also already offer Volume 11, which I’m about
to review in CD form (further items from 1591 plus some from
the 1607 Gradualia on CDA67653). Look out for
my forthcoming detailed – and commendatory – reviews of these.
Also from New College Choir and Edward
Higginbottom come excellent accounts of:
Thomas Tomkins The Third Service,
Anthems and Voluntaries (CRD3467);
William Croft Select Anthems
(CRD3491) – the only notable omission is of his well-known
setting of the Burial Service. (See also my recent
review
of Croft’s keyboard music on Soundboard SBCD991).
And, to return to one of our birthday boys,
a selection of Henry Purcell’s Verse Anthems
(CRD3504) – ideal if you don’t want or can’t run to
the complete Hyperion/King’s Consort collection. All these
CRD recordings are available from eMusic in very acceptable
mp3 sound – not quite the equivalent of the lossless Chandos,
but not far behind.
Also from New College and available from
eMusic in very decent mp3, Nicholas Ludford’s (c.1485-1587)
Missa Benedicta and Votive Anthems on the K617 label
(K617 206) – 11 tracks and 63 minutes of sheer delight,
excellently performed.
The Italian-born but German-domiciled
Giovanni Benedetto Platti’s (before 1692 or 1697-1763)
Concerti Grossi derived from chamber works by Corelli,
played by the Akademie für alte Musik, Berlin/Georg Kallweit
(Harmonia Mundi HMC90 1996, 21 tracks from eMusic)
pre-date Haydn by a considerable margin but the Cello Concerto
in D (tracks 6-8) anticipates Haydn’s middle-period Sturm
und Drang style. I had already encountered Platti’s Oboe
Concerto in g (trs.14-16) on the recent Albrecht Mayer
in Venice (478 0313 – see review)
but it receives a slightly sprightlier performance here and,
like, the whole programme, is well played and well worth hearing.
I was going to combine one of our anniversarians,
Haydn, with Richard Hickox by reviewing the complete
Chandos set of the Masses, but I’ve only got round
to downloading two volumes so far, so I’ll have to take the
proverbial rain-check on these until next month, except to
say that the individual recordings from the complete set are
less expensive than their equivalents on the individual discs
- £7.99 for lossless, as against £9.99 and you don’t need
to download the whole set to obtain them at these prices.
Similarly, I’ll have to leave over till
next month any further consideration of the Chandos series
of recordings of Handel’s Chandos Anthems –
and I haven’t even mentioned Mendelssohn yet. Another
job for next month.
It would be miserly
indeed to pass so quickly over Sir Charles Mackerras’s recent
versions of Mozart’s four last symphonies, Nos.38-41,
with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, available as CD-quality
or mp3 downloads from Linn, were it not that Tony Haywood
has said it all for me (CKD308, 2 CDs, Recording of
the Month – see review).
Alexander Janiczek directs the same orchestra in recommendable
versions of the Serenade in D (K185) and Divertimento
in Eb (K113) on Linn CKD287 – see review.
Both recordings sound excellent in wma format and there are
also less expensive mp3 versions.
Don’t forget Mackerras’s very fine earlier
Telarc set of the symphonies with the Prague Chamber Orchestra,
available to download from eMusic. The symphonies have been
rearranged for the complete set (Telarc 80729) in numerical
order, so you can follow up the new versions of 38-41 with
the earlier versions of the previous three symphonies, Nos.34-36,
on the eighth CD – 11 tracks for less than £3 on the 50-track-per-month
package. No.35, the Haffner, is just a shade too brisk
for my liking, having cut my teeth on Bruno Walter’s stereo
version (sadly, not currently available).
If you followed my advice last month to
get to know Rubbra’s symphonies in the excellent series
which Richard Hickox made with the BBC National Orchestra
of Wales for Chandos, you may wish to follow up Symphonies
3 and 7 with Symphonies 5 and 8 and the Ode to the
Queen on CHAN9714 from theclassicalshop.net.
Last month I mentioned Richard Hickox’s
2-for-1 set of the orchestral music of the under-rated Herbert
Howells. Supplement this with his equally fine recording
of Music for Strings (Concerto for String Orchestra,
Serenade for Strings, etc.) on CHAN9161 – lossless
or mp3 from theclassicalshop.net. I also tried two tracks
from this recording in very acceptable mp3 sound from eMusic.
Howells’ Piano Quartet,
Fantasy String Quartet and Rhapsodic Quintet
make a splendid supplement to his orchestral music (Thea King,
Bernard Roberts and the Richards Ensemble, Lyrita SRCD.292)
– see reviews by Em
Marshall and John
Quinn. A mere 5 tracks from eMusic, at just over £1.
If you like what you hear, you’ll also want Howells’ String
Quartet No.3 In Gloucestershire (Hyperion Helios CDH55045,
with Dyson’s Three Rhapsodies – see review)
but buy the CD – the download from iTunes will cost you more
than the disc.
Last year I was not wholly enthusiastic
about The Nash Ensemble in Brahms’ Sextets, though
most other reviewers enjoyed them greatly. To make partial
amends, I was much more impressed by their new versions of
the Piano Quartets, Nos. 1 and 3. I still prize the
augmented Beaux Arts versions on Philips Duo, but the new
recording would make an excellent substitute. (Onyx 4029,
eight tracks from eMusic.)
Brian
Wilson