Guirne Creith, rather like Roger Sacheverell Coke, Walter 
                Gaze Cooper  and Sam Hartley Braithwaite, remains a mystery figure. 
                Dutton dispel some of the mist and add to the fascination with 
                this recording of her Violin Concerto. It's a very attractive 
                work in the same part of the firmament as the violin concertos 
                by Bax, Elgar and Coleridge Taylor - if this doesn't sound like 
                too strange a confection. It's a serious concerto with a stirring 
                dramatic mien. It might be seen as the Bax concerto Bax might 
                have written had the inspiration caught him in the middle of his 
                Nordic period rather than when he was left only with sputtering 
                recollections of the Ballets Russes, Richard Strauss and the lighter 
                aspects of his music. The Creith is not of the English pastoral 
                school. It is a full-blooded romantic work with great ideas in 
                the solo line and in the orchestra. The slow movement flowers 
                with coaxed tenderness. It was dedicated to Albert Sammons who 
                premiered it with the BBC and Constant Lambert on 19 May 1936. 
                There is also a violin sonata which really should be included 
                in one of Dutton Epoch's sonata anthologies. I hope also that 
                yet more of her orchestral work will be discovered and recorded 
                as convincingly as this. 
              
Many enthusiasts 
                  will already know of Thomas Pitfield but this is the 
                  first time we have heard his Concerto Lirico from 1958 
                  written against a contemporary tidal surge of dissonance by 
                  a  composer who held true to his style. That style is melodic, 
                  carefree, partaking a little of Rubbra's Collana dance 
                  movements. Its central movement makes passing contact with Warlock's 
                  Frostbound Wood. The work was premiered by Peter Mountain 
                  - a name well remembered by those who knew the broadcasts and 
                  concerts of the BBC Training Orchestra (long disbanded). 
                  Pitfield was a craftsman in many fields including typography, 
                  calligraphy, line drawings, woodcuts; not just music. This is 
                  a breathtakingly beautiful concerto in the same singing company 
                  as the Respighi, the Finzi Introit, the Moeran and the 
                  Ivanovs. The distressing story of the premiere with an unsympathetic 
                  conductor I will leave to John Turner in his liner notes - suffice 
                  to say that this recording is only possible due to the discovery 
                  of a microfilm of the full score found in the composer's garage 
                  after his death. The production of a practical performing entity 
                  is down to Peter Mountain's editorial work – Mr Mountain being 
                  the only violinist who knew the work from the inside.
                
Richard Arnell's 
                  single movement Violin Concerto is from 1949. It's another flamboyantly 
                  romantic piece - rather akin to Rawsthorne yet without the tart 
                  astringency. It was written during Arnell’s time in New York 
                  and premiered in Carnegie Hall in 1946.
                
Hearing works like 
                  these at last recorded with such superb success makes me hope 
                  before too long to be hearing Robin Milford's Violin Concerto 
                  and his Hardy-inspired The Darkling Thrush also for violin 
                  and orchestra as well as the Goossens’ Phantasy Violin Concerto.
                
Lorraine McAslan 
                  triumphs again in these unknown violin concertos. We must be 
                  grateful for her fine judgement in learning these works and 
                  in projecting them with such overwhelming confidence. She treats 
                  them as they deserve - as if they belonged in company with the 
                  conventional greats of the repertoire.
                  
                  Rob Barnett