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Joseph HOLBROOKE
(1878-1958)
The Pit and the Pendulum: Fantasie for Orchestra, op.126 (1929)
[9:46]
Cello Concerto op.103, Cambrian (1936) [28:12]
Symphony No.4 in B minor, op.95 Homage to Schubert (1928)
[30:55]
Pandora: ballet movement (1920) [6:04]
Raphael Wallfisch (cello)
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra/George Vass (op.126; op.95)
Royal Scottish National Orchestra/George Vass (op.103; Pandora)
rec. The Friary, Liverpool, 6 April 2010 (op.126; op.95); RSNO Centre,
Henry Wood Hall, Glasgow, May 2010 (op.103; Pandora)
World premiere recordings of all except symphony
DUTTON EPOCH CDLX 7251 [74:57]
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This is a most welcome disc of music by Joseph Holbrooke from
the enterprising Dutton label whose championing of music from
lesser-known English composers has been and continues to be
outstanding. Every new disc from Dutton is an exciting experience
that rarely disappoints both with their choice of rare repertoire
and the recording quality. I have thirty or so Dutton discs
that all fall into this exploratory category that I have all
enjoyed. Recently I have been especially delighted with the:
Rootham, Holbrooke, Walford Davies and Benjamin Violin Sonatas,
Creith, Arnell and Pitfield Violin Concertos, W.H. Bell and
Stanley Bate Viola Concertos and the series of discs featuring
Richard Arnell and Stanley Bate orchestral works. There are
a handful of discs available of Holbrooke’s music. I have especially
enjoyed the disc of Holbrooke’s chamber music recorded by the
Rasumovsky Quartet with Richard Hosford (clarinet) in 2002 from
Dutton on CDLX
7124.
Those active in England in the final years of the nineteenth
century and the opening decades of the twentieth century tend
to fall into three main camps. There were a substantial number
of budding composers who studied at the Royal College of Music
most notably under Stanford and also Parry. I think of them
as the ‘Stanford Group’ such as: Vaughan Williams, Holst, Ireland,
Bliss, Haydn Wood, Howells, Moeran, Gurney, Stokowski and a
considerable number of others. At the Royal Academy of Music
there were also several fledgling composers who thrived there
under the influence of professor of composition Frederick Corder.
This group could be described as the ‘Corder Group’ notably:
Sir Arnold Bax, York Bowen, Benjamin Dale, Sir Granville Bantock
and the featured composer of this disc Joseph Holbrooke. There
was also a third smaller group who studied in Germany at the
Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt known as the ‘Frankfurt Gang’
who comprised Percy Grainger; Norman O’Neill; Roger Quilter;
Cyril Scott and Balfour Gardiner.
During a period when music in England was breaking out from
its Victorian dryness the London-born Holbrooke’s career began
so splendidly. The young man’s The Raven (1903) inspired
by Edgar Allan Poe’s narrative poem was well regarded by many
music writers. The composer and music writer Julius Harrison
said of Holbrooke’s score, “there are moments of inspiration
and power” (‘The Musical Companion’, Edited A.L. Bacharach
Book II. ‘The Orchestra and Orchestral Music’ by Julius Harrison
‘Orchestral Music of Many Kinds’ ‘Programme Music’ pg. 275 Victor
Gollancz Ltd., London (1934)).
The opening work on the disc is The Pit and the Pendulum:
a Fantasie for Orchestra, op.126. Completed in 1929 this tone-poem
is based on the short story of the same name by Edgar Allan
Poe. It seems that the score is presented in four sections with
titles serving as guides to Poe’s story of the suffering endured
by a prisoner during the Spanish Inquisition. Significantly
powerful and dark this is sumptuous writing by Holbrook with
several angry doom-laden climaxes. I was struck by the ecstatic
writing for the strings and woodwind. At times I could hear
shades of the music of Wagner; Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov.
It is good to have another cello concerto from an English composer
in the repertoire. It is titled ‘Cambrian’ reflecting
the interest Holbrooke held for all things Welsh. It was dedicated
to Elisabeth the Countess Orloff-Davidoff who was the newly
married daughter of Holbrooke’s patron Thomas Evelyn Scott-Ellis
the 8th Baron Howard de Walden. Maybe the dedication was intended
to commemorate the wedding of Countess Elisabeth who played
the cello? The opening movement is a wild, brooding and often
pleading Andantino punctuated with passages of mystery
and calm. The cadenza at 6:35-7:53 is most skilfully
executed by the impeccable Raphael Wallfisch. A shimmering nocturnal
feel suffuses the slow movement, a mood-painting evocative of
a star-filled sky on a cool and crisp winter’s night. For me
the finest movement is the scurrying and darting Finale
containing appealing music of zestful energy with an impressive
valedictory climax.
The three movement Symphony No.4 in B minor ‘Homage
to Schubert’ has its origins as an entrant in the
1927 Schubert Competition. It seems that Holbrooke rewrote the
symphony in 1933 and further revised the score with a new finale
prior to a performance in 1943. If rather lumbering the opening
movement does contain several attractive passages in the spirit
of Schubert. The movement ends with a climax of significant
proportions almost out of balance with the rest of the material
that has gone before. Throughout I felt that the slow movement
displayed suggestions of the sound-worlds of Delius and Debussy.
Through the mainly dense string writing shine prominent parts
for solo woodwind almost in the manner of birdsong. At 4:25
and 5:11 the brass vividly appear out of the mists. The concluding
movement is an eclectic mix of styles. At times it felt evocative
of the music of Stanford, Parry, Niels Gade and Rachmaninov.
In many respects the lush string-laden music reminded me of
the central movement albeit with a slightly quicker pace. The
exciting Finale, an Allegro provides a
vigorously buoyant conclusion.
The final work on the set is an orchestral waltz movement marked
Lento cantabile - Con grazia from the ballet Pandora
(or Pandora’s Box) completed in 1920. Short-lived, the
ballet staged by Marianne Wilson at the Kingsway Hall, London
in 1921 was reported in the December 1921 edition of Musical
Opinion. My initial impression of Pandora was how much
the score reminded me of the Concert Waltz from Geoffrey
Toye’s ballet The Haunted Ballroom completed over a decade
later in 1934. There are some magical moments in Pandora,
a score infused with attractive melody and notable for the shimmering
strings.
For an enterprising label such as Dutton there is still a considerable
number of mainly English composers whose music is virtually
unknown or could be investigated more fully. Many of them formed
part of ‘Stanford’s circle’, however, it is not possible to
obtain a definitive list of all his composition pupils at the
RCM during his tenure. As a guide I have provided a list of
a number of the lesser known composers who certainly came under
Stanford’s sphere of influence if not taking lessons with him
namely: Fritz Hart, Sydney Peine (S.P.) Waddington, Geoffrey
Toye, Harold Darke, William Henry Bell, Cecil Forsyth, Arthur
Somervell, Henry Walford Davies, James Friskin, Frank Tapp,
Alan Taffs, Edward Naylor, Sydney Hugo Nicholson, Eric Gritton
and Ernest Farrar, Landon Ronald, William Harris, Heathcote
Statham and Frederick Wadely.
Both orchestras can take credit for splendidly perceptive and
well rounded performances. In the Cambrian Raphael Wallfisch
aptly demonstrates his superb technique. The timbre of his 1760
Gennaro Gagliano cello is glorious. Recorded at two separate
locations the sound quality is clear albeit somewhat lacking
in depth. An interesting and informative essay together with
striking artwork adds to the excellent presentation. It is pleasing
to see the renewal of interest in the late-Romantic music of
Joseph Holbrooke. With a recording as fine as this long may
it continue.
Michael Cookson
See also
review by Rob Barnett
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