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Box of Delights Phyllis TATE (1911-1985) London Fields (1958) [13:14] Samuel COLERIDGE-TAYLOR (1875-1912) Four Characteristic Waltzes, Op.22 (1899) – Valse de
la reine [4:30] Three-fours – Valse Suite, Op.71 (1909) arranged by Norman
O’Neill
No.2 Andante [2:47]; No.5 Andante molto [4:12] Granville BANTOCK (1868-1946) Russian Scenes (1899) [14:18] Cecil ARMSTRONG-GIBBS (1889-1960) Fancy Dress – Dance Suite Op.82 (1935) [17:22] Elisabeth LUTYENS (1906-1983) En Voyage, suite for full orchestra (1944) [15:02]
London Philharmonic
Orchestra/Barry Wordsworth
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Simon Joly (Lutyens)
rec. Tate: March 1988, Walthamstow Town Hall, August 1989, Henry Wood Hall; remainder
in Henry Wood Hall, August and September 1989. DDD LYRITA SRCD214 [71:32]
Amidst the excited
flurry of the monthly Top Gun Lyrita releases comes this
gentler morsel. But just because it’s not Boult’s Elgar Symphonies
or the Coleridge-Taylor Violin Concerto or the George Lloyds
or … well, whatever else it’s not, that doesn’t mean you
should pass by. Here we have a quintet of composers and plenty
of relaxed enjoyment. It also qualifies as a Light Music
offering, as the disc’s subtitle makes clear, and given the
prodigious number of genre releases recently that’s no bad
thing either.
Phyllis Tate is
represented by her 1958 London Fields. Tate has clearly listened to her Eric Coates but the xylophone
frolics of The Maze at Hampton Court owe more to the syncopated bite of dance bands and maybe the large
shade of Teddy Brown. The gauzy evocation of St
James’s Park is written in very
best Light Music style and the finale is a vigorous waltz – Hampstead Heath here teems with
Edwardian bustle.
Coleridge-Taylor,
whose Violin Concerto has now come into deserved light, is
still the composer for lightly evocative Waltzes. We have Valse de la reine, the third of his Characteristic Waltzes written
in 1899. Written con sentimento it was sent to
his wife during their courtship and is delightfully, appositely
and predictably sweet. A decade later he wrote Three-fours – Valse
Suite. Of the two movements here No.2
is a charming Andante but No.5, whilst it sports a role for
solo violin, is rather less accomplished. They’re both heard
in the orchestrations by Norman O’Neill.
Programme planning,
especially in compilation discs, is something of an art and
the compilers clearly enjoyed following Coleridge-Taylor’s
decorous late-Victorian and Edwardian waltzes with Bantock’s
altogether more invigorating sketches. His Russian Scenes come
from the same year as Coleridge-Taylor’s Valse de la Reine. Bantock
doffs his capacious hat to Rimsky and to Borodin quite a
lot hereabouts,
and naturally to Tchaikovsky too. These are dance movements
with local colour and plenty of energy. It depends how one
takes them though. On Marco Polo 8.223274, Adrian Leaper
and the Czechoslovak State, based in Košice, have their own
view. Barry
Wordsworth is gruffer than Leaper in the Mazurka and
we find the Lyrita team points it very nicely with rubati;
Leaper and his Slovak team are straighter and more metrical.
Things
are balanced though in the Valse – much quicker
in Košice than London – where the evocative sound
of the very brightly lit Slovak winds can sound tangier than
their more cosmopolitan LPO rivals. By and large though
Wordsworth prefers heft, and greater subtlety, especially
in the Polka, to Leaper’s lighter take on Bantock’s musical
sightseeing.
The Fancy Dress Dance Suite of Armstrong-Gibbs
was written in 1935. The waltz Dusk is deservedly
the most popular of the four movements, a famous BBC Home
Service broadcast
charmer. But though the Dance of the Mummers doesn’t sound too promising it actually largely eschews cod-maypole
stuff and instead pays a fond and brief tribute to Delius,
who had died the previous year. The final movement is rather
over-long but its Elgarian moments – another casualty of
1934 – are explicit.
Finally there’s
scary Elisabeth Lutyens and her delightful En voyage,
written in wartime. The journey to Paris via boat train may
be a thing of the
past – and it certainly was back in 1944 for different reasons – but
Lutyens summons up some evocative nature painting for a Channel
squall, vibrant gaiety as the train approaches the bright
lights of Paris and a generous winding down. Simon Joly and
the RPO do the honours here and very well too.
Nothing over-serious
here – just charming fare all round, finely played and conducted.
Try Leaper for another take on Bantock but otherwise banish
humdrum days with this delightful collection.
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