With the death of Richard Hickox this disc will be the only volume 
                in the intended Chandos Holst series unless another conductor 
                takes over. This utterly splendid disc makes Richard’s passing 
                all the more lamentable. It is in fact the finest Holst disc in 
                years. Otherwise one needs to look back to the Lyrita recordings 
                on SRCD 222 
                (Boult), 223 
                (Imogen Holst) and 209 
                (David Atherton) for anything anywhere near as good. Also don’t 
                forget the essential Decca 
                collection. Sadly there is no sign as yet of recordings of 
                his complete operas: Sita and The Perfect Fool. 
              
The Ballet music 
                    from The Perfect Fool comprises elemental dances from 
                    the opera which itself runs to about 75-80 minutes – ideal 
                    for a CD project. Chandos provide a deeply pleasing and vivacious 
                    recording – one of their very best. It delivers a palette 
                    of detailing stimulatingly placed across the aural span. The 
                    brass are imperiously emphatic and the more feline touches 
                    - such as the soft and cool flute playing - are rendered with 
                    touching expression. If you already enjoy Dukas’s L’Apprenti 
                    Sorcier or Chabrier’s España or Holst’s The 
                    Planets then this is something you must get to know. The 
                    classic Decca Boult recording of the ballet music is brilliant 
                    but was made in the 1960s. Hickox’s is every bit its equal 
                    but basks in contemporary sound. Never mind that the full 
                    fairytale opera with its complement of wizards, narcoleptic 
                    fools, princesses and elemental spirits pokes fun at Verdi 
                    and Wagner clichés; these bejewelled dances are immensely 
                    enjoyable in their own right. By the way, the opera itself 
                    is lots of fun as those who heard the Groves (1972) and Handley 
                    (Christmas Day, 1995) broadcasts will attest. In terms of 
                    character you might bracket it with RVW’s Poisoned Kiss: 
                    entertaining, brilliant and touching.
                  
              
In practice The 
                Perfect Fool dances are the most familiar pieces here. The 
                other scores are largely unknown. The two choral ballets are new 
                to CD (see footnote). If you recall a recording of The Golden 
                Goose it’s Imogen Holst’s version minus chorus on SRCD 223. 
                Also sans chorus is The Morning of the Year dances 
                on SRCD 209 – the same disc includes the ballet music from The 
                Lure. The Golden Goose score is in seven  tracks. It’s 
                a score in which Holst’s folk-song manner is present as it is 
                in his Somerset Rhapsody – see Boult-Holst Lyrita disc. 
                This is not the end of the story because other streams flow in 
                including a Tippett-like delicacy (near the start), a proud bluff 
                manner: part RVW and part de Falla’s Tricorne and a wassailing 
                beguilement. The singing is precise yet springy and wonderfully 
                attentive to dynamics and word-shaping. There’s also a ready sense 
                of humour evident – how about the refrain: “I shan’t get home 
                in time to make my old man’s dinner tonight!” It’s not all broad 
                humour though – listen to the Neptune-ethereal singing 
                at 3:44 on tr. 6. At tr. 9 the voice of the solo violin rises 
                in a pristine dancing delicacy – which reminded me a little of 
                Holst’s ascetic Four Songs for voice and violin (1916). 
                The Lure is memorable for the satisfying shark-skin abrasion 
                of the strangely Hispanic brass playing, its music-box grace (4:40) 
                and a gorgeously Rimskian swell (5:40). The xylophone punctuation 
                in the more exuberant brass recalled similar effects in Hanson’s 
                first two symphonies and Lament for Beowulf. Finally The 
                Morning of the Year brings us back to the choir and orchestra. 
                This is a somewhat lower key score but has its charms. Its folkdance 
                feeling is consistent with the dedication - which is to the English 
                Folk Dance Society. In this sense it recalls one of RVW’s few 
                unrecorded scores: the large-scale Folk Songs of the Four Seasons 
                written for a Women’s Institute extravaganza in the 1950s 
                and rarely heard since. Holst is a degree more nuanced and mystical. 
                In the penultimate segment the slowly accelerating swing of voices 
                and orchestra into dance suggests that William Mathias knew the 
                score before writing his This Worldes’s Joie. This mood 
                can be contrasted with the asceticism of tr. 14 with its echoes 
                of Betelgeuse from Holst’s Humbert Wolfe Songs and the 
                pantheistic mysteries of The Hymn of Jesus recalled in 
                the first segment of the ballet. 
              
I listened to 
                    this in conventional CD mode but those who have SACD are in 
                    for an even more intense experience.
                  
Richard Hickox 
                    died in the middle of a sequence of sessions to record Holst’s 
                    A Choral Symphony – a sequence of Keats-settings.
                  
              
The listening experience 
                of this disc is completed in princely style with full texts reproduced 
                in the booklet. There’s also an attentive and authoritative note 
                by Colin Matthews who has worked on many Holst scores including 
                several used here.
                
                Rob Barnett
                
                Footnote
                I am grateful to Colin Mackie for pointing out my mistake in claiming 
                that this is the first time that 'The Golden Goose' and 'The Morning 
                of the Year' have appeared on disc. Hyperion released a CD with 
                these two Choral Ballets coupled with 'King Estmere'(An Old English 
                Ballad for Chorus and Orchestra) recorded in 1995 with the Guildford 
                Choral Society and the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Hilary 
                Davan Wetton(CDA66784)(nla). RB