Purchase Brilliant Classics from MusicWeb - "CLICK" here

Classical CD and DVD reviews. Make a regular donation(£1, £2, £5) here MusicWeb is not a subscription site and our advertisers help pay for it. Please visit their sites regularly to see if anything might interest you. Purchasing from them keeps MusicWeb free.

Classical Editor: Rob Barnett                               Founder Len Mullenger





Buy through MusicWeb for £12.50 postage paid World-wide.
You may prefer to pay by Sterling cheque or Euro notes to avoid PayPal. Contactfor details

Purchase button

Frederic COWEN (1852-1935)
Symphony No.6 in E major The Idyllic (1897) [35:22]
Samuel COLERIDGE-TAYLOR (1875-1912)

Symphony in A minor (1896) [36:44]
Aarhus Symphony Orchestra/Douglas Bostock
rec. Frichsparken, Aarhus, 20-23 September 2005
CLASSICO CLASSCD 684 [71:50]



When Marco Polo released their recording of Cowen’s Third Symphony I’m sure many of us had hopes for a cycle of the surviving symphonies – the first two of the six appear to be lost. Nothing though was forthcoming and it’s taken the ever-enterprising and brilliantly committed ClassicO to get to grips with the Sixth in their British Symphonic Collection, of which this is volume fifteen. They’ve coupled it with Coleridge-Taylor’s youthful Symphony in A minor and both constitute world premiere recordings.

Both works were almost contemporaneous, the Coleridge-Taylor having been written in 1896 and Cowen’s Symphony the following year. The influences are I suppose the standard Continental ones – Dvořák on Coleridge-Taylor and Mendelssohn on the considerably older Cowen.

In the case of the older man one finds a tremendous sense of warmth of utterance and lightness of orchestration. Cowen ‘s deft use of winds is a characteristic feature of his writing. He’s also not averse to a strong role for the horn, both features of the opening movement. It’s not surprising then that the cor anglais leads in the Allegro scherzando where there’s just a shimmer of the Iberian in Cowen’s rhythms alongside that precise and gossamer orchestration. The broad string tone of the slow movement even manages to irritate annotator Lewis Foreman who finds the composer’s "good manners and self control" rather limiting. Still, the horn and clarinet writing is impressive enough, and the climax, when it arrives, is powerful rather than merely exhausting. I find the modality of the writing even glancingly suggests O Come, O Come, Emmanuel in its burnished austerity. The ceremonial march of a finale has its share of elegiac lyricism, some of it somewhat Elgarian. There are in fact certain thematic patterns and rhythmic similarities; at one point I was even reminded of the Symphonies. But overall lies Cowen’s benevolence and sympathetic generosity – the cantilevering winds and reassuringly warm horn writing, the well distributed sectional writing. Certainly The Idyllic is an aptly chosen title.

Coleridge-Taylor’s early Symphony is cut from a different cloth. Again it’s in four movements, the finale of which never satisfied the composer’s teacher, Stanford. To such an extent in fact that three versions of the finale exist; the one in the manuscript at the Royal College of Music is the one performed here. At one college run through Hans Richter was present and in the orchestra playing it sat Holst playing the trombone and Vaughan Williams the triangle.

The Dvořákian elements are stamped from the first but Coleridge-Taylor had even at this youthful stage cultivated his own brand of genial tension; the climax in the opening movement for example is exceptionally well worked. The rather sonorously titled slow movement – it’s a Lament; Larghetto affetusoso – turns out to be considerably less portentous than one might expect. Rather it’s full of warm string wash, flute riding above, and through the developing intensity there’s a role for solo violin. His characteristic gift for melodic beauty is always present. Perhaps the most distinctively Dvořákian movement is the Scherzo though this does have a rather charming pentatonic folk lilt that anchors it as much to native soil as to Bohemian. It’s all fresh air lyricism in the finale until the more reflective material into which the elegant music winds; the percussion and a final brass chord ends it without undue fanfare.

Another splendid venture from Classico, then, restoring at a stroke, two contemporaneous and for so long unheard symphonies. Neither has had an airing for a century or so. Both have charm and merit, the younger man’s symphony especially. Cowen’s essentially reminiscent work also has something to tell us about his undersung place in the English symphonic tradition. And maybe there are trace elements of Elgarian writing as well.

Fortunately the performances are nourishingly affectionate and subtle and no mere run through. Bostock directs with the acuity we have come to expect from him, pacing with care and giving due weight to winds and to the horns especially. Classico’s engineering team has done a splendid job not least with regard to sectional balance. Laudable and expert, volume fifteen in the series is a triumph of programming and imagination.

Jonathan Woolf

The British Symphonic Collection

 

Advertising Rates
Visitor stats
MusicWeb International
has over 21,000 Classical CD reviews on offer


Gerard Hoffnung Concerts &
The Bricklayer Story

Naxos Classical

Purchase Brilliant Classics

Australian Eloquence CDs on Buywell.com


New Releases

Hyperion
New Releases


Guild Music






MusicWeb sells the Polish
catalogue CDAccord
£10.50 post free W-W


MusicWeb sells the
Arcodiva catalogue
£12.00 post free W-W


Price Reduction: £11.00
post-free
world-wide
Try it and see - Sale or Return

 

MusicWeb can now offer you discs from the following catalogues:
Prices include postage

[Acte Préalable £13.50]
[Arcodiva £12.00]
[Avie from £6.25]
Brilliant Classics
[British Music Society £13.49]
[CDACCORD from £10.50 ]
[ClassicO £12.50]
[Hallé from £11]
[Hortus £14.99 ]

[Lyrita ONLY £11.00 ]
LYRITA Sale or Return
[Onyx £12.00
]
ONYX Sale or Return
[REDCLIFFE £11 ]
[Tactus £11.50 ]
[Talent from £12.00 ]
[Toccata Classics £12.50 ]

MusicWeb Recommended Recordings 2008

DISCS OF THE YEAR 2007


Return to Index



Reviews from previous months
Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the discs reviewed. details
We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin Board.  Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to which you refer..

 


You can purchase CDs and Save around 22% with these retailers: