Three works for solo instruments and orchestra 
                and all dating from the first half of the 1990s. 
              
 
              
Lees' style in the Horn Concerto is 
                becoming more familiar to me. Loosely speaking he touches on late 
                Vaughan Williams with other elements from the ‘softer end’ - from 
                Randall Thompson and at the more ‘scarifying end’ from William 
                Schuman. He is certainly not 'difficult' and he never veers far 
                from tonality. During the long cadenza the natural tones of the 
                horn reminds the listener of Britten's Serenade. William 
                Caballero is fully equal to the demands of the score which include 
                the sunny chiming directness and evolving nobility of the 'calmly' 
                middle movement. The aggressive writing of the finale reminds 
                me of Herrmann's On Dangerous Ground and North by North-West. 
                Lees solves the finale problem with a very satisfying sign-off. 
              
 
              
The single movement Balada piece is more 
                exotic with the instrument chanting with its piping; sometimes 
                sweet and sometimes caustically penetrating sound. Fury is not 
                absent as you can hear at 7.05 and 12.20. At 15.20 the composer 
                seems to confide in us glimpses of chaos and of Breughel’s ‘Garden 
                of Earthly Delights’. There is an easy singing at 8.40 rising 
                like a variant of the start of Beethoven 5. At 13.58 there is 
                a sweetly chanting Chinese effect pizzicato. Very much a fantasy 
                concertstück. The Zwilich concerto goes with the grain 
                of the bassoon’s oakily singing soul. with spitting thundering 
                percussion and much quirky variety along the way. 
              
 
              
Incidentally what quirk of marketing prompts 
                the instruction on the casing to file under Classical/Zwilich 
                rather than Classical/Lees. 
              
 
              
Good notes as usual from New World and high end 
                acoustics. Nothing here seems at all humdrum; no doubt each work 
                was recorded in the wake of concert performances which usually 
                helps. The soloists are easily a match for the many dimensions 
                of each work. 
              
 
              
The Lees is one of the finest Horn Concertos 
                I have heard. Seek out this disc and I doubt you will be at all 
                disappointed. 
              
Rob Barnett