This
                    is not a new disc. The performances are a good thirty years
                    old now and have appeared before on ABC Classics in the mid-nineties
                    under a different catalogue number. ABC has also released
                    the slow movement of the C sharp minor in a compilation disc
                    - Eternity. The Timeless Music of Australia’s Composers on
                    ABC Classics 476 160-7. It may be that ABC has given this
                    renewed coverage because of Hyde’s recent death – she died
                    in 2005. The booklet naturally enough still reflects her
                    then still very much living status but it would be good to
                    think that ABC could commission a proper essay on Hyde’s
                    life and career. The present one is perfunctory to the point
                    of irrelevance. 
                
                 
                
                
                Hyde’s
                    two piano concertos were written in London where the Australian
                    composer was studying at the Royal College of Music. They’re
                    youthful works, written in her early twenties - exciting,
                    romantic, spilling over with Rachmaninovian fervour. She
                    presumably played at the premieres and after, and she plays
                    them on disc forty years after they were written with undiminished
                    passion and enjoyment.
                
                 
                
                The
                    earlier of the two dates from 1933. Opening with ripe piano
                    athleticism and in frank romantic tradition it has a few
                    will o’the wisp moments along the way. Hyde’s slow movements,
                    perhaps reflecting her keen early twenties, are non-sentimental,
                    somewhat unsettled and actively questing and dynamic. Though
                    the E flat minor is marked Lento it’s not at all becalmed;
                    rather it mines from Rachmaninovian, Tchaikovskian and Lisztian
                    fields.
                
                 
                
                The
                    second concerto followed two years later. Fluently written
                    and once more attractively orchestrated it would be hard
                    to claim this, or its sister concerto, exhibited any really
                    startling melodic distinction. But it’s very well laid out
                    for both solo instrument and orchestra and does start with
                    some arresting angular brass calls and answeringly lissom
                    string writing. Once more the piano pitches in early, and
                    again the communing spirit is Rachmaninov. The slow movement
                    contrasts tranquilo sections with the Russian composer’s
                    heft. The finale is terpsichorean with a striding figure
                    of delightfully pomposo intent. The piano scampers
                    with heroism and dexterity.
                
                 
                
                There’s
                    a pendant in the form of the VW inflected 1943 Village
                    Fair, complete with some rustic band evocations.  
                
                 
                
                The
                    performances naturally carry the authoritative imprimatur
                    of the composer. Sound quality is still highly impressive
                    and the performances are genial and affectionate. Now we
                    need a good set of notes.
                
                 
                    
                    Jonathan Woolf
                    
                see also review by Rob Barnett                
                
                 
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
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