I'm not sure what I was expecting when Rob Barnett, the Classical 
                Editor, asked me to look out for the appearance of this new recording, 
                currently available only as a download, and to review it. Would 
                the 'b.1945' betoken some post-Schoenbergian musical trauma, or 
                did the connection which I knew to exist between Edward Gregson 
                and brass band music mean that this new concerto would inhabit 
                some insipid middle-of-the-road territory? I'm pleased to report 
                that neither is the case; indeed, I enjoyed the experience so 
                much that I now intend to search out the recordings of Gregson's 
                other music. Please see below for details and expect reviews in 
                my monthly Download Roundups.
                
                As EMI did in the case of the Adès Violin Concerto, Chandos 
                have released this concerto on its own as a download only until 
                they have assembled more of Gregson's music for a CD release. 
                Incidentally, EMI have now carried out their promise to include 
                the Adès Concerto, with added content, on CD, 4578132. 
                I understand that the Chandos coupling will be Gregson's Cello 
                Concerto. The download costs £2.10 in good mp3 sound at 
                the highest bit-rate of 320 kbps, or £2.70 in a variety 
                of lossless formats. Audiophiles also have the choice of better-than-CD 
                24-bit sound for £3.60. Please note that such 24/96 downloads 
                are not suitable for burning to CDR or for playing on the popular 
                Squeezebox. For those who have never downloaded before, the process 
                of registering on the Chandos site and obtaining the music is 
                very straightforward and intuitive.
                
                As Chandos offer no notes and there is, as yet, no booklet to 
                download, some information may be helpful. The concerto was composed 
                for Michael Hext, the first winner of the BBC Television Young 
                Musician of the Year competition in 1978, in response to a commission 
                from the Bedfordshire Education Service, with the assistance of 
                the Arts Council of Great Britain. Its first performance was in 
                1979 at the Royal College of Music; Michael Hext was the soloist, 
                with the Bedfordshire County Youth Orchestra, conducted by Michael 
                Rose.
                
                Composed for one winner of the BBC Young Musician competition, 
                the Trombone Concerto is now performed by a more recent star, 
                Peter Moore who, at the age of twelve, was the youngest winner 
                in 2008. Now aged fourteen, Peter is a student at Chetham's School 
                of Music in Manchester. As the former principal of the Royal Northern 
                College of Music in the same city, a governor of the school and 
                a member of the Young Musicians panel, Gregson obviously speaks 
                from knowledge of Peter Moore's talent, so, when he praises him 
                as a musician of the highest calibre, we had better believe it.
                
                Our own Glyn Pursglove was equally impressed. His words about 
                Peter Moore's playing in the Young Musician final are certainly 
                applicable to his solo on the new recording: 'The extraordinary 
                maturity of his playing, a maturity which paradoxically retains 
                a freshness and innocence, a directness, an uncluttered vision 
                of what is at the heart of each piece of music that he plays, 
                is certainly remarkable.' (See 
review 
                in Seen and Heard). I do hope that we shall hear much more of 
                him - he might even help to make the trombone a more popular instrument.
                
                Gregson's own description of the concerto is better than anything 
                that I could offer: 
                
                The work falls into three main sections, played without a break, 
                but conforming to the traditional pattern of concerto structure. 
                After a slow introduction, containing most of the motivic and 
                rhythmic ideas used in the work, there follows the main fast section 
                which is divided into three parts and concludes with a fierce 
                climax (timpani and gong). The slow and intense middle section 
                is linked to a cadenza for the soloist, at first unaccompanied 
                but leading to accompanied references to earlier material. The 
                final section is a scherzo which dramatically ends with a re-statement 
                of the opening slow introduction. A brisk coda concludes the work. 
                The interval of a fourth (and its augmented form) provides melodic 
                and harmonic unity for the work; the tonal juxtaposition between 
                E minor and B flat major through the concerto being an important 
                element of the structure.
                
                If I say that the introductory slow section reminded me at times 
                of Britten and at others of Arnold, I am not implying any sort 
                of plagiarism, rather seeking to establish the quality of the 
                composition and the area which the music inhabits. The tone here 
                is lyrical, with the soloist floating over the orchestra and sounding 
                rather plangent at times. As we move gradually into the first 
                part of the central fast section the lyricism becomes less apparent; 
                though it reasserts itself at times, the tone becomes rather more 
                troubled and occasionally discordant until it concludes in the 
                fierce climax to which the composer's note refers.
                
                Even at this climactic point, however, there is nothing here more 
                frightening for the traditionally-minded than can be found in 
                Vaughan Williams, Walton or Arnold. Nor is the composer's description 
                of the central slow section as 'intense' a euphemism for discordance. 
                Surprised though I am to find The Lark Ascending chosen year after 
                year by Classic FM listeners, I think those listeners would find 
                this section of Gregson's concerto no harder to respond to, with 
                the soloist again floating his music above the orchestra in much 
                the same manner as the violinist does in the Vaughan Williams. 
                Try the section which begins just before ten minutes into the 
                work to see what I mean.
                
                Nor does the concluding scherzo bring much to tax those who find 
                that they don't respond immediately to most new music - among 
                whom I include myself. Once again it's VW, Walton and Arnold territory, 
                metaphorically, rather than, say the Adès Violin Concerto 
                to which I referred. It took me some time to feel at home with 
                the Adès - I'm still struggling a little with his The Tempest 
                - but it required only two playings to convince myself of the 
                value of the Gregson Trombone Concerto.
                
                For some reason, members of the brass family as concerto soloists 
                don't have a lasting track record, apart from the perennial Mozart 
                Horn Concertos and an occasional outing for the Haydn Trumpet 
                Concerto. Perhaps it's the mental association with Tubby the Tuba 
                that has led to Vaughan Williams' concerto for that instrument 
                being neglected, though I was surprised to see that it's currently 
                available in six versions, including couplings with Gregson's 
                and other British Tuba Concertos on Naxos 8.557744 and Albany 
                TROY501.
                
                Trombone Concertos seem mainly to be the preserve of Scandinavian 
                composers, though there is one by Gordon Jacob, which has been 
                recorded twice, with Warwick Tyrrell as soloist on ABC 438825-2 
                and with Christian Lindberg, coupled with Trombone Concertos by 
                Elgar Howarth and Derek Bourgeois on BIS-CD-658. Jacob's concerto 
                is more immediately likeable than Gregson's; it has a generally 
                jollier tone, including several raspberry sounds, but ultimately, 
                I think, the Gregson work is the more durable. The Howarth concerto 
                has a greater range of moods - generally serious in tone, though 
                with its share of raspberry noises, too. It has more to offer 
                me than the Jacob, but I think shall return to the Gregson at 
                least as often.
                
                I imagine that this new download will shortly join the other Chandos 
                recordings of the composer's music on the Naxos Music Library 
                for those who wish to try before buying. Subscribers to NML may 
                wish to make it their first port of call, to try out the three 
                other Chandos releases of Gregson's music and four other recordings 
                on offer there:
                
                " Solo! Air Combat Command Heritage of America Band: Altissimo 
                75442261932 
                " Concertos for Brass - Besses o' th' Barn Band: Chandos 
                CHAN4526 
                " British Tuba Concertos Naxos 
8.557754 
                
                " Vaughan Williams: Bass Tuba Concerto in F minor; Ewazen: 
                Bass Trombone Concerto; Gregson: Tuba Concerto - Depaul Wind Ensemble: 
                Albany TROY501 
                " Gregson: Trumpet Concerto; Homages; Saxophone Concerto 
                - BBC Philharmonic/Rundell: Chandos CHAN10478 
                " Gregson: Blazon; Clarinet Concerto; Stepping Out; Violin 
                Concerto Chandos 
CHAN10105 
                
                " Morthenson: Paraphonia; Dahl: Saxophone Concerto; Gregson: 
                Tuba Concerto; Keuris: Catena: Caprice CAP21414 
                " Kiss My Brass - US Military Bands: Altissimo 75442255902
                
                The Naxos Music Library also has the ABC and BIS recordings of 
                the Jacob and Howarth Trombone Concertos.
                
                The Chandos recordings are best downloaded from their own website, 
                theclassicalshop.net, or purchased on CD. The Naxos recording 
                is best purchased from Naxos's own website, classicsonline.com, 
                and the other recordings are also available there.
                
                Overall, then, this new recording impressed me. I shall want to 
                return to it for the sake of the music - less immediately appealing 
                than, say, Gordon Jacob's concerto, but ultimately more satisfying, 
                I think. I hope that it bucks the trend of concertos for brass 
                instruments to be less than popular.
                
                I happily yield to the composer's own high assessment of Peter 
                Moore as soloist, and the accompaniment and recording are all 
                I could wish them to be. Even if you intend to buy the CD when 
                it appears, I don't think you will regret spending a couple of 
                pounds on the download now. If Chandos would include some notes 
                - which they sometimes do a week or so after the download appears, 
                so keep looking - my satisfaction would be complete. I certainly 
                have this recording earmarked as Discovery of the Month in my 
                June 2010 Download Roundup.
                
                
Brian Wilson