Another valuable mining by Naxos of the golden seams of
the British Music Society archives. All the more so when one looks through
the current catalogue for other recordings of Patric Standford's work.
Aside from his
Christmas Carol Symphony on Naxos (
review
~
review)
and the Ballet Suite
Celestial Fire on
ASV
this new disc seems to complete his orchestral recorded catalogue. Greatly
enjoyable though those two other works are they give the listener just one
aspect of the composer's output - rather like judging Elgar on the
strength of his
Wand of Youth Suites alone. In one fell swoop this
excellent disc demonstrates just what an impressive and powerful composer
Standford was. Was, because sadly he died rather suddenly in April 2014 (
obituary)
- not before this recording had been released in its original BMS format but
before it could benefit from the wider global distribution and lower price-point
that Naxos can offer.
Given the dearth of music by Standford that the curious listener can track
down it is all the more valuable that the three works presented here are as
impressive and as diverse as they are. The disc opens with his
Symphony
No.1 subtitled ''The Seasons - An English Year".
In the English-only liner Standford contributes a very useful and informative
personal note outlining the genesis of the work and how the music ties into
the implicitly pictorial title. I have enjoyed listening to this work very
much but my one observation would be that I suspect the title might dissuade
some listeners from engaging with it. On face value the title implies some
cosy-fireside-chat of a work but the reality is an altogether grittier more
interesting and challenging piece. If one is looking for season-like allusion
then the opening
Allegro deciso risoluto is the movement that seems
to 'fit' its nominal season. This is a blustery, tempestuous
Spring with nature in full flood. From the dynamic thrusting opening all the
qualities of the music and indeed this recording are evident. The Royal Scottish
National Orchestra are in very good form under David Lloyd-Jones - confident
and dynamic in this far from simple music. Likewise the familiar technical
team of Andrew Walton producer and Mike Clements engineer have caught the
orchestra extremely well in the resonant warmth of the Henry Wood Hall Glasgow.
Standford's Spring occupies the same elemental landscape as Frank Bridge's
Enter Spring - an irrepressible force. I was interested to read in
Standford's own liner-note his fascination with the musical/technical
challenge of "keeping the pulse steady and the momentum airborne".
So even when the obviously driving energy of the movement temporarily subsides
around 5:00 there is still a sense of a pulse compelling the music forward.
Standford's orchestration is especially effective as well in all three
works. Tricky to pull off because he often creates a flickering instrumental
patchwork with fragments thrown around the orchestra which only cohere into
a whole from the perspective of the listener. Again credit to conductor and
orchestra for succeeding with this time and again.
Although Standford had abortively written early 'student' symphonies
the impulse to write his first one came from a separate piece for strings
written as a memorial for Sir John Barbirolli whose Sheffield concerts with
the Halle Orchestra Standford had attended as a child. I listened to the disc
before reading the note - as is my preference with unfamiliar music - and
my strong impression was that this movement - included in the Symphony as
'Summer' - would work as a stand-alone piece. Certainly it occupies
a substantially different landscape than the other sections and not just because
of the strings-only instrumentation. As a piece of music I think it is very
fine - powerfully sustained and beautifully conceived for strings. As a piece
representing an English Summer I struggle to find any analogy at all. If I
was trying to find a climatic/topographical description for the music I would
have to say a rather desolate and arid landscape - yet Standford describes
it as representing "a strongly optimistic and dynamic memory of Barbirolli"
and since it's his music he should know best so I defer to his description.
The third movement 'Autumn' is another scherzo-like section.
Again, Standford's brilliance as an orchestrator is to the fore with
scurrying woodwind and slippery strings evoking - much more easily - eddying
mists and wind. Usually there is nothing I like more than a programme but
again I feel this transcends the need for anything quite so literal. Perhaps
because his music is in my mind with his recent passing - but in this movement
I heard echoes of John McCabe's brilliant
Chagall Windows
- although important to point out that the Standford predates that work by
a good two years. The work finished with 'Winter Epilogue' which
is five variants on a chorale theme Standford wrote originally for his
Christus
Requiem. My instinct is to treat this as absolute music - the essentially
slow pulse allowing the music to unwind steadily and very expressively towards
a quiet close shattered by some quite unexpected stabbing chords. More beautifully
poised playing from the RSNO underlines the sense of finality and closure.
Of equally impressive stature is the
Cello Concerto of 1974.
Completing the roster of excellence is the predictably fine contribution of
cellist Raphael Wallfisch. He is the work's dedicatee and gave it its
first broadcast performance in 1979. Is there another living performer who
has done so much to promote his nation's music - and beyond - on their
chosen instrument? Wallfisch's discography is vast yet every recording
finds him in technically superb form and more to the point giving performances
of remarkable insight and intelligence. So it proves here. Standford's
inspiration this time sprang from a stay at the apartment in Baden-Baden where
Brahms spent his summer months. As a consequence he drew on motifs from the
fifth movement of Brahms'
German Requiem and built them into
the outer sections of the work. The quotation is overtly recognisable in the
work's finale but in the opening he has transformed the soprano soloist's
melody into the cello part. Again the very opening of the work is strikingly
powerful. With no preparatory material the orchestra dives in with hammered
low B flats an insistent pedal for a full ninety seconds - an orchestral piano
part an important addition throughout - and the soloist sings an impassioned
song. Excellent engineering ensures an ideal balance between the solo and
tutti orchestral lines. This movement is marked
Adagio with the crucial
qualifier -
ma con moto, as in the symphony there is a sure sense
that somewhere in the work's substructure there is a steady heartbeat
ensuring that whatever the basic tempo the music is perpetually drawn forward.
The central
molto vivace is a
tour de force aptly described
by Standford as "largely [an] animated pianissimo: a flight of midsummer
madness which I imagine Mendelssohn might achieve more effectively were he
still here." In the self-deprecating "more effectively" Standford
does himself an injustice - this is a very impressive movement indeed all
flickering half-lights and shadows. Not at all easy for the performers to
bring off - one missed or mis-judged entry and the whole edifice collapses.
The musical language of the whole disc to this point has been clearly tonal
but with a reasonably high level of dissonance. The balm of the emergence
of the Brahms quotations in fairly unadulterated form in the concerto's
finale has a powerful impact simply because it introduces consonance where
previously we had tangy dissonance. In turn they come after a cadenza-like
sequence for the cello which is darkly questioning and anguished [track 7
3:30]. It makes for a touchingly tender passage with woodwind's Romantic
harmony trying to console the despairing cello whilst in the background the
low repeating pedal notes return on the timpani. Technically it is an impressive
passage, bringing together all the material from earlier in the work, but
it is emotionally cathartic too. Wallfisch is particularly impressive here
finding an ideal balance between poise and passion. The sophisticated layers
of Standford's orchestration are beautifully revealed and revelled
in by all concerned. I like the rather ambiguous ending as it evaporates into
ethereal silence. The last few years have been rather good for the re-discovery
and reassessment of British cello concerti;
Lyrita's
recent offering of Simpson, Joubert and Christopher Wright and Dutton reviving
a
Cyril
Scott score along with works elsewhere by
Havergal
Brian, Alan Bush,
Rubbra,
Foulds,
Dyson,
MacMillan
and
Holbrooke
all proving that the repertoire for concerted works for cello by British composers
was a lot more than 'just' the Elgar, Walton and Britten. The
common factor? - all recordings by Raphael Wallfisch - and every single one
well worth hearing. To this esteemed list the Patric Standford concerto is
a very worthy addition.
If that were not enough, the disc concludes with a real orchestral showpiece.
It's a proper scherzo for orchestra that would adorn any concert programme.
Where the earlier symphony included a work conceived separately here the process
is reversed. The
Prelude to a Fantasy The Naiades
started life as a movement in Standford's Second Symphony. What the
liner does not make clear is if it can still be found as part of the larger
work or whether Standford replaced it with an alternative movement. Enough
to say that it is a literally brilliant work. The orchestration glitters and
twinkles whilst the rhythms twist with agile dexterity. I really like Standford's
extended use of muted trumpets - something rarely encountered except for the
odd bar or two. Standford describes the Naiades as "minor deities, ever
dancing and restless like children" and this is
exactly how
the music sounds - good naturedly energetic and questing - beautifully realised
with flecks of harp and vibraphone intertwining with chattering string and
wind. All in all a hugely enjoyable
bonne bouche to conclude an already
impressive recital.
Without a shadow of doubt this disc significantly enhances Standford's
posthumous reputation. I would love to think it might simply be the first
in a series of discs from the same artists and production team covering more
of his major works including the remaining symphonies and the
Christus
Requiem.
Nick Barnard