Of the cordillera of Baxs seven symphonies the sixth is the undoubted
	peak. Including this one there have been only three commercial recordings:
	Norman Del Mars Lyrita from 1965 never transferred to CD and Bryden
	Thomsons. Del Mars still stunning account remains un-available
	and would be a strong contender despite its vintage and the oddly spot-lit
	recording. The Thomson on Chandos is a modern recording but is afflicted
	with a strange lassitude. Baxs symphonies tempt a certain Delian meandering
	but benefit from a strong forward pulse even in the most lyrical moments.
	
	Bostock (a Thomson pupil) captures the spirit of fantasy and adventure so
	well in an account drenched in a potent blend of magic and violence. He does
	not allow proceedings to descend into an invertebrate dream but injects a
	sense of urgency and conflict and keeps things moving. He is clearly sensitive
	also to Baxs love affair with beauty just out of reach and suggests
	this in the sense of joy lost and a peaceful but enchanted resignation of
	the closing pages.
	
	Tintagel is given the best performance I have heard bar only the original
	Eugene Goossens set of 78s from the 1920s. Bostock and his German orchestra
	are concentrated and passionate projecting a sea-spattered and urgently romantic
	canvas. This vies only with the early Decca Boult recording and is of course
	a much better recording than the Decca. Lastly we have a recording premiere
	in the brightly swashbuckling Overture to Adventure written for Dan
	Godfreys successor at Bournemouth, Richard Austin.
	
	The orchestra is enthusiastic and accomplished lacking only the last ounce
	of sumptuous tone in the strings by comparison with Del Mars mid-sixties
	Philharmonia. The overture is in the spirit of many British overtures of
	the 1930s and 1940s having something in common with Moerans
	ENSA-commissioned Overture to a Masque.
	
	Fine recording. Good notes though anonymous. A very strong cross-section
	and a recommended collection featuring the key masterwork in the Bax output.
	Confidently recommended.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Robert Barnett
	
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	and another point of view  from David Wright
	
	Bax is both an interesting and important composer. He may not be a great
	composer and his music does lack rhythmic invention and yet contains an equalled
	atmosphere. He has often been called the composer of 'music of Celtic twilight'
	whereas his music also inhabits the world of glowing sunlight. His orchestration
	often shows a delicate palette and yet he can produce moments of controlled
	pageantry.
	
	The Symphony No 6, which dates from 1934, is a very likeable piece,
	although, possibly, a little overlong, and this performance is warmly
	recommended. It brings out clearly the shifting tonalities, the wonderful
	harmonies and the clear textures indicating that Bax was a fine orchestrator.
	His symphonies are rarely performed and so we are grateful that this loving
	account is available.
	
	Bax often employed a worrying sense of form or structure. There is far more
	satisfaction in movements being complete and separate entities in themselves.
	In this symphony, the finalé consists of four elements - an introduction,
	a scherzo, a trio and an epilogue and, to my mind it does not work.
	
	There is a quality to Bax's music which is easy to admire yet hard to define.
	It has a very human face, a warmth and tenderness that is devoid of sickliness.
	His use of the woodwind is exemplary.
	
	Douglas Bostock understands this beautiful score and the playing he secures
	from the Munich Symphony Orchestra is admirable. The sound and balance is
	very good as well.
	
	The performance of Tintagel serves to remind me of how similar this
	score is to Debussy's La Mer completed over a decade earlier. This
	performance is lacking in the drama and excitement that exists in both the
	Boult and Thomson versions but there is much orchestral detail to admire.
	
	The Overture to an Adventure was performed early in 1937 and, among
	other things, includes an introspective melody for the strings which may
	qualify Bax to be a 'late romantic'. The music 'stops and starts' which is
	a weakness inherent in some composers and undermines any work's sense of
	continuity or momentum. This is more a tone poem in the Sibelius mode than
	an overture but in this genre, Bax is no Sibelius!
	
	The disc should please many. The Del Mar reading of the Sixth Symphony
	is in many ways preferable and Tintagel is far more expressive elsewhere.
	But there is much to admire in this recording.
	
	David Wright.
	
	Performance  
	
	Recording  
	
	Visit the
	Arnold Bax
	web site
	
	see also Richard Adams interview with
	Douglas Bostock
	
	    
The 
          British Symphonic Collection