Richards. Mini-Preludes. No.1 - 5. Interludes. No.1 - 2. Primitive
	Rites. Nocturnes. No.1 - 2. 
	Tommis. Mel Wefus. (Prelude No.5) 
	Williamson. Mosaics. No.1. (Lament) No.2. (Breathless) No.3. (Mockery)
	
	Biberian. Haiku. No.1.& No.6. 
	Harrison. Nova Antiqua. The Face that Launched a Thousand
	Ships 
	Tavener. Chant. 
	Croucher. Six Preludes. The Little Boat. Elegy. 
	 Rawsthorne. Elegy.
	
	
	A complete disc of 20th century guitar music is a very ambitious
	programme and British 20th century guitar music unusual fare indeed.
	Although the inlay notes state that Jonathan Richards has recorded before,
	his name is unfamiliar to me, as are five of the composers represented here
	. Tavener, Rawsthorne and Biberian are familiar, the latter two through their
	guitar compositions and, although Tavener has become very popular recently,
	this is his first venture into writing for the guitar.
	
	For the most part, Jonathan Richards,comes across as a precise, sensitive
	player being selective in the use of his tonal pallete, a wise move given
	the short duration of some of the pieces. His overall tone is good (if at
	times a little thin on the first string) and seems to be in control as long
	as he doesn't force the sound too much as he does in his Nocturne No.
	2 and Primitive Rites where the tone becomes a little 'naily'.
	His forté is definitely the more lyrical moments.
	
	With the exception of Tavener and Rawsthorne the programme mainly consists
	of groups of small pieces, some lasting only a few seconds. Jonathan Richards'
	own compositions, although interesting, are the least effective and I feel
	would have worked better if they had been interspersed throughout the programme
	rather than grouped together at the opening of the disc. However, with Collin
	Tommis' Mel Wefus we seem to enter a different musical landscape and
	Richards seems to be more at home with this piece (even more so than with
	his own compositions), treating us to some lovely growling bass at the opening.
	It is a pity that more of this composer is not included here; his is a name
	I will look out for.
	
	Mosaics by John Williamson held less appeal (does a piece lasting
	only 45 seconds require a subtitle after to indicate it's meaning)? Gilbert
	Biberian's Haiku Nos, 1 and 6 (and why not include Nos, 2-5?) shows
	an accomplished guitar composer at his best, totally in control of the medium
	and, here, inspired by Japanese poetry. The two Timothy Harrison pieces,
	Nova Antiqua and The Face that launched a Thousand Ships, does
	conjure up the past, Nova Antiqua certainly retaining an early music
	feel regardless of the liberal use of subtle modern harmonies. Chant
	by John Tavener is, at just over 11 minutes, the longest of the programme
	and gives a feeling of spaciousness that Richards' playing intensifies by
	focusing the attention and drawing one into the music; for me a high point
	of this disc.
	
	The Six Preludes of Terence Croucher (the longest only 57 seconds)
	I liked very much, the last giving a nod of recognition to Villa-Lobos. The
	Little Boat does evoke images of the title and Elegy, a much weightier
	piece, shows us that there could be more strong compositions from this composer.
	The closing work, Elegy by Alan Rawsthorne, was the only piece familiar
	to me. The dedicatee, Julian Bream, recorded it in 1973 and such a strong
	personality as Bream's cannot be ignored so comparisons are inevitable, Jonathan
	Richards takes over a minute longer (9 minutes 9 seconds as opposed to Breams
	7 minutes 45 seconds) but maintains the intensity of this powerful work most
	successfully.
	
	A very enjoyable disc that will definitely be worth revisiting; the guitarist
	conveys his own personality, the overall quality of the recording is good
	and on the whole the material presented is a breath of fresh air.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Andy Daly
	
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	and another view from Andrew Seivewright
	
	Any CD supported by the Rawsthorne Trust must surely be of general interest
	to viwers of this site; they will certainly find reward in this fine guitar
	collection, which concludes with Alan Rawsthornes last opus, the Elegy,
	commissioned and completed by Julian Bream. An appropriately sombre and
	disturbing work, this piece suggested to me Dylan Thomass celebrated
	couplet:
	
	Do not go gentle into that good night
	
	Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
	
	A work to repay repeated hearings.
	
	A shorter Elegy by Terence Croucher precedes the Rawsthorne, the last of
	a series of eight pieces by this composer. Six Preludes briefly explore a
	variety of musical ideas: the final item is a real winner, as also is the
	enchanting The Little Boat.
	
	The first ten tracks feature Richardss own compositions: five MiniPreludes,
	two Interludes, a piece called Primitive Rites, and two Nocturnes. Colouristic
	contrast, and an impressive array of well-executed effects characterise this
	attractive sequence. Two of the Preludes find transatlantic inspiration both
	north and south of the Border and are delightfully easy on the ear. But
	Stravinskyan dynamism is also present here, in a recording that throughout
	catches every tonal nuance of the instrument.
	
	Colin Tommis, the prolific J.R. Williamson, Gilbert Biberian and Timothy
	Harrison are other composers featured in this showcase of British talent:
	all have something to offer.
	
	Lastly, a big name, John Tavener whose 11-minute Chant is designed
	to conjure up his beloved Greek landscape. Daringly economical in texture,
	it is perhaps not vintage Tavener, but is certainly atmospheric and evocative.
	
	On all counts - content, recording and performance - this 65-minute CD is
	highly recommended.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Andrew Seivewright