Paul Lewis is a versatile, prolific composer whose music has 
        already appeared, albeit in small quantity, on records (his English 
        Overture on ASV WHL 2126 and his English Suite for 
        strings on NAXOS 8.550070). This is – I think – the first disc entirely 
        devoted to his music, and particularly to his many TV scores. He has also 
        composed a good deal of so-called library music, such as the LP History 
        Book of Music featuring what is now apparently best referred to as 
        the Benny Hill Waltz. This delightfully ironic waltz, originally 
        titled Ballroom, is here recorded at its proper speed, so that 
        some may not recognise it (I did not!). 
         
        
Some of his TV scores were quite substantial scores 
          from which sizeable suites have been drawn, e.g. the epic Arthur 
          of the Britons and the emotionally more complex The Dark 
          Angel based on Sheridan le Fanu’s Uncle Silas. Lewis’s 
          score for Arthur of the Britons successfully blends heroic 
          and dramatic episodes (e.g. Celtic Horns somewhat redolent of 
          Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man) and more peaceful 
          and tender ones, such as the beautifully lyrical Fair Rowena. 
          The suite is a quite substantial score in the best tradition of epic 
          film scores, and not unworthy the comparison with some similar scores 
          by Alwyn, Arnold or Kamen. The Dark Angel is a more complex 
          score allowing for a more richly varied approach. The Gothic Melodrama 
          drawn from the score is a remarkable tour de force in which waltz 
          tunes and rhythms are subtly varied according to the plot or the characters 
          they evoke. 
        
 
        
Philip Lane, the producer of this disc, mentions Arnold 
          and Walton as Lewis’s models (he might have added Richard Rodney Bennett); 
          and, true to say, Malcolm Arnold’s shadow looms large over some of the 
          scores (and none the worse for that, as far as the present Arnold fan 
          is concerned). This is particularly evident in the rousing tune for 
          King’s Royal or the brilliant overture Wreckers 
          at Deadeye. But, in spite of some clear influences, Lewis manages 
          to remain his own man as in the delightful short fantasy Woof! 
          (one of the most enjoyable items here) and the superb Mood Picture 
          The Island for wordless soprano and orchestra which is, as 
          far as I am concerned, the finest work in this selection. This is a 
          real tone-poem in all but the name, that may sometimes recall Bax’s 
          seascapes. A really beautiful piece. 
        
 
        
I suppose that British music lovers are likely to respond 
          heartily to this release, the more so that these TV serials have been 
          quite popular. I, as a foreigner, have to react to the music’s own merits; 
          and I am happy to report that it is beautifully crafted, superbly scored 
          and quite appealing. This generous selection of some of Lewis’s finest 
          TV scores is a joy from first to last. Excellent playing from all concerned, 
          fine recorded sound and well-documented presentation. Incidental music 
          of the highest quality (and The Island is much more than 
          that), maybe, but well worth hearing (after all, Mendelssohn’s Midsummer 
          Night’s Dream started its life as incidental music). 
        
 
        
Hubert Culot