Stephen Hough is one of our finest pianists. He has 
          an extensive repertoire embracing much that is outside the well-trodden 
          paths of many recitalists. Unlike so many performers these days – on 
          whatever instrument – he also tries his hand at composing (and arranging) 
          for his instrument. 
        
 
        
This very attractive Hyperion release is representative 
          of his skills and is of especial interest to lovers of British music. 
          Few of the items thereon will be widely known, apart from Alan Rawsthorne’s 
          Bagatelles, which express so much in such a brief compass, and 
          the colourful and thoroughly characteristic In Smyrna which has 
          been swept up in the Elgarian revival of the past 40 years. (It may 
          be more popular now than in Elgar’s lifetime). The gossamer–like Bridge 
          miniatures are post–1918 but are in his pre-Great War lighter vein which 
          yielded so much for our delight. 
        
 
        
York Bowen’s large output may work against his popularity 
          as it does in the case of others among music’s big producers. I had 
          previously heard none of these three pieces which form a rewardingly 
          varied group: Reverie d’Amour’s lushness contrasting well with 
          the wistful Serious Dance and the happy-sounding, if restrained, 
          Way to Polden (Polden is thought to be in Somerset). 
        
 
        
Stephen Reynolds, born in 1947, is a new name to me 
          as a composer (he has achieved distinction as a pianist). These four 
          Poems are lighter interludes in a more "serious" compositional 
          output. Delius and Fauré are two of his favourite composers and 
          the Poems are attempts to write in their respective styles. I 
          could detect little that was Delian in the brief and charming Rustic 
          Idyll but considerably more in the much longer Serenade and Dance 
          of Spring. The Fauré Poems are most enjoyable, too, 
          their fluency arguing that Fauré the song composer was their 
          primary influence. 
        
 
        
Mr Hough figures as a composer in the Valses Enigmatiques, 
          enchantingly light in texture and apparently full of personal allusions’ 
          which (like Elgar’s Enigma Variations) need not concern the average 
          listener. I liked, too, his sensitive and affectionate arrangement of 
          Bantocks Song to the Seals. 
        
 
        
Most of this repertoire can reasonably be dubbed light 
          piano music, of which British composers have written a huge amount and 
          which I suspect has given enormous, if largely untold, pleasure down 
          the years. The exception is Kenneth Leighton’s Studies, which 
          are much more craggy and astringent than anything else here, but whose 
          rhythmic imaginations, culminating in a very rapid and excitingly percussive 
          finale, repay the closest listening. Their superb piano writing reminds 
          us that Leighton was a fine pianist. Mr Hough clearly values them highly 
          and this may well be the definitive performance. 
        
 
        
Good recording; I am happy to recommend this disc strongly. 
        
 
        
        
Philip Scowcroft