Look at the dates of 
                these Dances. They neatly bracket and 
                scatter across the period in which Arnold 
                was writing symphonies. The First Symphony 
                was written in 1949 while the Ninth 
                was written in 1986. 
              
While the opp. 27, 
                33, 59 and 91 are bluff and poetic creatures, 
                the Irish Dances proclaim a caustic 
                melancholy as well as some disillusion 
                clothed in neo-Handelian colours; listen 
                to the Commodo and the Piacevole. 
                Both dances are troubled and have much 
                in common with Warlock or Bridge or 
                Goossens. The poetry is still there 
                but more oblique, soured and borne into 
                a world which had become chilly and 
                unwelcoming. In the Welsh Dances 
                there is a return to the ebullience 
                and spirited gestures of the English 
                Dance set with fewer psychological 
                ambiguities than are presented by the 
                Cornish and Irish examples. I am not 
                absolutely sure that this final set 
                carries the conviction of the earlier 
                groups. There is some sense of going 
                through the motions rather than of gripping 
                engagement. 
              
 
              
The vintage orchestral 
                dances run a wide gamut. They are variously 
                salty, beguiling, salacious, brave, 
                gentle, dashing, lusty, macho, tipsy, 
                graceful and triumphant. The whole orchestra 
                gets a work-out. Arnold’s mastery of 
                orchestration is never in doubt. The 
                woodwind and brass are specially blessed. 
                Arnold was of course a topflight trumpeter 
                just like Arthur Butterworth, another 
                extraordinary symphonist. 
              
 
              
Just occasionally in 
                this music we may scent a tepid whiff 
                of 1950s commercialism but this is a 
                transient blemish amid so much character 
                and individuality. The Highland laddie 
                in the Vivace of the Scottish 
                Dances has surely stayed a mite 
                too long at the still. On the other 
                hand Andrew Penny presses forward faster 
                than I would have hoped in the Allegretto 
                - one of the loveliest melodies 
                and most tender treatments in all classical 
                music. Having, like Vaughan Williams, 
                found the equivalent of his own Lake 
                in the Woods Arnold would surely 
                have wished us to linger longer. The 
                composer made the Allegretto last 
                a delectable 3.45 in 1962 when he recorded 
                it with the LPO (Phoenix PHCD 102) and 
                a languidly relished 4.02, again with 
                the LPO, in the mid-1980s (Lyrita SRCD201). 
                It is interesting to note this tendency 
                of the composer to adopt a more leisurely 
                and broadly relished approach in his 
                final recordings. Look at his other 
                Lyrita recording of the same vintage. 
                SRCD200, 
                which contains only his Symphony No. 
                4, runs to an elephantine 54.11 (frankly 
                glorious rather like Bernstein’s Enigma) 
                yet Hickox gets it to 40.36 on Chandos 
                CHAN 9290. Andrew Penny on Naxos despatches 
                the work in about 39 minutes. 
              
 
              
The ‘march of the saints’ 
                in the con moto e sempre senza parodia 
                of the Cornish Dances looks 
                forwards to the great ‘Sally Army’ march 
                in the Eighth Symphony (for me a treasured 
                favourite among the nine - occupying 
                a position in Arnold’s Nine equivalent 
                to Six in Sibelius’s Seven) from 1986. 
              
 
              
The Bryden Thomson 
                set with the Philharmonia includes all 
                the dances except the Welsh ones. It 
                is on Chandos (CHAN 8867) and is almost 
                as resplendently recorded as the Lyrita. 
                It sports the booziest bassoon solo 
                I have ever heard in the Vivace 
                of the Scottish Dances. In general 
                however Thomson keeps the music moving 
                along rather unfeelingly. He lacks the 
                rheumy-eyed indulgence of the composer. 
                Things are much better in the Cornish 
                Dances but even so the English 
                Dances should have been allowed 
                more ‘world enough and time’. 
              
 
              
For ‘complete’ sets 
                the competition comes head-on between 
                Lyrita and Naxos. The Lyrita is given 
                a recording that is nothing short of 
                spectacular: transparency, oomph, gloriously 
                firm bass attack and silky string sound. 
                And if the composer’s tempi are distended 
                the music carries it pretty much flawlessly. 
                The music in some cases positively basks 
                in the additional time the composer’s 
                approach permits. 
              
 
              
The Queensland Orchestra 
                are not the equal of the LPO nor is 
                the Naxos technical team, on this occasion, 
                able to capture the sheer thrill delivered 
                by the Lyrita engineers. Of course it 
                will only cost you a little to have 
                both the Lyrita and the Naxos, The Penny/Queensland 
                disc is bound to be in demand anyway 
                for the Welsh Dances which are 
                otherwise unavailable. 
              
 
              
I had better not pull 
                my punches. If you are looking for one 
                disc with all but one of the Arnold 
                dances then the Lyrita 
                stands head and shoulders high. If you 
                can find it ... get it. 
              
Rob Barnett  
              
See also review 
                by Colin Clarke