The British Light Music 
                series from White Line hits Volume 6. 
                There are three orchestras and two conductors 
                involved – Gavin Sutherland waving his 
                well-established baton over the Royal 
                Ballet Sinfonia and the City of Prague 
                Philharmonic Orchestra and Neil Thomson 
                takes the LSO – no less – through Christopher 
                Slaski’s Frank Lloyd Wright Suite. Is 
                my Snob Detector too sensitively tuned 
                or should I overlook the fact that the 
                LSO typeface on the cover booklet comfortably 
                dwarfs that of the other two bands? 
                If I was Sutherland I might be a bit 
                miffed, though I’m sure he’s not that 
                sort of chap. 
              
 
              
The programme is a 
                funny old affair I have to say. Starting 
                with Walford Davies’ 1919 RAF March 
                Past and adding the Hamilton Harty arrangement 
                of Londonderry Air is one thing but 
                to add John Field’s Rondo in A flat 
                (originally for Piano Quintet) in this 
                Philip Lane arrangement for piano and 
                orchestra might be taken as a whimsicality 
                too far. Surrounding them is the meat 
                of the disc and they offer richer rewards, 
                no matter how well the staples are played 
                – and I don’t discount the espressivo 
                string playing in the Walford Davies, 
                or the fine harp and solo violin playing 
                in the Harty, much less Alan MacLean’s 
                handling of the Field. I’ve enjoyed 
                Gareth Glyn’s atmospheric work before. 
                Here his 1984 suite, Legend of the Lake, 
                has been recently revised and its five 
                movements are, as ever, full of clever 
                touches. He moves from jolly 30s style 
                – light, bright – to the tense, brittle 
                Shostakovich influenced trumpet and 
                percussion Manhunt with plenty 
                of well-orchestrated lyricism on show 
                as well. Iain Hamilton’s Overture 1912 
                is a homage to Dan Leno, hero of the 
                Halls, and is an impressionistic take 
                on the milieu quoting perkily throughout; 
                there’s Arnoldian wit here as well as 
                an admixture of playful mordancy and 
                the muted brass garnishes this affectionate 
                tribute. 
              
 
              
David Fanshawe’s music 
                for Tarka fuses lyric relaxation with 
                apposite tension and his Serenata is 
                a delight. Slaski’s Frank Lloyd Wright 
                Suite is the longest work here, 
                a four-movement suite dedicated to the 
                architect and each evoking a particular 
                building. Thus Slaski conjures up rippling 
                and glittering waterfalls and jazzy 
                chic laced with impressionistic shimmer 
                or else, in Wingspread, the final movement 
                conjures a solo violin, ever ascending, 
                decorative harp, fine orchestration 
                and a twilit clarinet – fine chiaroscuro. 
              
 
              
Despite the differing 
                origins of the performances the sound 
                quality remains even across the disc; 
                not really opulent but attractive. Plenty 
                of good nuggets here – but what a weird 
                piece of programming. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf