This is an issue of 
                commanding interest if you value the 
                landscape of piano solo music created 
                in the British Isles during the post-war 
                period. 
              
 
              
Leighton is no pastoralist. 
                He is tougher combining two inimical 
                voices - he studied with both Finzi 
                and Petrassi. There are three symphonies 
                (one is available on Chandos) and ten 
                concertos including three piano concertos. 
                The end result in the Op. 95 set is 
                a work that picks up on the writing 
                of Bartók, judiciously accented 
                with dissonance and with tributaries 
                feeding in from blues, jazz and Rachmaninov; 
                some might even think of Kapustin from 
                time to time. The three movement Sonata 
                starts and ends in with the sort of 
                insistent bell-clear writing we encounter 
                from Martinů 
                in his Toccata e Due Canzoni 
                touching obsessively on the depths 
                plumbed by Britten's Grimes Passacaglia. 
                This is again challengingly attractive 
                music with jazzy infusions - back to 
                Kapustin again. In the finale I was 
                reminded of the more insistent romantically 
                flourishing music in Bliss's Piano Concerto. 
              
 
              
The notes by Paul Spicer 
                provide all the essential information. 
              
 
              
Being able to buy this 
                certainly justifies joining the BMS. 
              
 
              
This is extremely impressive 
                music. I would not want anyone to be 
                in any doubt about this and the performances 
                could hardly be more authoritative. 
              
 
              
The disc insert warns 
                that the master reel-to-reel tape had 
                deteriorated by the time the transfer 
                came to be made. Be reassured I could 
                hear nothing to worry you. The sound 
                is stable, without wow and warmly centred. 
              
Rob Barnett