I must state straightaway that this disc is a 
                minor revelation. Normally Thea Musgrave is not a part of my listening 
                programme. It is nothing personal really. However I seem to recall 
                a number of works that I heard (in Glasgow) in the early seventies 
                that did not impress me in the least. That experience put me off 
                her music ever since. With this in the background I approached 
                the present disc with some trepidation.
                
                The first thing to strike me was its presentation. The cover art 
                is a fine painting by Claude Monet – Rue St Denis, Festivities 
                of June 30th, 1878; more about this later. The next point 
                to note is the generous amount of material that Clarinet Classics 
                have engineered onto this disc – an excellent 73 minutes. 
                There are three works written over a period of nearly twenty five 
                years so it is well representative of the composer’s career. 
                The programme notes are excellent, if somewhat idiosyncratic. 
                They are written by the composer herself, although in the third 
                person!
              All three pieces are beautifully played by the 
                BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under the composer’s baton. 
                The clarinet soloist, Victoria Soames, brings her deep understanding 
                of modern music to these works and her technique seems to me to 
                be faultless. 
              Thea Musgrave is a Scottish composer who has 
                decided to live in the United States. Her husband is conductor 
                and director of the Virginia Opera, so it is a musical household. 
                Her name first came to the fore through performances on the BBC 
                and works presented at the Edinburgh Festival. However there is 
                nothing parochial about her music. She is performed throughout 
                the western world at venues such as the Warsaw Autumn Festival, 
                the Florence Maggio Musicale, Venice Biennale, Aldeburgh, Cheltenham 
                and Zagreb Festivals. 
              She is noted for her eight operas, the most famous 
                being ‘Mary Queen of Scots.’ This work has 
                had a number of productions in the United States and the UK. 
              Musgrave has written for a wide variety of media, 
                including orchestral and chamber music. Latterly she has utilised 
                what she calls the ‘dramatic-abstract’ form – 
                dramatic in presentation but because lacking in a programme it 
                is also abstract. 
              The Clarinet Concerto reflects this 
                particular philosophy whilst the other two works exhibit the more 
                programmatic elements of her music-making. 
              Based on my early ’seventies excursion 
                into her music I was prepared for a heady mix of serialism – 
                reflecting Schoenberg and Webern. I was pleasantly surprised to 
                find that these pieces are extremely approachable. There is nothing 
                here that is fearsome or liable to excite reactionary comments 
                about “noise not music”. This is not to say that it 
                abounds in tunes that the errand boy will whistle on his bike. 
                However, there is much lyricism here that is enhanced by sensitive 
                orchestration.
              The first work on this disc is the Clarinet Concerto 
                which was composed for a Royal Philharmonic Society commission 
                in 1968. Its dedicatee was Gervase de Peyer who gave the first 
                performance and also made a recording. The programme notes suggest 
                that the philosophy of the work is simple: a dramatic struggle 
                or conflict between ‘unequal forces – solo versus 
                tutti; individual versus crowd.’ Len Mullenger, in a review 
                of this piece has expressed the method well: ‘The soloist 
                begs support from sections of the orchestra and does this by the 
                peripatetically moving to different sections of the orchestra 
                and persuading them to play as separate units independently of 
                the conductor.’
              The Concerto is conceived as a single movement 
                presented in six contrasting sections. Musgrave describes it as 
                being in effect a ‘concerto grosso’. Each of these 
                sections offers attractive material that never lacks interest. 
                An unusual moment is the scherzo-like ‘prestissimo’ 
                which makes use of an accordion for tonal effect. The ‘sensuoso’ 
                is an atmospheric nocturne that once again exploits a wide range 
                of orchestral colour. One of the features of this work, as alluded 
                to above, is that the soloist physically moves around the orchestra. 
                First with the woodwinds, then the brass and finally in the ‘normal’ 
                concerto position for the tumultuous finish. This is done to enable 
                the soloist to lead the various ‘concertante’ groups. 
              
              As a work this is well written and never lacks 
                interest. The musical language is not overly difficult. There 
                is always an overt lyricism underlying even the most angular phrases.
              The second work on this CD, The Seasons, 
                is in many ways different to the two concerti. It was commissioned 
                by the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Field in 1988. Musgrave relates 
                that the work was inspired by Piero de Cosimo’s frightening 
                painting of hunting and fire, ‘Caccia Primitiva.’ 
                It moved her to consider the ‘seasons’ as a metaphor 
                for the cycles in the life of man.
              The work unsurprisingly is in four movements. 
                It commences with Autumn which depicts an impending storm. The 
                composer makes use of ‘hunting horns’ set against 
                an unsettled background. Winter is a wonderful musical 
                description of a frozen landscape – of ‘ice and despair.’ 
                In places its mood reminds me of the temper of RVW’s Antarctic 
                Symphony. The great painting by Leutze of "Washington 
                Crossing the Frozen Delaware" underlies the imagery 
                here. The Spring movement heralds a thaw. The snow melts, 
                there is a dawn chorus, and rebirth is suggested. This is the 
                most romantic movement and it is certainly very beautiful; perhaps 
                the most impressive music on the disc. Summer is all 
                ‘fulfilment and rejoicing’. It is inspired by the 
                painting that is on the CD cover, Claude Monet’s – 
                Rue St Denis, Festivities of June 30th, 1878. The only weak 
                point is the direct quotation of the U.S. and French national 
                anthems. It strikes me as somewhat trite and certainly mars an 
                otherwise superb work. Up to this point it is possible to hear 
                this work as abstract music. This quotation forces a programme 
                on the listener. I accept the final contention that ‘summer’ 
                means that mankind is freed from tyranny – but wish that 
                she had chosen another way of communicating this fact.
              I had never heard a ‘bass clarinet concerto’ 
                until the one recorded here. I doubt that there can be many well 
                known ones in the catalogue. However, for a list of examples consult 
                http://www.bassclarinet.org/bclcon.html
              This example by Musgrave is actually called an 
                Autumn Sonata – a Concerto for Bass Clarinet and Orchestra. 
                It was commissioned by the present soloist in 1993 who gave its 
                first performance at the Cheltenham Festival the following year. 
                There is a definite programme underlying this work: derived in 
                this case from literature. Musgrave had previously set a poem 
                by the Austrian poet Georg Trakl. She revisited his writings and 
                chose a number of short fragments to ‘preface the major 
                sections of this autumnal landscape’. The work has six sections, 
                each lasting for two or three minutes. Once again the composer 
                creates a varied presentation of material; attention never lapses. 
                This is an atmospheric tone poem operating at a number of levels: 
                death, war and landscape. Although the composer is not directly 
                describing war, there are allusions to the desolation and despair 
                caused by hostilities. This is a fine piece that exploits the 
                tonal colour of the bass clarinet to the full. 
              I enjoyed this CD. It is an excellent introduction 
                to compositions by this well known and well respected Scottish 
                composer. I would further recommend it to anyone who loves the 
                clarinet. Ignore any rumours that you may have heard about difficulty 
                or gross intellectualism in her music. All of this is approachable 
                and most of it is thoroughly enjoyable.
              The soloist renders both works extremely well. 
                It is certainly interesting to hear a performance on the bass 
                clarinet.
              John France
              See also 
                review by Len Mullenger