These gloriously tuneful 
                and eventful symphonies, derived mainly 
                from Boyce’s overtures for his odes 
                and serentas, have never lacked for 
                adherents on disc. Even so there have 
                been times when choice has been severely 
                confined so a new entrant is more than 
                welcome. Mallon and his Aradia Ensemble 
                have been producing fine work for Naxos 
                and they were a reliable bet for this 
                repertoire, especially since their baroque 
                recordings have been refreshing and 
                attractively accomplished. 
              
 
              
One won’t be disappointed 
                overall. The balance between harpsichord 
                and strings, for example, is just and 
                the bass line pointing in the slow movement 
                of the B flat major [No.1 to distinguish 
                it from No.7 in the same key] is well 
                nuanced and weighted. The Allegro assai 
                of the A major is well shaped, with 
                strings that are pert and good entry 
                points. Then, too, the pomposo gait 
                of the Vivace of the Third is well characterised 
                and there’s graciousness in the same 
                symphony’s Minuet finale (if arguably 
                just a shade too much). The brass is 
                on good form for the splendid middle 
                movement of the Fourth and the horn 
                harmonies of its finale are finely chiselled. 
                The trumpets flare in the Fifth, with 
                antiphonal voices to the fore, and things 
                are kept flowing in the Largo introduction 
                to the Sixth with its stately Larghetto 
                well deployed. 
              
 
              
All this is fine; the 
                winds are as adept as the brass and 
                one can hear this in the First Symphony 
                in particular. They phrase and shape 
                with great nuance and feel for the Handelian 
                lines. But turn to the 1992 AAM/Hogwood 
                (now on Decca in their British Music 
                series) and to the English Concert/Pinnock 
                (Archiv 1990) and I think you will hear 
                how much more immediate the earlier 
                recordings are. Partly this is to do 
                with sound. The church acoustic of Grace 
                Church on the Hill in Toronto does blunt 
                the attacks and gives a rather distant 
                and diffuse quality to the recording. 
                It obscures wind lines on occasion as 
                well. But as much as this one can hear 
                there’s more sheer zest in the other 
                recordings - a more earthy immediacy. 
                Hogwood makes Boyce sound bigger and 
                manlier in the First, and for all their 
                skill the Fourth sounds earthbound and 
                more amorphous in the Naxos than it 
                ever did with Hogwood and Pinnock. The 
                AAM strings are more lithe in the Fifth. 
                But there are certainly interesting 
                points of departure. Mallon is far brisker 
                than Hogwood in the Vivace second movement 
                of the Second Symphony and imparts a 
                different mood to the music - just as 
                valid as his competitors. Then again 
                I do prefer the greater sense of sprightliness 
                and incision Hogwood brings to the Sprituoso 
                section of the Seventh. On balance, 
                and throughout, I have to say I prefer 
                Hogwood. 
              
 
              
He would be my first 
                choice, irrespective of price considerations, 
                though perhaps this antediluvian can 
                put in a mournful plea for a resurrection 
                of the old cycle recorded by Jörg 
                Faerber and his Württemberg forces 
                - such gusto and brio. Maybe it won’t 
                win any prizes for its historically 
                informed manners but let’s not be precious 
                about that. But Hogwood is still the 
                front-runner. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf