The 
                    virile recording quality secured by Chris Hazell is the first 
                    thing that hits you about this disc. But there’s more to it 
                    than that.
                  Ole Schmidt is best known as a conductor who has 
                    made far too few recordings. I had cause quite recently to 
                    recommend strongly his Sibelius 
                    and Borodin 
                    collections on Regis. His early 1970s recording of the six 
                    Nielsen 
                    symphonies made history and remains the most life-enhancing 
                    and vivid in the catalogue (Regis again). 
                  Schmidt is a composer whose tutelage was served 
                    with Vagn Holmboe, Finn Høffding, Jörgen Jersild and Niels 
                    Viggo Bentzon. He was born in Copenhagen in 1928. After the 
                    war he became a jazz pianist and continued this career while 
                    studying at the Royal Danish Academy of Music. His conducting 
                    lessons were learnt at the hands of Albert Wolff, Kubelik 
                    and Celibidache. 
                  His Piano Concerto of 1954 was broadcast on the 
                    radio and made an early success. At about the same time he 
                    wrote the score Bag Tæppet (Behind the Curtain) 
                    for the Royal Danish Ballet. In fact there are a number of 
                    ballet scores,. He also became music director of the company 
                    in 1957 an appointment that continued until 1965. His ballet 
                    experience is reflected in the airborne fantasy of the two 
                    flute concertos recorded here. The writing in both cases has 
                    the flightiness of the Nielsen concerto but without its wilder 
                    anarchic element. The Horn Concerto is in two movements. It 
                    shows Schmidt’s engagement with the ripeness of the romantic 
                    schools - in itself extraordinary for 1966 - but its accenting 
                    is contemporary. The golden cantilena at 1:52 in the 
                    Largo recalls Malcolm Arnold while the moderately gritty 
                    aspects link with the horn writing in Britten’s Serenade. 
                    The work also struggles with nightmare visions (4:33). The 
                    writing here is of a searing pressure. The Allegro giusto 
                    has a bold striding metropolitan confidence and street-wise 
                    heroism - at times redolent of Arnold. For sampling try the 
                    ticking, ear-tickling syncopation of 4:20 onwards in the Allegro 
                    giusto. This is a splendid display piece; all the stronger 
                    because it has no vapid moments. The Tuba Concerto is in three 
                    movements. It too reflects the romantic strain especially 
                    in the ruminative and singing second movement although one 
                    occasionally is aware of the ungainliness of the instrument. 
                    In the brief final allegro there are some extraordinary 
                    moments such as the rapid rolling sprouting figures for the 
                    soloist at 2:20.  It’s not as strong a piece as the Horn Concerto 
                    but it will repay repeat hearings.
                  The Horn Concerto is a remarkable odyssey of a 
                    work - surely one of the most masterful of the twentieth century’s 
                    concertos for the instrument - and stands out in this company 
                    for its sustained oxymoronic toughness and romance. The wonderfully 
                    provocative writing is deeply harnessed to romantic models 
                    but breathes a wholly contemporary ozone.
                  Rob 
                    Barnett
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