It was in the Spring 
                of 1971 when I heard on Radio 4 an introduction 
                to a new work by Alan Rawsthorne; sadly 
                it was also to be his last. This was 
                the ‘Elegy’ which Julian Bream premiered. 
                The continuity announcer commented that 
                he did not see why modern composers 
                could not write music that was more 
                approachable. Rawsthorne died a few 
                months later and in the November of 
                that year, I went to the Wigmore Hall 
                memorial concert. The audience included 
                the great and the good of that time. 
                I remember Richard Rodney Bennett, Priaulx 
                Rainier and Elisabeth Lutyens. I also 
                remember the music: chamber works like 
                the masterful ‘Theme and Variations’ 
                for two violins’ and I thought that 
                it was quite challenging at the time. 
                Listening to this CD and some other 
                pieces in preparing this review I cannot 
                now understand what I, or that BBC announcer 
                found so difficult. Rawsthorne, it seems 
                to me lies directly in the path of the 
                English Romantics except with a distinct 
                style of his own, a style which owes 
                something to the leading European composers 
                of the mid-century like Hindemith and 
                Stravinsky. He is not dissimilar in 
                some ways to Arnold Cooke. 
              
 
              
This well-filled disc 
                gives us an opportunity to re-assess 
                Rawsthorne’s finest works. It is a happy 
                if belated follow-up to the disc of 
                the three symphonies (SRCD 
                291 - review) which came out in 
                the mid-nineties. Like that earlier 
                CD this one, with excellent if arguably 
                now somewhat historic performances, 
                benefits from audio quality which was 
                then in the demonstration class and 
                still sounds superb today. 
              
 
              
Thinking of the above 
                Theme and Variations it’s worth remembering 
                that it was immediately followed by 
                the ‘Symphonic Studies’ - also in a 
                sense a set of variations. Then, just 
                as war broke out, the 1st 
                Piano Concerto appeared, thus establishing 
                the composer’s reputation. 
              
 
              
There is an element 
                of the neo-classical in Rawsthorne, 
                and that applies to the three movement 
                1st Concerto with its three 
                titled movements: Capriccio, Chaconne 
                and Tarantella. The booklet notes on 
                this work are by John McCabe from the 
                original LP. The other writers are Alan 
                Frank and Hugo Cole. McCabe emphasises 
                that in his view the second movement 
                of the 1st concerto is "one 
                of the loveliest movements in Rawsthorne’s 
                output". He goes on: "his 
                achievement in producing a finale so 
                satisfying and entertaining is remarkable". 
                Why this work is not a repertoire piece 
                I really do not know. At 20 minutes 
                it’s an ideal length for a young pianist 
                to cut his teeth on. And I haven’t yet 
                mentioned the joyous first movement 
                which opens with an arresting rhythm 
                on the timpani to set everything in 
                motion. 
              
 
              
If the 1st 
                Concerto is good fun the longer four 
                movement 2nd is equally memorable, 
                especially the finale. Malcolm Binns 
                is really fleet of foot here and in 
                addition he is expressive. There’s a 
                little touch of rubato in the Andante 
                semplice although the orchestral balance 
                does not always help him. The opening 
                of the work is the complete antithesis 
                of the 1st concerto. There’s 
                that rippling piano feature accompanying 
                a melody, so very typical Rawsthorne 
                in its contour, on solo flute, which 
                is then taken up ‘piacevole’ by the 
                piano. He works this to a passionate 
                climax before embarking on a much more 
                - forgive me - masculine second subject. 
                He then weaves these ideas together 
                beautifully. 
              
 
              
In the April 2007 Gramophone 
                a review of this recording claimed that 
                he had been superseded by the Chandos 
                recording with Geoffrey Tozer and the 
                LPO. Well, I have not heard it so cannot 
                comment, I also find it difficult to 
                imagine a more memorable recording of 
                this concerto, in which everything seems 
                to have been so beautifully thought 
                out. 
              
 
              
It seems to me that 
                the work of Sir John Pritchard is mostly 
                lying unrecognized on long forgotten 
                LPs. Perhaps the time has come to re-assess 
                his work, particularly with the music 
                of his contemporaries. I was drawn to 
                this view when hearing, after some time 
                away from it, his performance of the 
                wonderful ‘Symphonic Studies’ in which 
                Pritchard seems to be in his element. 
                He has, in this work anyway, a real 
                feeling for architecture. Now of course 
                I have heard no other conductor do this 
                piece; even so Pritchard knew the piece 
                well, having performed it several times 
                under the guidance of the composer so 
                it’s easy to believe that this is the 
                way it’s meant to go. Its opening theme 
                is a grandiloquent statement which soon 
                breaks into a lively Hindemithian type 
                melody, the strings of the LPO being 
                in particularly good form. All sections 
                of the work are tracked. There is some 
                deft orchestration too. The woodwind 
                are nicely scored and the ideas are 
                tossed around rhythmically and expressively. 
                Its twenty minutes are over without 
                a wasted note. 
              
 
              
The disc is made up 
                with a smart performance of ‘Street 
                Corner’: a happy concoction of English 
                pastoral meets Hollywood, good fun. 
              
 
              
Lyrita march on, and 
                the best of luck to them. They will, 
                I’m sure, continue in this mission to 
                bring great music and superb musicianship 
                coupled with lovely warm recordings 
                back into circulation. This is a worthwhile 
                release, fine performances and fine 
                music which should be better known. 
              
 
              
Gary Higginson 
                 
              
 
              
 
              
See also review 
                by Rob Barnett 
              
Rawsthorne 
                Website